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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Rand Paul: Fraud, Failure, Liar This time, hes crossed the Rubicon As the smoke wafted up into the already smoggy Los Angeles air, a group of young libertarians watched as Jayel Aheram burned his Stand With Rand t-shirts. He had two of them, a token of his former esteem for the libertarian-ish presidential candidate and Senator from Kentucky, whose father had inspired young Jayel to identify as a libertarian and become active in the movement. A former Marine and Iraq war veteran, the now 31-year-old Aheram had phone-banked for Rand, and enthusiastically retweeted the Senators pronouncements on Twitter. He had even forked out $35 for those T-shirts and now they were going up in flames as he and a group of young libertarians sat on the roof of Jayels Los Angeles apartment, drinking beer and glumly contemplating what had brought them all former supporters of Rand Pauls presidential campaign to this point. As Charles Davis writes over at MondoWeiss: So what prompted such a fiery stunt on a Saturday night? Simple: The son of Ron opposes the deal with Iran over its nuclear program, faulting the agreement for lifting sanctions on the Islamic Republic before evidence of compliance. Paul still insists he prefers peace to war who doesnt? and that he favors a negotiated settlement to the Wests standoff with the Islamic Republic, he just doesnt support the only one that will ever happen, functionally making him pro- war. Worst of all: Hes lying to do it. Aheram and his friends had stood by the Kentucky Senator for many months, even as Rand occasionally waffled and made some statements that didnt sit well with them by any means: the military budget proposal that actually called for an increase in what is laughingly referred to as defense spending, and his signing of an open letter to the Iranian government authored by neoconservative warmonger Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Strauss), who made no bones about his determination to scotch the looming deal with Iran. These things had disturbed them, but not enough to extinguish all hope that Sen. Paul who had, after all, been brought up by a father whose dedication to liberty and peace is unquestioned could and would serve as an admirable spokesman for their cause. But it was the lie that vanquished that hope. In questioning Secretary of State John Kerry at a hearing on the Iran deal before the Senate Foreign Relations committee, Sen. Paul cited what he said were the Ayatollah Khameneis words: The Americans say they stopped Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. They know its not true. Claiming that this contradicts the administrations contention that the deal would prevent [the Iranians] from getting a nuclear weapon, Paul averred that the Ayatollah is saying the opposite. But what did Khamenei really say? Heres the entire quote: The Americans say they stopped Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. They know its not true. We had a fatwa, declaring nuclear weapons to be religiously forbidden. It had nothing to do with the nuclear talks. This was no mistake on Rand Pauls part. It was a lie, and he repeated the lie to Fox News in an interview with the Lou Dobbs: I made a point that the ayatollah is now saying that the deal does not prevent them from having a nuclear weapon and I thought thats precisely what the deal is supposed to do, so I dont know how we can have an agreement that President Obama says means one thing, John Kerry says means one thing, but the ayatollah says doesnt mean that at all. So Rand Paul is now repeating AIPACs dishonest talking points. This is reminiscent of the same sort of propaganda that led the US to invade Iraq: factoids ripped out of context and promulgated by the Bush administration and its pet neoconservative pundits to create an entirely false picture of an Iraq that was seeking nuclear weapons. In short, the Rand Paul that we were all hoping for someone who would stand up to the War Party and refute their propaganda is no more, if he ever existed in the first place. Instead of refuting the lies hes joining in the telling of them and in doing so, hes crossed the Rubicon as far as libertarians and all those who oppose war with Iran are concerned. What makes a sad situation far worse is that Sen. Pauls turn toward the neocons hasnt helped him one bit: instead, its hurt him. In the past few months his support, once in the double digits, has been cut in half. The latest PPP poll has him down to a mere 4 percent. This dramatic drop coincides precisely with his efforts to appease people who are never going to support him. His campaigns effort to broaden the base has in reality marked a turning away from the base of supporters who were brought into politics and the GOP by his father. Not a very smart strategy, but then again the know-it-all professionals running the campaign think theyre being realistic. And yet: what good is a self-described pragmatism that turns out to be not very pragmatic? Sen. Pauls strategy failed because in a field of 16 GOP presidential wannabes its absolutely imperative to stand out. Yet, after his attempt to filibuster the renewal of the Patriot Act, his efforts were directed at blending in with the crowd, especially on the vitally important foreign policy issue. There are numerous articles out there attributing Rands downfall to organizational issues, lack of money, and infighting in the campaign, but this confuses effects with the primary cause, which is that Rand Paul has sold out. That is why hes lost the Jayel Aherams of this world, and without the youthful energy that pushed the elder Paul into the national spotlight and made the Paul name a household word, the junior Senator from Kentucky has lost his principal asset. And in losing that, hes effectively lost the race before its barely begun. Oh, he may hold on for a good while, but word is out that campaign staff are already making inquiries about other employment and who can blame them? Hes sinking in the polls, along with the morale in his own campaign headquarters, and its because standing with Rand doesnt mean what it might have meant. Standing with Rand means standing with someone who openly lies in a Senate committee hearing and then repeats the lie on national television. Its sad, and even ugly, but libertarians must face the truth and this writer is pledged to tell his readers the truth, no matter how bitter. Rand Paul has crossed a very bright line: he has gone from being a wavering and occasionally eloquent spokesman for the cause of liberty and peace to being a full blown renegade from the movement that brought him to where he is today. To be clear: he is an enemy of peace, and therefore of libertarianism. He is far worse than Tom Cotton, his co-signer on that open letter to the Iranian government, because at least with Sen. Cotton we know where he stands and why. With Rand Paul, we know only that hell say anything in order to advance what he wrongly sees as his own political advantage. So what should libertarians do about Rand Paul? Aside from withdrawing their support, the task of libertarians in regard to his campaign is to protect the libertarian brand against the Senator. For what we are seeing here isnt just the errors of a single individual but a full-blown major deviation from the libertarian philosophy of peace, civil liberties, and free market economics. Rand-ism, if I may coin a phrase, limns the conservatarian nonsense peddled by Charles Cooke in his book, The Conservatarian Manifesto, in which a noninterventionist foreign policy is downplayed in favor of socially liberal, and economically conservative policies an anodyne phrase designed to convince people that libertarians are really just Republicans who smoke pot. This is a cliché that weve often had to refute, but Rand Paul is busy reinforcing it. Rand-ism sends the following message: Were against big government, and even government spying on Americans, but dont worry, all you Fox News enthusiasts out there, were not averse to bombing the shit out of helpless civilians when the occasion calls for it. Rand Pauls trajectory is no accident: I warned very early on that he had advisors around him eager to pull him in precisely the direction hes gone. And, although I struggled mightily to give Sen. Paul every chance to prove me wrong he even had me fooled there for a while it is now clear beyond all doubt that hes taken that road. It is a road to abject failure, as the present condition of his campaign demonstrates, but we must make sure that route is forever blocked off, lest other libertarians make the mistake of taking it. Without making any concessions to an arid sectarianism that decries political action per se and abjures all efforts to truly broaden the libertarian movement, we must make it perfectly clear that Rand Paul is not one of us. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Somebody needs to inform these kids that political stars never lie or sin -- they only "err" or "fail".
#2. To: NeoconsNailed (#1)
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