|
Ron
Paul is Dangerous
By Matt Barber
After the most recent
GOP presidential debate, reasonable people can
disagree as to who came out on top. It was abundantly
clear, however, who was smothered beneath the pile.
As Ron Paul waxed naive from his perch in
Sioux City, Iowa, on issues ranging from foreign
policy to judicial activism, one could almost hear his
campaign bus tires deflate. Although some polls
indicate that Mr. Paul has surged in Iowa, most
national polls suggest that, beyond a relatively fixed
throng of blindly devoted “Paulbots,” support for the
eccentric Texas lawmaker has a concrete ceiling.
Mr. Paul did himself
no favors during the debate. Afterward, former Iowa
House Speaker Christopher C. Rants blogged, “Ron Paul
finally lit a match after dousing himself with
gasoline.”
The Persian Bomb
...
Putting aside for a
moment Mr. Paul’s leftist policies on a variety of
social issues ranging from his unwavering support for
newfangled “gay rights” – to include open
homosexuality in the military – to advocacy for
across-the-board legalization of illicit drugs, Mr.
Paul demonstrated that he has a dangerous, fundamental
misunderstanding of the threat posed to every American
citizen by radical Islam. This alone disqualifies him
for serious consideration as our future Commander in
Chief.
During the debate,
moderator Bret Baier asked Mr. Paul: “Many Middle East
experts now say Iran may be less than one year away
from getting a nuclear weapon. … Even if you had solid
intelligence that Iran was in fact going to get a
nuclear weapon, President Paul would remove the U.S.
sanctions on Iran - including those added by the Obama
administration. So, to be clear, GOP nominee Paul
would be running left of President Obama on Iran?”
Mr.
Paul responded: “But I’d be running with the American
people because it would be a much better policy.” (The
only American people running with this policy risk
running the rest of us off a cliff.)
He
went on to reject a U.N. agency report that indicates
Iran is within months of developing nuclear weaponry,
calling it “war propaganda.” He then spouted the same
anti-American talking points we’ve come to expect from
the hard-left “progressive” establishment, blaming
America for Iran’s efforts to go nuclear.
In
defense of Islamic terrorists, not unlike those
responsible for Sept. 11, Mr. Paul said, “Yeah, there
are some radicals, but they don’t come here to kill us
because we’re free and prosperous. … They come here
and want to do us harm because we’re bombing them.
“I
don’t want Iran to have a nuclear weapon,” he
continued, all the while demonstrating to everyone
watching that a President Paul would be unwilling to
lift a finger to prevent it.
Ancient Echoes of
"Peace in our Time"
His
pacifist ruminations prompted fellow presidential
candidate Michele Bachmann to respond: “With all due
respect to Ron Paul, I think I have never heard a more
dangerous answer for American security than the one
that we just heard from Ron Paul. … I’ll tell you the
reason why, the reason why I would say that is because
we know without a shadow of a doubt that Iran will
take a nuclear weapon, they will use it to wipe our
ally Israel off the face of the map, and they stated
they will use it against the United States of America.
Look no further than the Iranian constitution, which
states unequivocally that their mission is to extend
jihad across the world and eventually to set up a
worldwide caliphate. We would be fools to ignore their
purpose and their plan.”
Mr.
Paul evidently is one of those fools.
Iran
is today’s version of Nazi Germany, and Mr. Paul’s
obtuse strategy of reckless inaction affords him the
dubious title of this generation’s Neville
Chamberlain. Like Chamberlain’s fruitless appeasement,
Mr. Paul’s similar strategy simply feeds the
insatiable beast. Don’t get me wrong. I
personally like Ron Paul. He’s that affable - if not a
little “zany” - uncle who has the whole family on edge
at Thanksgiving. “Oh boy; what’s Uncle Ronny gonna say
next?” Still, you wouldn’t give Uncle Ronny the
carving knife for the turkey, much less the keys to
the Oval Office.
(Chamberlain photo is a
link to a biography page)
Mr.
Paul is many things, but conservative is not one of
them. He’s a died-in-the-wool libertarian. That’s one
part conservative, two parts anarchist.
The Three Legged
Stool
Ronald Reagan often spoke of a
“three-legged stool” that undergirds true
conservatism. The legs are represented by strong
free-market economic principles, a strong national
defense and strong social values. For the stool to
remain upright, it must be supported by all three
legs. If you snap off even one leg, the stool
collapses under its own weight.
Mr.
Paul is relatively conservative from an economic
standpoint, but in true libertarian form, has snapped
off the legs of national defense and social values.
The libertarian is a
strange and rare little animal – a bit like the woolly
flying squirrel. It spends its days erratically
darting to-and-fro atop this teetering, one-legged
stool in a futile effort to keep it from toppling.
America witnessed Ron Paul doing this squirrelly
libertarian tango Thursday night. Cute but
unstable.
Ron Paul never had a
chance; but now, with the possible exception of his
most committed devotees, I suspect most people will
finally admit it. Regardless of what happens in Iowa,
the Paul engine has run out of steam. During the
debate it pulled into the station and released its
final wheeze right alongside the Cain Train.
© 2011 Matt
Barber (Mr. Barber is an attorney
concentrating in constitutional law.)
|