Ron Paul Is a Protest Candidate
by
Isaac Lopez
by Isaac Lopez
DIGG THIS
Ron Paul is
a protest candidate. No more. No less.
What you have
to consider, though, is that Dr. Paul's campaign is a political
dream come true for a lot of people in America right now. More proof
of that can be found in the first ten days of the fourth quarter,
where he's already raised
over half of what Huckabee did all of last 3rd quarter. The
day after the poorly moderated Michigan debates, Dr. Paul had a
$100,000 day online (imagine how much more he could have raised
if he’d have been treated like a candidate who had just raised $5
million dollars from enthusiastic Americans ready to vote for him).
What the media
and Republican power center hasn’t quite figured out yet is that
Ron Paul's campaign is not going away. At some point in time the
media (and the people in general) are
going to have to recognize the facts here. We have a fiscally
conservative candidate who is garnering huge amounts of people-powered
cash, talking about peoples’ top issue (getting out of the Iraqi
civil war), while returning American government to its Constitutional
roots. His voting record is as stellar in its adherence to Constitutional
principle as you could ever imagine a voting record could be. Oh
yeah, and he doesn't accept money from special interests.
Oh, and one
more thing: the
Ron Paul package comes tremendously steeped in Reagan tradition.
Reagan's genial conservativism
proved to be a powerfully winning formula for drawing people on
both sides of the aisle. Ron Paul has already proven that this
formula works like a charm in two separate elections in Texas, one
where he beat a
well-funded Democrat incumbent, and another where he beat a
well-funded Republican who had previously been a Democrat. This
is a man with bona fide cross-party appeal.
Ron Paul's
Revolution isn't just a neat slogan. Whether the average person
understands/believes it or not, there is radical change being peacefully
born in our political system. The establishment is only going to
be able to hide and marginalize Paul's campaign for so long. He's
going to start (smartly) spending money soon. He has spent hardly
a dime yet and he's gained ground in nearly every poll you can point
to over the last six months (especially in primary states). These
poll numbers have risen thanks to his debate performances, his non-stop
touring across the states from Washington DC, to Washington
State and his most powerful (yet thus far ignored) superweapon:
the most free,
and abundant political advertising that a candidate has ever enjoyed
having in the history of political advertising.
People
are going to find him... And when they do, they're going to
find that this man is an
open book. He's not afraid to talk
at length about his principles to anyone who will listen, unabashedly
and consistently speaking truth to power. With each debate, his
willingness to stand up against popular and popularly backwards
thought is going to gain him a lot of fans on both the left and
the right. And as these reasonable folks explore their feelings
of agreement on different issues (nearly everybody in America strongly
agrees with Ron Paul on at least one core issue that's important
to them), those who speak out about their political confusion and
raise discussion about it will find themselves being brow-beat and
driven out of their respective party by loyalists who demand near
fealty to their flawed mainstream candidates (you can witness this
already happening every day on RedState, FreeRepublic, or Daily
Kos).
If Ron Paul
doesn't get the Republican nomination, you have to remember that
Ross Perot got 18% of the vote as a third-party candidate with a
message nowhere near as powerful as Dr. Paul’s. Perot’s third party
was something that he had just invented on the spot the Reform
Party. Dr. Paul already has a strong association to an existing
political party to funnel his supporters into should his bid for
the Republican Nomination fall short. With the backing of a party
and enough widespread grassroots support, Ron Paul is the only candidate
who's spot in the post-primary debates is virtually cemented. Everyone
else still has to get by the primaries. All he has to do is make
a decent showing in the primaries and then say yes to the supporters
who have donated and will do everything they can to ensure that
his name is on the ballot, even if this means accepting
the Libertarian party nomination. Let Dr. Paul be coy now, but
his campaign is like Plato’s cave, and nobody is going back down.
Dr. Paul’s name will be on the ballot come hell or high water.
That's when
the fireworks will really begin, because Ron Paul out-flanks both
sides of the establishment candidates on issues that are crucial
to their base's. Hillary vs. Rudy vs. Ron Paul in a debate is going
to be Must See TV for the ages. It's going to be beautiful watching
the establishment snakes double talk on their bases core issues,
while Dr. Paul talks credibly about things like State's Rights,
local controls, less government, fewer taxes, more personal liberty,
a fundamentally sound economy, and peace through non-intervention
teamed with free and abundant commerce.
And when election
day comes, and people are in that voting booth with the curtain
closed, and nothing but themselves, their United States ballot,
and their own personal best interests in mind, they're going to
find themselves faced with an unfamiliar reality: that they have
a decision, and that they're not making a choice between Hillary
and Rudy (the lesser of two evils), but that they're making a choice
between Hillary and Ron Paul, and Rudy and Ron Paul.
And they're
going to remember how their party has treated them. They're going
to remember how the system has treated them. They're going to remember.
And I'll tell
you what: they're going to protest.
October
16, 2007
Isaac Lopez
[send him mail] is a
husband, father, and technology marketer living in Vancouver, WA.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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