Reason: Lew Rockwell wrote Ron Paul’s newsletters
posted at 12:24 pm on January 16, 2008 by Allahpundit
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Some of them, anyway. He denies it but Weigel and Sanchez have half a dozen sources saying it’s so. That’s good news, actually, since Paul will be finished as a political force once the campaign’s over but Rockwell’s website will crawl on, with this now chained to its ankle.
There’s an inside-baseball element here about the split within libertarianism between the left-libertine types like the Reason crew and the “paleo” types like Rockwell, who apparently once concluded that the key to building a winning electoral coalition was hooking up with David Duke and militia fantasists. Paul has a foot planted in each wing, migrating from the latter to the former over the years so that now the left-libs are stuck holding his baggage. Reason’s trying to hand it back to him (or, more specifically, to the paleos), and while they still appear to allow for the possibility that he didn’t know what was going on at the time with the newsletters, they also pretty clearly think that possibility’s remote. Credit them for unsparing skepticism here:
The publishing operation was lucrative. A tax document from June 1993—wrapping up the year in which the Political Report had published the “welfare checks” comment on the L.A. riots—reported an annual income of $940,000 for Ron Paul & Associates, listing four employees in Texas (Paul’s family and Rockwell) and seven more employees around the country. If Paul didn’t know who was writing his newsletters, he knew they were a crucial source of income and a successful tool for building his fundraising base for a political comeback…
The man who was once the Great Paleolibertarian Hope has built a broad base of enthusiastic supporters without resorting to venomous rhetoric or coded racism. He has stuck stubbornly to the issues of sound money, “humble foreign policy,” and shrinking the state. He wraps up his speeches with a three-part paean to individualism: “I don’t want to run your life,” “I don’t want to run the economy,” and “I don’t want to run the world.” He talks about the disproportionate effect of the drug war on African-Americans, and appeared at a September 2007 Republican debate on black issues that was boycotted by the then-frontrunners. All this and more have brought him $30 million-plus from more than 100,000 donors; thousands of campaign volunteers, and the largest rallies he’s ever spoken to, including a crowd of almost 5,000 in Philadelphia.
Yet those new supporters, many of whom are first encountering libertarian ideas through the Ron Paul Revolution, deserve a far more frank explanation than the campaign has as yet provided of how their candidate’s name ended up atop so many ugly words. Ron Paul may not be a racist, but he became complicit in a strategy of pandering to racists—and taking “moral responsibility” for that now means more than just uttering the phrase. It means openly grappling with his own past—acknowledging who said what, and why. Otherwise he risks damaging not only his own reputation, but that of the philosophy to which he has committed his life.
I don’t think he’s doing any lasting damage to libertarianism. The intelligent libertarian kids in his base will dump the chaff and keep the wheat; the cranks are lost causes anyway. As for his coming clean, though, what can he say? What excuse can he plausibly give that doesn’t involve admitting, however obliquely, “Yes, I once held those views?” When and where did the supposed, er, Pauline conversion come?
Update: Levy and Kerry Howley separate the wheat from the chaff.
Link: sevenload.com
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Good point. Let me rephrase it to; “some of his supporters.”
Fed Up on January 16, 2008 at 4:06 PM
Did you take those in collge?
Jim Treacher on January 16, 2008 at 4:07 PM
got me…lol
Fed Up on January 16, 2008 at 4:08 PM
You forgot “Jew-lover” in there, and probably a few more.
rightwingprof on January 16, 2008 at 4:13 PM
Usually I just type, I’m a bit tired now, didn’t notice my grammar error until later and there’s no edit function. Sorry if that syntax error was distressing.
Just because I don’t believe that the CFR is part of a concerted effort to erode our sovereignty, returning to the Gold Standard at this point is an impossibility, and a 19th century foreign policy is invalid in a 21st century world, doesn’t make me a neocon.
I know what a neocon is. I know I am not one. And yes I am at college, and I work to come here.
By the way, it’s spelt “college.” If you’re going to mock someone else’s grammar errors, at least be careful to cover up your own.
Keljeck on January 16, 2008 at 4:13 PM
So Jim,
I’ve seen you on many of Michelle’s posts, especially the ones that bash Ron Paul.
What’s important to you about bashing another canddidate rather than supporting yours?
We Paulite’s spend our time supporting our candidate, not bashing the others. While we support our candidate, our hope is to open the eyes of others. Unlike you and the Michele Malkin clan, they are not having an effect on changing our minds with continual unsubstantiated negative attacks.
If your candidate is Fred, Rudy, John, Huck or McRomney, what are you doing to convince Ron Paul supporters here that they are better? Answer: nothing
So how does this help your cause? Answer: it doesn’t
So in a sense, you’re wasting your time, but we Paulite’s aren’t.
Fed Up on January 16, 2008 at 4:13 PM
I have always love to read REASON. I don’t see where it is a “LEFT” magazine.
I don’t think Ron is anywhere near the right person to be president but he has less faults in my eyes than the others except Fred Thompson. Of course his anti-war cr@p is B$ but at least my taxes wont go up…… just saying.
dako on January 16, 2008 at 4:14 PM
Fair enough…
but realize…I did hijack this blog from its original intent…and that was my plan.
A good grasp of NLP is something I highly recommend for you Keljeck. Good luck in school.
Peace!
Fed Up on January 16, 2008 at 4:16 PM
It’s fun to watch Ron Paul supporters twist themselves into knots trying to justify these newsletters. You amuse me. Please continue.
Jim Treacher on January 16, 2008 at 4:20 PM
Thanks for the compliment.
Fed Up on January 16, 2008 at 4:21 PM
You’re welcome.
Jim Treacher on January 16, 2008 at 4:23 PM
I didn’t say there was. All I’m saying is that it is something more than a club where men of industry and power get together over cigars to talk about their frigid wives (or gay lovers).
Drum on January 16, 2008 at 5:13 PM
I don’t think Reson is a “left” magazine, as in The Progressive, or The Nation, or In These Times.
It is a very liberal, dilettantish, not very serious interpretation of libertarianism, which explains its editors’ absurd vacillation on the Ron Paul issue.
And their need to denounce wiretapping that leads us to terrorists overseas, and drug control laws, while somehow ignoring hate crimes laws and the overbearing taxation experienced by a large swath of Americans.
Radicals for Capitalism was a good read though.
Gerard on January 16, 2008 at 5:45 PM
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