Dr.
Ron Paul Tightens the Screws – Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying
and Love the Money Bomb
by Rick Fisk
by Rick Fisk
DIGG THIS
When the
dust cleared, there were over seven million dollars collected
and deposited into the Ron Paul campaign coffers, just 5 days into
the second month of the quarter. While there was a push sometime
past midday, November 5, 2007, to beat Mitt Romney's one-day fund-raising
drive of 3.1 million dollars, there was a huge difference in the
result and the methods used. Romney received pledges. Ron Paul received
real money or, as real as they allow us plebes to possess
nowadays.
The
number reported by the Associated
Press was "more than 4.2 million" raised in a single day. Ron
Paul Graphs puts it at 4.014 million if you don't count the
offline donations of 326,000
added to the mix just after midnight. Counting those offline donations,
the number was 4.3 million. This was an event completely scripted
outside campaign officialdom and embraced by his grassroots supporters.
It was the largest single-day haul on-line in the history of politics.
For those who are discounting the value and strength of Dr. Paul’s
grassroots support, this should kill their arguments dead. They
may have a chance to salvage their careers. They can start by admitting
that only real people with real money can buy an internet connection
or a cell-phone.
Press outlets
didn't really know how to handle this historic event. The first
old-media outlet to report it found their numbers had already gone
stale by hundreds of thousands of dollars by the time they could
post their copy. During a late surge, the rate of donations had
reached 220,000 dollars per hour.
Folks, neoconservatism
is officially dead. Guy Fawkes may have the last laugh after all.
Even at Free
Republic, home to the most cartoonish versions of "conservatives"
ever assembled on the web, posters who had previously dropped out
of sight, came back to revel in the carnage that was the Fifth of
November. The thread
there starts out with the usual detractors. However, if you can
gird your loins past the first couple of pages, it gets real interesting.
Money didn't
talk on what has become known as Guy Fawkes Day. I hate that cliché.
Money can't talk. People voted with their pocket books. The market
moved. The most brilliant part of this was not necessarily the choice
of days or the efforts by supporters to spread the word but the
choice to show in real-time what was happening. Only 17,500 people
pledged on the November 5th website. There were double that many
who actually participated. The lesson of economics is being taught
in real time by the one candidate who speaks that language fluently.
Hear that sound?
It's fear. The screws are being tightened against the limbs of the
status quo. Who needs gunpowder when you have the Internet, the
Constitution and forty thousand credit cards?
The New
York Times, USA
Today and CNN
jumped on the news bandwagon late in the afternoon with fairly positive
stories of the day's events and the Washington
Post reported too but couldn't do it with a straight face.
Come on, how could you report on an event like this without mentioning
that some obscure, wrestling porn-star-wannabee posted to a blog
in support of Ron Paul? Why, it would be a 'Dog Bites Man!' story
otherwise.
Reading some
of these old-media produced stories can be frustrating. The old
media had a chance to tell the story correctly, but generally couldn't
bring themselves to do it. The caption in the NY Times story below
Dr. Paul's scowling picture stated: "Representative Ron Paul’s use
of Guy Fawkes Day to encourage donations to his presidential campaign
netted millions."
Ugh. Ron Paul
had nothing to do with the event. According to the best old-media
article of the day, written by ABC's Z.
Byron Wolf, Trevor Lyman operated the November 5th site collecting
pledges but didn't actually come up with the idea himself. He simply
acted on a post he read in one of the Ron Paul meet-up forums. That
was October 18th, a mere 3 weeks prior to the historic event.
Here's another
great lesson to be learned from the Austrian school. If you allow
a market to self-organize and operate freely, the results can be
staggering.
That's true
in more ways than one. The 4.3 million dollar pick-me-up is obviously
an end unto itself, but the resulting value of the media's discussion
of what it means, could be worth 5 times that amount. For better
or worse, the next week and perhaps even Sunday's political shows
will see the old media covering what has happened and discussing
what it means to the future of politics. There's no getting around
that. George "That's not going to happen" Snuffleufflelgus might
learn to talk through his teeth. Those of you with televisions can
fill me in Monday.
For fans like
myself, watching events unfold was by far the most exciting experience
of this campaign thus far but I dare say it will only be a milestone
among many. Thomas
Woods gets the award for most humorous observation, and the
Lew Rockwell team of bloggers gets the "thank God they're around
for people without television" award. I coded up an SMS text messaging
router today with the donation counter on one screen and the Lew
Rockwell blog just behind it. I can't imagine that I was alone.
New Media articles were too numerous to read and started showing
up just prior to the clock's race toward midnight.
The truly
exciting result of this day will be the number of fence-sitters
and "leaners"
who jump on the bandwagon. Politics is generally a wait and see
affair. Rasmussen
has reported that a full 60% of the Iowa Straw Poll voters said
they could envision changing their minds before the Iowa Caucuses:
However,
the race in Iowa is very fluid. For each of the top four candidates,
between 57% and 61% of their supporters say they might change
their mind before the caucus is held.
That didn't
get reported much, if at all. Ron Paul's two biggest hurdles now
are name recognition and skepticism. The skepticism is normal. A
significant number of people have been waiting to see if Ron Paul
really has a chance. Well....I think we've seen that myth blown
apart today by a money bomb. The name recognition will commence
to increase but don’t expect that the old media will be reporting
any poll number jumps. It may just be that the Paul campaign mirrors
Kerry’s who polled at 4% nationally before winning New Hampshire
and Iowa.
Bombs away…..
November
7, 2007
Rick
Fisk [send him mail] is
a 45-year-old software developer and entrepreneur. He is married,
has 3 children and resides in Austin, TX.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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