Newman
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Ron Paul is truly the lone voice of honesty and common sense in our government. At least, he's the only voice of honesty and common sense that I can hear.
It seems the average TOLer thinks that he's "too libertarian", but for me (and this is my only criticism of Paul) he isn't libertarian enough.
People say that they like his economic ideas :up: but they don't like his foreign policy. To that I say "read more". Read some of Ron Paul's own writings on it, even if it is just five minutes of one chapter in the bookstore. Your conception of his ideas on foreign policy are probably based on what TV news, your neo-con friend, or some slanted opinion piece told you. His ideas simply are not that extreme. What is so revolting about a government minding its own business? What is so hard to understand about not intervening in other countries' affairs? What right do we have to "police the world"?
These questions, along with the simple fact that we cannot afford the trillions of dollars it takes to depose governments we don't like, set up new governments that we do like, then topple those, then try to kill all the people that fight for their own country back, etc., convince me that Ron Paul has it right when it comes to foreign policy.
As for the other hot topic so far in this thread, states' rights, one only has to point to the Constitution to show that Paul's view is the only constitutional one. Under the Constitution, states DO have the right to do the wrong things, provided that it isn't something that is forbidden by the Bill of Rights or the powers granted to the federal government.
I consider myself somewhat of an expert on Ron Paul's views (especially the economics/Austrian Business Cycle Theory and libertarian philosophy), and even in the rare occasion that we disagree, I still know what he'd say. So to all you detractors and doubters out there: bring it.
It seems the average TOLer thinks that he's "too libertarian", but for me (and this is my only criticism of Paul) he isn't libertarian enough.
People say that they like his economic ideas :up: but they don't like his foreign policy. To that I say "read more". Read some of Ron Paul's own writings on it, even if it is just five minutes of one chapter in the bookstore. Your conception of his ideas on foreign policy are probably based on what TV news, your neo-con friend, or some slanted opinion piece told you. His ideas simply are not that extreme. What is so revolting about a government minding its own business? What is so hard to understand about not intervening in other countries' affairs? What right do we have to "police the world"?
These questions, along with the simple fact that we cannot afford the trillions of dollars it takes to depose governments we don't like, set up new governments that we do like, then topple those, then try to kill all the people that fight for their own country back, etc., convince me that Ron Paul has it right when it comes to foreign policy.
As for the other hot topic so far in this thread, states' rights, one only has to point to the Constitution to show that Paul's view is the only constitutional one. Under the Constitution, states DO have the right to do the wrong things, provided that it isn't something that is forbidden by the Bill of Rights or the powers granted to the federal government.
I consider myself somewhat of an expert on Ron Paul's views (especially the economics/Austrian Business Cycle Theory and libertarian philosophy), and even in the rare occasion that we disagree, I still know what he'd say. So to all you detractors and doubters out there: bring it.