Ron Paul
Violated the Rules
by Thomas E. Woods,
Jr. by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG
THIS
Ron Paul
violated one of the most consistently observed rules of American
political life in the GOP debate in South Carolina the other night:
government officials are never, ever to level with the American
population. The people are to be endlessly flattered, spoken to in
bumper-sticker slogans, and in general treated like
seven-year-olds.
Congressman
Paul crossed another, more specific forbidden line when he
contradicted one of the major working assumptions of nearly all
mainstream American pundits: foreigners never, ever get angry at the
U.S. government’s foreign policy, and would never for any reason
want to avenge themselves against it. You can go out of your way to
prevent water treatment facilities from being repaired, you can
starve and bomb without compunction, and you can bring about half a
million deaths, and the people will quietly take it. In fact, they
probably spend their time reproaching themselves for having so
displeased the U.S. government.
A man of
principle and in possession of an IQ above 80, Paul naturally
refused to play along. He explained that foreign policy has
consequences, and that political and military interference around
the world has a tendency to stir up whole peoples against us. If we
ignore this simple and obvious fact, we do so at our peril. His
implicit conclusion was that the shenanigans of our government have
made our people more hated and more vulnerable than ever. In sum, if
you want to play empire, you cannot pretend that doing so will be
costless.
To the
propagandized automatons of 2007 America, this is called "blaming
America" for 9/11. I guess detectives should bear that in mind the
next time they seek the motive behind a murder. "You’re looking for
motive? Are you saying the dead man had it coming?" (Will
moral relativism never cease?)
Reports from
all over the intelligence community have repeatedly confirmed Paul’s
point, as if we needed express confirmation of what in normal times
would be a matter of simple common sense. The CIA’s Michael Scheuer,
who is by no means antiwar, told CNN: "We're being attacked for what
we do in the Islamic world, not for who we are or what we believe in
or how we live. And there's a huge burden of guilt to be laid at Mr.
Bush, Mr. Clinton, both parties for simply lying to the American
people."
Now I can
already hear the other objection: Islamic history and theology
provide ample pretext for jihad violence for anyone who wants to
find it. Supposing the truth of that claim for the sake of argument,
what exactly is it that makes them seem to want to find it? Are we
to ignore the countless reports showing how the dumb belligerence of
the current administration has increased the ranks of the radicals?
And why does Osama bin Laden bother producing recruitment tapes
detailing atrocities against Muslims if all he really has to do is
point to the Koran and send the suicide bombers on their way to
America?
The rest of the
world, hearing Paul’s remarks, will doubtless be relieved to know
that there are still at least a few Americans in public life who are
able to process information at higher than a sixth-grade level, and
whose understanding of international affairs isn’t cartoonish and
delusional. But being a conservative today, of course, means that on
principle you don’t care what the rest of the world thinks – what
are you, some kind of commie? God bless America!
It’s a good
thing for him that Russell Kirk didn’t have to live to see the
deranged caricature of itself that American conservatism has now
become. Kirk, one of the key architects of that movement, spent the
last years of his life opposing every military adventure of the U.S.
government. The average conservative today, on the other hand, who
knows only what the government and its neocon shills tell him, would
be at an utter loss to account for that.
(On the
domestic front, one brief observation: only Ron Paul spoke
forthrightly of scaling back the scope of the federal government.
Poor Tommy Thompson couldn’t think of a single thing he’d want to
cut – oh, except paragraph 17b, line 32, from some health program
whose purpose would take fifteen minutes to describe. He wasn’t
alone: the rest of the candidates droned on about cutting waste and
abuse – code for business as usual. As Lew Rockwell put it, "The
others couldn't name one federal typewriter they would sell off." No
wonder they hate having Ron Paul there.)
There are
still some Americans who don’t enjoy being propagandized, talked
down to, or treated like imbeciles, and it is they in particular who
appreciate Ron Paul. Long after the self-promoting phonies on that
stage are gone and forgotten, Paul will still be admired. I know I
can’t wait to read the biography of his political life.
Dan McAdams,
who works in Ron Paul’s office, posted these remarks immediately
following the debate:
I have worked
for and with Dr. Paul more closely than perhaps anyone in this
country (along with my colleagues) for the past six years and the
fact of the matter is, as Lew can attest, that Dr. Paul is the
most even-tempered, best-humored, easy-going, and intellectually
engaging individual anyone would ever want to know. I still look
at the little notes he sends me – even from years ago – and laugh
my head off.
No one would saddle themselves with
the kind of inhuman schedule that he does unless he genuinely
enjoyed and felt passion for what he was doing. The joy is there
every time I see him each week. And I have never met anyone who is
so intellectually nimble and interested in new ideas.
Ron Paul has
put himself up for personal ridicule at the hands of his inferiors
just to show all of us that there is an alternative to the
direction we are headed. Which of us would have the courage to do
the same? He won? Irrelevant. His every word to the national
audience is worth a million blows of the hammer on the stone of
authoritarianism. God bless him. I have never felt more proud of
him than tonight, enduring the slings and arrows of fascists like
Giuliani.
No further comment is
necessary.
May 17, 2007
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [view his
website; send him
mail] is senior
fellow in American history at the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
His books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free
chapter here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American
History.
Copyright © 2007 Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Thomas Woods
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