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The Antiwar, Anti-Abortion,
Anti-Drug-Enforcement-Administration, Anti-Medicare Candidacy
of Dr. Ron Paul
July 22, 2007
By Christopher Caldwell
The New York Times
Whipping westward across Manhattan in a limousine sent
by Comedy Central’s “Daily Show,” Ron
Paul, the 10-term Texas congressman and long-shot Republican
presidential candidate, is being briefed. Paul has only
the most tenuous familiarity with Comedy Central. He has
never heard of “The Daily Show.” His press
secretary, Jesse Benton, is trying to explain who its
host, Jon Stewart, is. “He’s an affable gentleman,”
Benton says, “and he’s very smart. What I’m
getting from the pre-interview is, he’s sympathetic.”
Paul nods.
“GQ wants to profile you on Thursday,” Benton
continues. “I think it’s worth doing.”
“GTU?” the candidate replies.
“GQ. It’s a men’s magazine.”
“Don’t know much about that,” Paul
says.
Thin to the point of gauntness, polite to the point of
daintiness, Ron Paul is a 71-year-old great-grandfather,
a small-town doctor, a self-educated policy intellectual
and a formidable stander on constitutional principle.
In normal times, Paul might be — indeed, has been
— the kind of person who is summoned onto cable
television around April 15 to ventilate about whether
the federal income tax violates the Constitution. But
Paul has in recent weeks become a sensation in magazines
he doesn’t read, on Web sites he has never visited
and on television shows he has never watched.
Alone among Republican candidates for the presidency,
Paul has always opposed the Iraq war. He blames “a
dozen or two neocons who got control of our foreign policy,”
chief among them Vice President Dick Cheney and the former
Bush advisers Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle, for the
debacle. On the assumption that a bad situation could
get worse if the war spreads into Iran, he has a simple
plan. It is: “Just leave.” During a May debate
in South Carolina, he suggested the 9/11 attacks could
be attributed to United States policy. “Have you
ever read about the reasons they attacked us?” he
asked, referring to one of Osama bin Laden’s communiqués.
“They attack us because we’ve been over there.
We’ve been bombing Iraq for 10 years.” Rudolph
Giuliani reacted by demanding a retraction, drawing gales
of applause from the audience. But the incident helped
Paul too. Overnight, he became the country’s most
conspicuous antiwar Republican.
Paul’s opposition to the war in Iraq did not come
out of nowhere. He was against the first gulf war, the
war in Kosovo and the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, which
he called a “declaration of virtual war.”
Although he voted after Sept. 11 to approve the use of
force in Afghanistan and spend $40 billion in emergency
appropriations, he has sounded less thrilled with those
votes as time has passed. “I voted for the authority
and the money,” he now says. “I thought it
was misused.”
There is something homespun about Paul, reminiscent of
“Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.” He communicates
with his constituents through birthday cards, August barbecues
and the cookbooks his wife puts together every election
season, which mix photos of grandchildren, Gospel passages
and neighbors’ recipes for Velveeta cheese fudge
and Cherry Coke salad. He is listed in the phone book,
and his constituents call him at home. But there is also
something cosmopolitan and radical about him; his speeches
can bring to mind the World Social Forum or the French
international-affairs periodical Le Monde Diplomatique.
Paul is surely the only congressman who would cite the
assertion of the left-leaning Chennai-based daily The
Hindu that “the world is being asked today, in reality,
to side with the U.S. as it seeks to strengthen its economic
hegemony.” The word “empire” crops up
a lot in his speeches.
This side of Paul has made him the candidate of many
people, on both the right and the left, who hope that
something more consequential than a mere change of party
will come out of the 2008 elections. He is particularly
popular among the young and the wired. Except for Barack
Obama, he is the most-viewed candidate on YouTube. He
is the most “friended” Republican on MySpace.com.
Paul understands that his chances of winning the presidency
are infinitesimally slim. He is simultaneously planning
his next Congressional race. But in Paul’s idea
of politics, spreading a message has always been just
as important as seizing office. “Politicians don’t
amount to much,” he says, “but ideas do.”
Although he is still in the low single digits in polls,
he says he has raised $2.4 million in the second quarter,
enough to broaden the four-state campaign he originally
planned into a national one.
Paul represents a different Republican Party from the
one that Iraq, deficits and corruption have soured the
country on. In late June, despite a life of antitax agitation
and churchgoing, he was excluded from a Republican forum
sponsored by Iowa antitax and Christian groups. His school
of Republicanism, which had its last serious national
airing in the Goldwater campaign of 1964, stands for a
certain idea of the Constitution — the idea that
much of the power asserted by modern presidents has been
usurped from Congress, and that much of the power asserted
by Congress has been usurped from the states. Though Paul
acknowledges flaws in both the Constitution (it included
slavery) and the Bill of Rights (it doesn’t go far
enough), he still thinks a comprehensive array of positions
can be drawn from them: Against gun control. For the sovereignty
of states. And against foreign-policy adventures. Paul
was the Libertarian Party’s presidential candidate
in 1988. But his is a less exuberant libertarianism than
you find, say, in the pages of Reason magazine.
Over the years, this vision has won most favor from those
convinced the country is going to hell in a handbasket.
The attention Paul has captured tells us a lot about the
prevalence of such pessimism today, about the instability
of partisan allegiances and about the seldom-avowed common
ground between the hard right and the hard left. His message
draws on the noblest traditions of American decency and
patriotism; it also draws on what the historian Richard
Hofstadter called the paranoid style in American politics.
Financial Armageddon
Paul grew up in the western Pennsylvania town of Green
Tree. His father, the son of a German immigrant, ran a
small dairy company. Sports were big around there —
one of the customers on the milk route Paul worked as
a teenager was the retired baseball Hall of Famer Honus
Wagner — and Paul was a terrific athlete, winning
a state track meet in the 220 and excelling at football
and baseball. But knee injuries had ended his sports career
by the time he went off to Gettysburg College in 1953.
After medical school at Duke, Paul joined the Air Force,
where he served as a flight surgeon, tending to the ear,
nose and throat ailments of pilots, and traveling to Iran,
Ethiopia and elsewhere. “I recall doing a lot of
physicals on Army warrant officers who wanted to become
helicopter pilots and go to Vietnam,” he told me.
“They were gung-ho. I’ve often thought about
how many of those people never came back.”
Paul is given to mulling things over morally. His family
was pious and Lutheran; two of his brothers became ministers.
Paul’s five children were baptized in the Episcopal
church, but he now attends a Baptist one. He doesn’t
travel alone with women and once dressed down an aide
for using the expression “red-light district”
in front of a female colleague. As a young man, though,
he did not protest the Vietnam War, which he now calls
“totally unnecessary” and “illegal.”
Much later, after the United States invaded Iraq in 2003,
he began reading St. Augustine. “I was annoyed by
the evangelicals’ being so supportive of pre-emptive
war, which seems to contradict everything that I was taught
as a Christian,” he recalls. “The religion
is based on somebody who’s referred to as the Prince
of Peace.”
In 1968, Paul settled in southern Texas, where he had
been stationed. He recalls that he was for a while the
only obstetrician — “a very delightful part
of medicine,” he says — in Brazoria County.
He was already immersed in reading the economics books
that would change his life. Americans know the “Austrian
school,” if at all, from the work of Friedrich Hayek
and Ludwig von Mises, two economists who fled the Nazis
in the 1930s and whose free-market doctrines helped inspire
the conservative movement in the 1950s. The laws of economics
don’t admit exceptions, say the Austrians. You cannot
fake out markets, no matter how surreptitiously you expand
the money supply. Spend more than you earn, and you are
on the road to inflation and tyranny.
Such views are not always Republican orthodoxy. Paul
is a harsh critic of the Federal Reserve, both for its
policies and its unaccountability. “We first bonded,”
recalls Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat, “because
we were both conspicuous nonworshipers at the Temple of
the Fed and of the High Priest Greenspan.” In recent
weeks, Paul’s airport reading has been a book called
“Financial Armageddon.” He is obsessed with
sound money, which he considers — along with the
related phenomena of credit excess, bubbles and uncollateralized
assets of all kinds — a “sleeper issue.”
The United States ought to link its currency to gold or
silver again, Paul says. He puts his money where his mouth
is. According to Federal Election Commission documents,
most of his investments are in gold and silver and are
worth between $1.5 and $3.5 million. It’s a modest
sum by the standards of major presidential candidates
but impressive for someone who put five children through
college on a doctor’s (and later a congressman’s)
earnings.
For Paul, everything comes back to money, including Iraq.
“No matter how much you love the empire,”
he says, “it’s unaffordable.” Wars are
expensive, and there has been a tendency throughout history
to pay for them by borrowing. A day of reckoning always
comes, says Paul, and one will come for us. Speaking this
spring before the libertarian Future of Freedom Foundation
in Reston, Va., he warned of a dollar crisis. “That’s
usually the way empires end,” he said. “It
wasn’t us forcing the Soviets to build missiles
that brought them down. It was the fact that socialism
doesn’t work. Our system doesn’t work much
better.”
Under the banner of “Freedom, Honesty and Sound
Money,” Paul ran for Congress in 1974. He lost —
but took the seat in a special election in April 1976.
He lost again in November of that year, then won in 1978.
On two big issues, he stood on principle and was vindicated:
He was one of very few Republicans in Congress to back
Ronald Reagan against Gerald Ford for the 1976 Republican
nomination. He was also one of the representatives who
warned against the rewriting of banking rules that laid
the groundwork for the savings-and-loan collapse of the
1980s. Paul served three terms before losing to Phil Gramm
in the Republican primary for Senate in 1984. Tom DeLay
took over his seat.
Paul would not come back to Washington for another dozen
years. But in the time he could spare from delivering
babies in Brazoria County, he remained a mighty presence
in the out-of-the-limelight world of those old-line libertarians
who had never made their peace with the steady growth
of federal power in the 20th century. Paul got the Libertarian
Party nomination for president in 1988, defeating the
Indian activist Russell Means in a tough race. He finished
third behind Bush and Dukakis, winning nearly half a million
votes. He tended his own Foundation for Rational Economics
and Education (FREE) and kept up his contacts with other
market-oriented organizations. What resulted was a network
of true believers who would be his political base in one
of the stranger Congressional elections of modern times.
A Lone Wolf
In the first days of 1995, just weeks after the Republican
landslide, Paul traveled to Washington and, through DeLay,
made contact with the Texas Republican delegation. He
told them he could beat the Democratic incumbent Greg
Laughlin in the reconfigured Gulf Coast district that
now included his home. Republicans had their own ideas.
In June 1995, Laughlin announced he would run in the next
election as a Republican. Laughlin says he had discussed
switching parties with Newt Gingrich, the next speaker,
before the Republicans even took power. Paul suspects
to this day that the Republicans wooed Laughlin to head
off his candidacy. Whatever happened, it didn’t
work. Paul challenged Laughlin in the primary.
“At first, we kind of blew him off,” recalls
the longtime Texas political consultant Royal Masset.
“ ‘Oh, there’s Ron Paul!’ But
very quickly, we realized he was getting far more money
than anybody.” Much of it came from out of state,
from the free-market network Paul built up while far from
Congress. His candidacy was a problem not just for Laughlin.
It also threatened to halt the stream of prominent Democrats
then switching parties — for what sane incumbent
would switch if he couldn’t be assured the Republican
nomination? The result was a heavily funded effort by
the National Republican Congressional Committee to defeat
Paul in the primary. The National Rifle Association made
an independent expenditure against him. Former President
George H.W. Bush, Gov. George W. Bush and both Republican
senators endorsed Laughlin. Paul had only two prominent
backers: the tax activist Steve Forbes and the pitcher
Nolan Ryan, Paul’s constituent and old friend, who
cut a number of ads for him. They were enough. Paul edged
Laughlin in a runoff and won an equally narrow general
election.
Republican opposition may not have made Paul distrust
the party, but beating its network with his own homemade
one revealed that he didn’t necessarily need the
party either. Paul looks back on that race and sees something
in common with his quixotic bid for the presidency. “I
always think that if I do things like that and get clobbered,
I can excuse myself,” he says.
Anyone who is elected to Congress three times as a nonincumbent,
as Paul has been, is a politician of prodigious gifts.
Especially since Paul has real vulnerabilities in his
district. For Eric Dondero, who plans to challenge him
in the Republican Congressional primary next fall, foreign
policy is Paul’s central failing. Dondero, who is
44, was Paul’s aide and sometime spokesman for more
than a decade. According to Dondero, “When 9/11
happened, he just completely changed. One of the first
things he said was not how awful the tragedy was . . .
it was, ‘Now we’re gonna get big government.’
”
Dondero claims that Paul’s vote to authorize force
in Afghanistan was made only after warnings from a longtime
staffer that voting otherwise would cost him Victoria,
a pivotal city in his district. (“Completely false,”
Paul says.) One day just after the Iraq invasion, when
Dondero was driving Paul around the district, the two
had words. “He said he did not want to have someone
on staff who did not support him 100 percent on foreign
policy,” Dondero recalls. Paul says Dondero’s
outspoken enthusiasm for the military’s “shock
and awe” strategy made him an awkward spokesman
for an antiwar congressman. The two parted on bad terms.
A larger vulnerability may be that voters want more pork-barrel
spending than Paul is willing to countenance. In a rice-growing,
cattle-ranching district, Paul consistently votes against
farm subsidies. In the very district where, on the night
of Sept. 8, 1900, a storm destroyed the city of Galveston,
leaving 6,000 dead, and where repairs from Hurricane Rita
and refugees from Hurricane Katrina continue to exact
a toll, he votes against FEMA and flood aid. In a district
that is home to many employees of the Johnson Space Center,
he votes against financing NASA.
The Victoria Advocate, an influential newspaper in the
district, has generally opposed Paul for re-election,
on the grounds that a “lone wolf” cannot get
the highway and homeland-security financing the district
needs. So how does he get re-elected? Tim Delaney, the
paper’s editorial-page editor, says: “Ron
Paul is a very charismatic person. He has charm. He does
not alter his position ever. His ideals are high. If a
little old man calls up from the farm and says, ‘I
need a wheelchair,’ he’ll get the damn wheelchair
for him.”
Paul may have refused on principle to accept Medicare
when he practiced medicine. He may return a portion of
his Congressional office budget every year. But his staff
has the reputation of fighting doggedly to collect Social
Security checks, passports, military decorations, immigrant-visa
extensions and any emolument to which constituents are
entitled by law. According to Jackie Gloor, who runs Paul’s
Victoria office: “So many times, people say to us,
‘We don’t like his vote.’ But they trust
his heart.”
In Congress, Paul is generally admired for his fidelity
to principle and lack of ego. “He is one of the
easiest people in Congress to work with, because he bases
his positions on the merits of issues,” says Barney
Frank, who has worked with Paul on efforts to ease the
regulation of gambling and medical marijuana. “He
is independent but not ornery.” Paul has made a
habit of objecting to things that no one else objects
to. In October 2001, he was one of three House Republicans
to vote against the USA Patriot Act. He was the sole House
member of either party to vote against the Financial Antiterrorism
Act (final tally: 412-1). In 1999, he was the only naysayer
in a 424-1 vote in favor of casting a medal to honor Rosa
Parks. Nothing against Rosa Parks: Paul voted against
similar medals for Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II.
He routinely opposes resolutions that presume to advise
foreign governments how to run their affairs: He has refused
to condemn Robert Mugabe’s violence against Zimbabwean
citizens (421-1), to call on Vietnam to release political
prisoners (425-1) or to ask the League of Arab States
to help stop the killing in Darfur (425-1).
Every Thursday, Paul is the host of a luncheon for a
circle of conservative Republicans that he calls the Liberty
Caucus. It has become the epicenter of antiwar Republicanism
in Washington. One stalwart member is Walter Jones, the
North Carolina Republican who during the debate over Iraq
suggested renaming French fries “freedom fries”
in the House dining room, but who has passed the years
since in vocal opposition to the war. Another is John
(Jimmy) Duncan of Tennessee, the only Republican besides
Paul who voted against the war and remains in the House.
Other regulars include Virgil Goode of Virginia, Roscoe
Bartlett of Maryland and Scott Garrett of New Jersey.
Zach Wamp of Tennessee and Jeff Flake, the Arizonan scourge
of pork-barrel spending, visit occasionally. Not all are
antiwar, but many of the speakers Paul invites are: the
former C.I.A. analyst Michael Scheuer, the intelligence-world
journalist James Bamford and such disillusioned United
States Army officers as William Odom, Gregory Newbold
and Lawrence Wilkerson (Colin Powell’s former chief
of staff), among others.
In today’s Washington, Paul’s combination
of radical libertarianism and conservatism is unusual.
Sometimes the first impulse predominates. He was the only
Texas Republican to vote against last year’s Federal
Marriage Amendment, meant to stymie gay marriage. He detests
the federal war on drugs; the LSD guru Timothy Leary held
a fundraiser for him in 1988. Sometimes he is more conservative.
He opposed the recent immigration bill on the grounds
that it constituted amnesty. At a breakfast for conservative
journalists in the offices of Americans for Tax Reform
this May, he spoke resentfully of being required to treat
penurious immigrants in emergency rooms — “patients
who were more likely to sue you than anybody else,”
having children “who became automatic citizens the
next day.” (Paul champions a constitutional amendment
to end birthright citizenship.) While he backs free trade
in theory, he opposes many of the institutions and arrangements
— from the World Trade Organization to Nafta —
that promote it in practice.
Paul also opposes abortion, which he believes should
be addressed at the state level, not the national one.
He remembers seeing a late abortion performed during his
residency, years before Roe v. Wade, and he maintains
it left an impression on him. “It was pretty dramatic
for me,” he says, “to see a two-and-a-half-pound
baby taken out crying and breathing and put in a bucket.”
The Owl-God Moloch
Paul’s message is not new. You could have heard
it in 1964 or 1975 or 1991 at the conclaves of those conservatives
who were considered outside the mainstream of the Republican
Party. Back then, most Republicans appeared reconciled
to a strong federal government, if only to do the expensive
job of defending the country against Communism. But when
the Berlin Wall fell, the dormant institutions and ideologies
of pre-cold-war conservatism began to stir. In his 1992
and 1996 campaigns, Pat Buchanan was the first politician
to express and exploit this change, breathing life into
the motto “America First” (if not the organization
of that name, which opposed entry into World War II).
Like Buchanan, Paul draws on forgotten traditions. His
top aides are unimpeachably Republican but stand at a
distance from the party as it has evolved over the decades.
His chief of staff, Tom Lizardo, worked for Pat Robertson
and Bill Miller Jr. (the son of Barry Goldwater’s
vice-presidential nominee). His national campaign organizer,
Lew Moore, worked for the late congressman Jack Metcalf
of Washington State, another Goldwaterite. At the grass
roots, Paul’s New Hampshire primary campaign stresses
gun rights and relies on anti-abortion and tax activists
from the organizations of Buchanan and the state’s
former maverick senator, Bob Smith.
Paul admires Robert Taft, the isolationist Ohio senator
known during the Truman administration as Mr. Republican,
who tried to rally Republicans against United States participation
in NATO. Taft lost the Republican nomination in 1952 to
Dwight Eisenhower and died the following year. “Now,
of course,” Paul says, “I quote Eisenhower
when he talks about the military-industrial complex. But
I quote Taft when he suits my purposes too.” Particularly
on NATO, from which Paul, too, would like to withdraw.
The question is whether the old ideologies being resurrected
are neglected wisdom or discredited nonsense. In the 1996
general election, Paul’s Democratic opponent Lefty
Morris held a press conference to air several shocking
quotes from a newsletter that Paul published during his
decade away from Washington. Passages described the black
male population of Washington as “semi-criminal
or entirely criminal” and stated that “by
far the most powerful lobby in Washington of the bad sort
is the Israeli government.” Morris noted that a
Canadian neo-Nazi Web site had listed Paul’s newsletter
as a laudably “racialist” publication.
Paul survived these revelations. He later explained that
he had not written the passages himself — quite
believably, since the style diverges widely from his own.
But his response to the accusations was not transparent.
When Morris called on him to release the rest of his newsletters,
he would not. He remains touchy about it. “Even
the fact that you’re asking this question infers,
‘Oh, you’re an anti-Semite,’ ”
he told me in June. Actually, it doesn’t. Paul was
in Congress when Israel bombed Iraq’s Osirak nuclear
plant in 1981 and — unlike the United Nations and
the Reagan administration — defended its right to
do so. He says Saudi Arabia has an influence on Washington
equal to Israel’s. His votes against support for
Israel follow quite naturally from his opposition to all
foreign aid. There is no sign that they reflect any special
animus against the Jewish state.
What is interesting is Paul’s idea that the identity
of the person who did write those lines is “of no
importance.” Paul never deals in disavowals or renunciations
or distancings, as other politicians do. In his office
one afternoon in June, I asked about his connections to
the John Birch Society. “Oh, my goodness, the John
Birch Society!” he said in mock horror. “Is
that bad? I have a lot of friends in the John Birch Society.
They’re generally well educated, and they understand
the Constitution. I don’t know how many positions
they would have that I don’t agree with. Because
they’re real strict constitutionalists, they don’t
like the war, they’re hard-money people. . . .”
Paul’s ideological easygoingness is like a black
hole that attracts the whole universe of individuals and
groups who don’t recognize themselves in the politics
they see on TV. To hang around with his impressively large
crowd of supporters before and after the CNN debate in
Manchester, N.H., in June, was to be showered with privately
printed newsletters full of exclamation points and capital
letters, scribbled-down U.R.L.’s for Web sites about
the Free State Project, which aims to turn New Hampshire
into a libertarian enclave, and copies of the cult DVD
“America: Freedom to Fascism.”
Victor Carey, a 45-year-old, muscular, mustachioed self-described
“patriot” who wears a black baseball cap with
a skull and crossbones on it, drove up from Sykesville,
Md., to show his support for Paul. He laid out some of
his concerns. “The people who own the Federal Reserve
own the oil companies, they own the mass media, they own
the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, they’re
part of the Bilderbergers, and unfortunately their spiritual
practices are very wicked and diabolical as well,”
Carey said. “They go to a place out in California
known as the Bohemian Grove, and there’s been footage
obtained by infiltration of what their practices are.
And they do mock human sacrifices to an owl-god called
Moloch. This is true. Go research it yourself.”
Two grandmothers from North Carolina who painted a Winnebago
red, white and blue were traveling around the country,
stumping for Ron Paul, defending the Constitution and
warning about the new “North American Union.”
Asked whether this is something that would arise out of
Nafta, Betty Smith of Chapel Hill, N.C., replied: “It’s
already arisen. They’re building the highway. Guess
what! The Spanish company building the highway —
they’re gonna get the tolls. Giuliani’s law
firm represents that Spanish company. Giuliani’s
been anointed a knight by the Queen. Guess what! Read
the Constitution. That’s not allowed!”
Paul is not a conspiracy theorist, but he has a tendency
to talk in that idiom. In a floor speech shortly after
the toppling of the Taliban in Afghanistan, he mentioned
Unocal’s desire to tap the region’s energy
and concluded, “We should not be surprised now that
many contend that the plan for the U.N. to ‘nation-build’
in Afghanistan is a logical and important consequence
of this desire.” But when push comes to shove, Paul
is not among the “many” who “contend”
this. “I think oil and gas is part of it,”
he explains. “But it’s not the issue. If that
were the only issue, it wouldn’t have happened.
The main reason was to get the Taliban out.”
Last winter at a meet-the-candidate house party in New
Hampshire, students representing a group called Student
Scholars for 9/11 Truth asked Paul whether he believed
the official investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks was
credible. “I never automatically trust anything
the government does when they do an investigation,”
Paul replied, “because too often I think there’s
an area that the government covered up, whether it’s
the Kennedy assassination or whatever.” The exchange
was videotaped and ricocheted around the Internet for
a while. But Paul’s patience with the “Truthers,”
as they call themselves, does not make him one himself.
“Even at the time it happened, I believe the information
was fairly clear that Al Qaeda was involved,” he
told me.
“Every Wacko Fringe Group In the Country”
One evening in mid-June, 86 members of a newly formed
Ron Paul Meetup group gathered in a room in the Pasadena
convention center. It was a varied crowd, preoccupied
by the war, including many disaffected Democrats. Via
video link from Virginia, Paul’s campaign chairman,
Kent Snyder, spoke to the group “of a coming-together
of the old guard and the new.” Then Connie Ruffley,
co-chairwoman of United Republicans of California (UROC),
addressed the crowd. UROC was founded during the 1964
presidential campaign to fight off challenges to Goldwater
from Rockefeller Republicanism. Since then it has lain
dormant but not dead — waiting, like so many other
old right-wing groups, for someone or something to kiss
it back to life. UROC endorsed Paul at its spring convention.
That night, Ruffley spoke about her past with the John
Birch Society and asked how many in the room were members
(quite a few, as it turned out). She referred to the California
senator Dianne Feinstein as “Fine-Swine,”
and got quickly to Israel, raising the Israeli attack
on the American Naval signals ship Liberty during the
Six-Day War. Some people were pleased. Others walked out.
Others sent angry e-mails that night. Several said they
would not return. The head of the Pasadena Meetup group,
Bill Dumas, sent a desperate letter to Paul headquarters
asking for guidance:
“We’re in a difficult position of working
on a campaign that draws supporters from laterally opposing
points of view, and we have the added bonus of attracting
every wacko fringe group in the country. And in a Ron
Paul Meetup many people will consider each other ‘wackos’
for their beliefs whether that is simply because they’re
liberal, conspiracy theorists, neo-Nazis, evangelical
Christian, etc. . . . We absolutely must focus on Ron’s
message only and put aside all other agendas, which anyone
can save for the next ‘Star Trek’ convention
or whatever.”
But what is “Ron’s message”? Whatever
the campaign purports to be about, the main thing it has
done thus far is to serve as a clearinghouse for voters
who feel unrepresented by mainstream Republicans and Democrats.
The antigovernment activists of the right and the antiwar
activists of the left have many differences, maybe irreconcilable
ones. But they have a lot of common beliefs too, and their
numbers — and anger — are of a considerable
magnitude. Ron Paul will not be the next president of
the United States. But his candidacy gives us a good hint
about the country the next president is going to have
to knit back together.
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