Ilana Mercer on Beltway libertarians

Pat H

Moderator
lana Mercers perspicuity is at it usual high level in this article about the Beltway libertarians and their opposition to Ron Paul.

High priests of pomposity pan Ron Paul
Posted: January 18, 2008
1:00 a.m. Eastern



If you've missed the item about the politically incorrect newsletters published under Ron Paul's name during the 1980s and 1990s, and unearthed strategically by The New Republic, it is because Beltway libertarians are just about the only ones still "spilling pixels" over the affair. Spilling pixels and beating breasts.

Especially inconsolable over the unsavory newsletters, none of which bore Ron Paul's byline, are the Reason Magazine and Cato Institute claque – excrescences on the D.C. establishment both.


Ron Paul's supporters are certainly not reaching for the smelling salts. They remain focused on the Paul platform. They understand that in Paul his opponents have found a man who's led an exemplary life – has served his country and community, stayed married to his childhood sweetheart for 50 odd years, and is as devout a Christian as he is a constitutionalist. It's not easy to impugn this impish, good-natured man, so mudslinging becomes a must.


Because the Beltway characters believe they are at the center of the universe, they imagine that: 1) The Paul Revolution revolves around them and their "ideas," and 2) In the unlikely event the Revolution was started without them, it has to be insignificant.
As usual, they are wrong.


Ron Paul is not running as a Libertarian, but as a Republican with a strong libertarian sensibility. Ron's Revolution is revved, for the most, by independents, defecting Democrats, and disgruntled Republicans for whom his message is fresh and intuitive.

What are the odds that Rep. Paul's followers have come to the philosophy of freedom through Reason magazine? Is it remotely possible that the passionate soldiers of the Paul [COLOR=blue ! important][COLOR=blue ! important]Army[/color][/color] enlisted after chancing upon a dispassionate, desiccated, dry-as-dust disquisition on a free market in kidneys (I'm all for it)? I think not.

Perhaps Paulites were inspired by Stephen Moore, a former Catoite, now with the neoconservative "War Street Journal." From his comfy perch on "Kudlow & Company," Moore ventured just the other day that the recession is the result of the less-than dynamic demos' fear of rapid technological transformation. This is the Virginia Postrel "philosophy," if it can be called that.

Also antipathetic to Dr. Paul, Ms. Postrel is yet another establishment-endorsed libertarian of whom Paul backers are blissfully unaware. A filament of the Postrel faith evinced by her first book, "The Future and its Enemies," is that all change is good, always. All that glitters is gold was the essence of Ms. Postrel's second manifesto, "The Substance of Style." Profound perhaps to some, but not to Paulites.

Picture a Venn diagram. The overlap between the Paul and the Postrel solitudes is invisible to the naked eye. Only in the atrophying attics of mainstream intelligentsia and media does Postrel's stuff resonate.
Ron's Revolutionaries have coalesced around the illegal, immoral and unconstitutional invasion of Iraq, against America's hegemonic overreach, and for a sovereign, less "cosmopolitan" America.

Beltway libertarians, conversely, are moved in mysterious ways by gaping borders, gay marriage, multiculturalism, cloning and all else "cool and cosmopolitan."

Judging by Reason's "35 Heroes of Freedom," "cool and cosmopolitan" encompasses William Burroughs, a drug addled, Beat-Generation wife killer, whose "work is mostly gibberish and his literary influence baleful."
Madonna Reason has exalted for, as they put it, leading "MTV's glorious parade of freaks, gender-benders and weirdos who helped broaden the palette of acceptable cultural identities and destroy whatever vestiges of repressive mainstream sensibilities still remained." Sounds like the unscrambled, strange dialect spoken by a professor of Women's and Gender Studies.

Dennis Rodman Reason adulates for "set[ting] an X-Men-level standard for cultural mutation," and for his "flamboyant, frequently gay-ish antics." Having lived on a couple of continents and encountered my fair share of sophisticates, let me say that this stuff is all terribly provincial and infantile.

Contra Paulites, Beltway libertarians have generally supported the Iraq war, although they've cooled to it since the war lost some of its Cool Quotient. In fact, I suspect the Reason crowd supported Paul before opposing him because the Paul Revolution is so groovy. Reason is all about the groove; gravitas, not so much.

If we've learned anything so far from the cloying coverage of the 2008 elections it is that mainstream media can't even call a caucus. Ditto mainstream libertarians – they're utterly divorced from the groundswell Paul has ignited.

This (classical liberal) column is unaffiliated and independent; this columnist temperamentally unsuited to obedience. Thus, while I've endorsed Ron Paul, aspects of his philosophy and strategy have not escaped my scrutiny.

More to the point, I've endorsed Ron Paul because, unlike most of Paul's pampered detractors, I happen to know what living without freedom is like: I left South Africa with the proceeds from the sale of my apartment stashed in the soles of my shoes. Had I been apprehended smuggling my property out of that country, I'd have been jailed together with my husband; we both stood taller on that trip. Moreover, I've seen firsthand the same oppression sneak-up on unsuspecting Americans. For instance, the South-African model of detention-without-trial is slowly becoming a fixture of the American legal landscape.

So, when the prospects of liberty loom, carpe diem. Loving liberty viscerally means that when one encounters a man whose understanding of freedom and individual rights approximates – if not parallels – your own, you seize the day. Those who stand on the sidelines are slaves to abstractions – and worse: They are mollycoddled milksops.

Paul's vision is as close to The Good Life as we could hope to come in the current ideological climate. Only tinny ideologues encased in worthless ideological armor – worthless because it exists in the arid arena of their minds, not on earth – would turn their noses up at the prospect of Paul.



Ilana Mercer is the author of "Broad Sides: One Woman’s Clash With A Corrupt Culture." She is a fellow at the Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies, an independent, nonprofit, economic policy think tank. To learn more about her work, visit IlanaMercer.com. If you would like to comment on this column, go to Ilana's blog.
Attribution
 
Especially inconsolable over the unsavory newsletters, none of which bore Ron Paul's byline, are the Reason Magazine and Cato Institute claque – excrescences on the D.C. establishment both.


The racist statements were published in Ron Paul's newletter entilted: "THE RON PAUL REPORT" and another iteration of it with Paul's name in the masthead.

It's not reasonable to believe that Paul didn't at least know about the comments and approve of them.

Aren't we seeing a pattern here with Paul? A pattern of behavior where something is done in his name or directly involving him, but supposedly without his knowledge or approval. The Ron Paul Dollar debacle is a good example. We're expected to believe that Paul didn't have anything to do with that coin bearing his likeness and advertized as THE RON PAUL DOLLAR. Right. :rolleyes:

Nixon and Reagan didn't get away with this type of thing (Watergate, Iran-Contra) and Ron Paul shouldn't get a free pass either.

The Cato Institute is right to call Paul on his racist comments.

And at the very least, assuming arguendo that Paul's denials are credible, do we really need someone as apparently naive as he appears to be in the Oval Office?
 
The racist statements were published in Ron Paul's newletter entilted: "THE RON PAUL REPORT" and another iteration of it with Paul's name in the masthead.

The Cato Institute is right to call Paul on his racist comments.
I've looked at the "statements" in the newsletters, or at least the one's that the leftist press thought the most egregious.

One was a direct transcript of a skit on the Johnny Carson Show that featured Robin Williams and Carson satirizing the LA Rodney King riots.

The others, while perhaps unwise in the politically correct climate we have in America today, were no more racist that if I called a black man a negro, or vice versa.

It was a tempest blown up by political activists in the leftist camp and by cosmopolitan beltway libertarians, both of whom oppose Paul and can't find any real dirt on him.

So, they created it out of nothing.
 
Hmmm...I'd always thought Ilana Mercer was a neocon. It's nice to see that she's putting in a good word for Paul.

Ilana Mercer said:
Contra Paulites, Beltway libertarians have generally supported the Iraq war, although they've cooled to it since the war lost some of its Cool Quotient.
Which means they were libertarians in name only.

cool hand luke said:
The racist statements were published in Ron Paul's newletter entilted: "THE RON PAUL REPORT" and another iteration of it with Paul's name in the masthead.

It's not reasonable to believe that Paul didn't at least know about the comments and approve of them.
Not this AGAIN. :rolleyes:

CHL, you keep trying to push this "racist" angle and have even tried to claim that Paul doesn't support the Second Amendment! What is going on here? I don't want to personally attack anyone, but you're really damaging your credibility. Are you working for some foreign lobby that doesn't want to lose US taxpayer-funded aid? Come on, now.

For "proof" that Ron Paul is an evil racist, please go here:

Ron Paul's Racism in Action
 
Israel is the biggest recipient of US foreign aid, thanks to their lobby's stranglehold on Congress. Another major recipient is Egypt. Heck, there are many countries on the US dole.

Ron Paul wants US tax dollars to be spent only on the US, and a lot of people don't like that. Libertarians do, however, because if you're being taxed for something that doesn't benefit you, then it's theft. Why should my tax dollars go to funding illegal Israeli settlements or Israel's WMD programs when they could be used for something like cancer research here at home, or sealing our border with Mexico?
 
CHL, you keep trying to push this "racist" angle and have even tried to claim that Paul doesn't support the Second Amendment! What is going on here? I don't want to personally attack anyone, but you're really damaging your credibility. Are you working for some foreign lobby that doesn't want to lose US taxpayer-funded aid? Come on, now

Israel is the biggest recipient of US foreign aid, thanks to their lobby's stranglehold on Congress. Another major recipient is Egypt. Heck, there are many countries on the US dole.

Unbelievable.

First, I'm not Jewish.

Second, do you really think that the Israeli lobby would bother with an obscure internet forum. (Despite it's size, TFL is still relatively small).

Third, you're not doing much here to counter the credible allegations that Paul is an anti-semite.

Bottom line: If the Ron Paul supporters are going to post three or four threads per day lauding him, they need to be able to handle opposing viewpoints.

There are very legitimate arguments to be made that Paul is a racist (based on his newsletters and proven ties to white supremicist organizations), and that he's no friend of the second amendment (based on his vote against the PLCAA).

Name calling and false accusations aren't going to knock those agruments down.

If you don't wish to hear negative comments about Ron Paul, don't post so many threads about him. Once you start a thread he's fair game (within the rules established by this forum).

BTW- If you started five threads a day about John McCain I'd post negative comments about him in all five.
 
Unbelievable.

First, I'm not Jewish.
When did I say you were?

Second, do you really think that the Israeli lobby would bother with an obscure internet forum. (Despite it's size, TFL is still relatively small).
Actually, I was being facetious with the "foreign lobby" remark. But it just so happens that many in the Israel lobby are not Jewish. Some Christians think that modern Israel is some kind of fulfillment of prophecy and are loyal to Israel for that reason. (This is grossly unbiblical, but I won't go there....)

Third, you're not doing much here to counter the credible allegations that Paul is an anti-semite.
LOL! I guess you're not yet aware that my mother is Jewish (though she converted to Christianity). So ethnically speaking, I'm Jewish myself. However, I'm quite anti-Zionist. More than a few Jews are. See here, for example: http://nkusa.org/

Besides, even if I were a goose-stepping Nazi, how would anything I say reflect on what Ron Paul believes? Obviously he's not an anti-Semite -- though in the minds of the Israel-first crowd, anyone who doesn't believe America should bleed itself dry for Israel is an "anti-Semite."

Bottom line: If the Ron Paul supporters are going to post three or four threads per day lauding him, they need to be able to handle opposing viewpoints.
Fair enough, but it would be nice to hear something other than the same old smears for a change.

There are very legitimate arguments to be made that Paul is a racist (based on his newsletters and proven ties to white supremicist organizations)
The newsletter issue has been dealt with ad nauseam.

What are these "proven ties" to white supremacist organizations you're talking about? Yeah, I'm sure some such organizations might support him, but that doesn't mean he endorses their viewpoints.

and that he's no friend of the second amendment (based on his vote against the PLCAA).
Ron Paul has NEVER voted in favor of a federal gun restriction. If he didn't vote for something deemed pro-gun, then perhaps it was because he felt it was unconstitutional? He is as pro-gun as they come, but since he's a man of integrity, he cannot be expected to vote for legislation that violates the Constitution in any way. He took an oath, and he takes that oath seriously -- unlike just about every other US politician.

Name calling and false accusations aren't going to knock those agruments down.
Try not to be so thin-skinned -- no one has called you any names. At least I haven't. And like I said, the "false accusation" was facetious. Sorry if it didn't come across that way. I was basically ribbing you, not intending to be mean.

Nevertheless, I think you need to do more work if you want people to take these accusations you're making against Paul seriously.
 
When did I say you were? (Jewish)

Actually, I was being facetious with the "foreign lobby" remark. But it just so happens that many in the Israel lobby are not Jewish. Some Christians think that modern Israel is some kind of fulfillment of prophecy and are loyal to Israel for that reason. (This is grossly unbiblical, but I won't go there....)

I didn't see anything in your original post that would indicate you were kidding. One of these :D would have helped.

Given the accusatory tone adopted by some (not all) Ron Paul supporters, there was no reason to assume you were joking.

I'm glad to know you weren't serious.


Ron Paul has NEVER voted in favor of a federal gun restriction. If he didn't vote for something deemed pro-gun, then perhaps it was because he felt it was unconstitutional?

I'm sure he voted against the PLCAA for that reason. He voted against the damage award cap for malpractice suits on that basis as well. However, I think his thinking was seriously flawed on the PLCAA and it taints his record like perma-blue.
 
Ilana Mercer is Jewish, both of Ron Paul's economics mentors were Jewish, and the Ludwig von Mises Institute, Paul's economics information and philosophical resource, was co-founded by a Jew.

There isn't a drop of anti-Semitic blood running in Ron Pauls body. He's never made an anti-Semitic statement. He's never acted as an anti-Semite would act.

It's pretty easy to see and understand that Ron Paul isn't anti-Semitic and that any claim of such is scurrilous.
 
Nixon and Reagan didn't get away with this type of thing (Watergate, Iran-Contra) and Ron Paul shouldn't get a free pass either.
OK, lets just pretend that Ron Paul had admitted to beng a racist.how is being racist even REMOTELY coperable to breaking and entering, burlery, fraud, election fixing, lying under oath, destruction of documents, violating arms sals laws, tampering in foreign counties afairs, etc? Guess I dont see how ronpaulgate is comperable in any stretch of the imagination to waterate or Iran-contra.What is it that "Ron Paul shouldn't get a free pass" on that he's trying to?
 
Well Jr, I guess you're right; Ron Paul's racism might not be as bad as the actions of a murderer. Unless you happen to be black and would prefer not to go back to the days when segregation and explicit racism were openly tolerated here. But if you don't mind signs commanding black people to not use certain water fountains, bathrooms, and restaurants, I'm not going to try to convince you otherwise. Unsuprisingly, Ron Paul himself stated that he would vote against the Civil Rights Act. Good job reaching out to minority voters, Ron. :rolleyes: Hillbama would tear Ron Paul a new one about the Civil Rights Act during a debate, and with good reason. I suppose that in response, Ron's voice would start rising, he'd start pointing his finger, and he'd start stammering about a "property issue."

So, when the prospects of liberty loom, carpe diem. Loving liberty viscerally means that when one encounters a man whose understanding of freedom and individual rights approximates – if not parallels – your own, you seize the day. Those who stand on the sidelines are slaves to abstractions – and worse: They are mollycoddled milksops.

Well, at least Ron Paul supporters are consistent inasmuch as they consistently insult anyone who doesn't support Ron Paul with silly names. Iliana should have stayed in South Africa, because most Americans are not familiar with the "mollycoddled milksop" term; she ought to instead stick with the tried and true labels consistently used by Ron Paul supporters for those who dare question Ron Paul's positions, terms like "smearbunds" (whatever those are), socialist-communist, communist-socialist, neo-cons, zionists, etc....

I sure do hope that Iliana is not black. Ron Paul appears to have the same attitudes that the former South African government had about black people; namely, that black people are not entitled to civil rights, and that 95% of black people are criminals. Paul's campaign did not return the campaign contribution of a white-supremist wacko, and I'm not surprised about that.

If wanting the Civil Rights Act enforced by the President of the United States makes me a "mollycoddled milksop", a "smearbund", a "zionist", and/or a "communist-socialist", then so be it.
 
It's pretty easy to see and understand that Ron Paul isn't anti-Semitic and that any claim of such is scurrilous.

I beleive that when his banner comes down off of Stormfront and he publically rejects that crew.

WildhecanstarthereAlaska TM
 
If Ron Paul's banner is on the StormFront web site, that's an indication they're opposed to him since they know full well what their association means to his candidacy.

Since you're opposed to Ron Paul and visit StormFront, that must mean you're anti-Semitic too.

Explain why you're anti-Semitic or when you stopped being anti-Semitic.
 
Well Jr, I guess you're right; Ron Paul's racism might not be as bad as the actions of a murderer. Unless you happen to be black and would prefer not to go back to the days when segregation and explicit racism were openly tolerated here. But if you don't mind signs commanding black people to not use certain water fountains, bathrooms, and restaurants, I'm not going to try to convince you otherwise. Unsuprisingly, Ron Paul himself stated that he would vote against the Civil Rights Act.
Do you have any evidence that Ron Paul advocates seregation? I havent seen it in anyting I've read.Also, if the Civil Rghts Act includes any type of affirmative action, I'd vote against it too.Not because I'm a racist, but because I'm NOT.racism is racism, even when its white people getting descriminated against.Just like sexism is sexism, even when its men being descriminated against.And thats what affirmative actin does.Neither I, nor ANY member of my family, going back as far as m grandmother has traced our history (which goes back beyond the settlement of this country) ever owned a slave.Why am I punshed for other people's ancestors actions? No one in my family that I know of has ever uttered a racist comment, or descriminated against anone.Why should be punishd for those who did?

P.S.and I"m not even a ROn Paul supporter, and never planned on voting for him.
 
Since you're opposed to Ron Paul and visit StormFront, that must mean you're anti-Semitic too.

Explain why you're anti-Semitic or when you stopped being anti-Semitic.

LOL...the logic of a Paul supporter.

WildokbacktogunsthisistooboringAlaska ™
 
Now I understand; Ron Paul's opposition to the Civil Rights Act is justified because of affirmative action. Tell that to all of the black people who don't want to go back to a segregated society, and who would prefer that the President enforce the Civil Rights Act.

I don't trust Ron Paul to enforce the Civil Rights Act. Especially when the Ron Paul newsletter called 95% of blacks criminals, and complained that Black people have civil rights, as well as the ability to vote for Black representatives. Add the fact that Ron Paul knowingly retained a campaign contribution from a white supremist. But that's not so surprising now, is it? Welcome to Ron Paul's vision for America. :barf:

The Civil Rights Act needs to be enforced, notwithstanding the weak complaints regarding affirmative action and/or a "property issue." :rolleyes:
 
Israel is the biggest recipient of US foreign aid,

Israel is the 14th richest country in the world and yet they are the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid:confused:

Israel will receive $2.4 billion in 2008. Since the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty in 1979, Israel has received up to $3 billion in aid annually from the US.

Israel is a land of only 6 million people. That works out to about $5000 in arms aid per man, woman and child, and of course, since nearly a third of the people in Israel are Palestinian, and won't see a penny's (or bullet's) worth of that aid, it's really closer to $7500 per person. And remember, this is no basket case nation; this is one of the most technologically developed and wealthiest countries on earth we're talking about here.

So far we are only talking about miltary aid, total aid to Israel exceeds $100 Billion per year.

thanks to their lobby's stranglehold on Congress.

How much of the money taxpayers give the 14th richest country on Earth is then used to lobby congress?

Furthermore the US requires Israel to use 75 percent of all the military aid it receives to buy US-made arms. Consequently, every year billions of dollars are funneled from US taxpayers to hundreds of arms corporations, who then wage lobbying campaigns pushing for even more foreign military aid.

It is a legitimate question to ask if this is something we should be doing with our tax dollars.

The cries of anti-semitism or neo nazi ring hollow when the facts are presented.
 
The cries of anti-semitism or neo nazi ring hollow when the facts are presented.
Indeed, the cries should be anti-American when ever the anti-Semitic card is played in response to calls for cessation of aid to Israel.

Support for aid to Israel, or any other foreign nation, should be categorically viewed as anti-America, and all aid should be stopped, without exception.
 
Support for aid to Israel, or any other foreign nation, should be categorically viewed as anti-America, and all aid should be stopped, without exception.

Welcome to Ron Paul's vision of isolationism for the United States. :)
 
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