An Open Letter to the Protestant Community in
Behalf of Ron Paul
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
DIGG THIS
Member of Congress
and Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul is the premier advocate
for political and religious liberty in politics today. He is the
most pro-life, pro-family, pro-property, pro-Constitution politician
in history. If it is possible to be more Jeffersonian than Jefferson,
then Ron Paul is the man.
On issues that
are dear to the vast majority of Protestant Christians, Ron Paul
stands head and shoulders above the other candidates. Consider just
a few.
The Issues
Abortion:
Ron Paul is a physician who has delivered more than 4,000 babies.
He not only opposes federal funding of embryonic stem cell research
and partial-birth abortion, he is against abortion itself. As he
himself has said:
In 40 years
of medical practice, I never once considered performing an abortion,
nor did I ever find abortion necessary to save the life of a pregnant
woman. In Congress, I have authored legislation that seeks to
define life as beginning at conception, H.R. 1094. I am also the
prime sponsor of H.R. 300, which would negate the effect of Roe
v Wade by removing the ability of federal courts to interfere
with state legislation to protect life. This is a practical, direct
approach to ending federal court tyranny which threatens our constitutional
republic and has caused the deaths of 45 million of the unborn.
I have also authored H.R. 1095, which prevents federal funds to
be used for so-called "population control." Many talk
about being pro-life. I have taken and will continue to advocate
direct action to restore protection for the unborn.
Religion:
Ron Paul has issued a statement of his personal faith that should
satisfy Protestant Christians of any persuasion:
I have never
been one who is comfortable talking about my faith in the political
arena. In fact, the pandering that typically occurs in the election
season I find to be distasteful. But for those who have asked,
I freely confess that Jesus Christ is my personal Savior, and
that I seek His guidance in all that I do. I know, as you do,
that our freedoms come not from man, but from God. My record of
public service reflects my reverence for the Natural Rights with
which we have been endowed by a loving Creator.
The reason
we do not find very many references to religion in his writings
and speeches is because, unlike President Bush, Dr. Paul does not
cloak his political proposals with religious rhetoric in hopes of
beguiling Christians.
Family values:
Ron Paul lives his family values. Unlike Christian "leaders"
like prophecy guru Hal Lindsey, who is on his fourth wife, and adulterous
Republican politicians like the thrice-married Newt Gingrich and
Rudy Giuliani, Dr. Paul has been married to the same woman for fifty
years, and has five children and seventeen grandchildren. He also
opposes same-sex marriage, and has voted to prohibit federal funding
for the joint adoption of a child between individuals who are not
related by blood or marriage.
Gun control:
Ron Paul is the gun owners’ best friend. Not only has he consistently
opposed the expansion of federal gun control laws, he has introduced
in Congress the Second Amendment Protection Act to repeal unconstitutional
federal laws that allow bureaucrats to restrict the constitutional
rights of law-abiding gun owners. Dr. Paul opposes waiting periods,
instant background checks, and government databases of gun owners.
Illegal
immigration: Ron Paul is opposed to "open borders."
He believes that the U.S. government should fight terrorism by first
securing its own borders. Because he believes that true citizenship
requires cultural connections and an allegiance to the United States,
he favors an end to birthright citizenship. And because he believes
that it insults legal immigrants, he does not favor amnesty for
illegal immigrants in any form. But Dr. Paul is not anti-immigrant
in any sense of the word. He believes that the immigration problem
fundamentally is a welfare state problem. He joins the vast majority
of Americans who welcome immigrants who want to come here, work
hard, and build a better life. He opposes welfare state subsidies
for illegal immigrants that alienate taxpayers and breed suspicion
of immigrants. Dr. Paul also believes that all federal government
business should be conducted in English.
American
Sovereignty: Ron Paul is against any form of a world
government or a new world order. Because he believes that the United
Nations is a corrupt organization that was designed to undermine
sovereignty and representative government, he has introduced legislation
to withdraw the United States from the UN. Dr. Paul likewise opposes
the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SSP),
the NAFTA Super Highway, and any form of a North American Union.
He believes that these plans are the result of an unholy alliance
of foreign consortiums and government officials. Rather than resulting
from the demands of the free market, they are an extension of government-managed
trade schemes that benefit politically-connected interests. Dr.
Paul also opposes foreign aid since it is generally nothing more
than U.S. taxpayer dollars given away to corrupt foreign governments.
The Questions
So what gives?
Why aren’t Protestant Christians lining up in droves behind Ron
Paul?
It turns out
that because Ron Paul opposes constitutional amendments banning
abortion, same-sex marriage, and flag burning, some Protestants
have been led to believe that he is not a real Republican.
Some Christians think it inconsistent that Dr. Paul can oppose abortion
but also oppose a constitutional amendment banning abortion, oppose
same-sex marriage but also oppose a constitutional amendment defining
marriage as the union between a man and a woman, and oppose flag
burning but also oppose a constitutional amendment outlawing flag
burning.
Because Ron
Paul ran for president in 1988 as a libertarian and opposes the
war on drugs, foreign aid to Israel, and the war in Iraq, other
Protestants have come to the conclusion that he is not a genuine
conservative. They assert:
- Ron Paul
is a libertarian so he must be a libertine, or at least an advocate
of alternative lifestyles.
- Ron Paul opposes the war on drugs so he must support drug use.
- Ron Paul
opposes giving foreign aid to Israel so he must be either pro-Palestinian
or anti-Semitic.
- Ron Paul
opposes the Iraq war so he must not support the troops.
These are false
assertions.
The Answers
But if anyone
is a real Republican and a genuine conservative it is Ron Paul.
He has been elected to Congress ten times as a Republican. He is
the former honorary chair of the Republican Liberty Caucus. He consistently
scores a perfect 100 on the conservative New American magazine’s
"Freedom Index."
Unlike many
in Congress who call themselves Republicans or conservatives, Ron
Paul actually believes in strictly following the Constitution. Representative
Paul never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is
expressly authorized by the Constitution – even if it means courageously
casting the lone "no" vote. He has consistently voted
to lower or abolish federal taxes, spending, and regulation. He
has actively promoted the return of government to its proper constitutional
levels. He is recognized as the leading spokesman in Washington
for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free markets,
and a return to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed
currency. He has also received many awards and honors during his
career in Congress from organizations such as the National Taxpayers
Union, Citizens Against Government Waste, Council for a Competitive
Economy, and Young Americans for Freedom.
It is because
Ron Paul adheres to the Constitution that he opposes the Patriot
Act, domestic surveillance programs, warrantless searches, restrictions
on freedom of speech, national ID cards, federal information databases,
and what he calls the Homeland Security monstrosity. His congressional
website lists "The Ron Paul Freedom Principles":
- Rights belong
to individuals, not groups.
- Property
should be owned by people, not government.
- All voluntary
associations should be permissible – economic and social.
- The government’s
monetary role is to maintain the integrity of the monetary unit,
not participate in fraud.
- Government
exists to protect liberty, not to redistribute wealth or to grant
special privileges.
- The lives
and actions of people are their own responsibility, not the government’s.
Ron Paul believes
that Roe v. Wade was wrongly decided because abortion is
simply not a constitutional issue. He doesn’t think there is any
serious argument based on the text of the Constitution that there
exists a federal "right to abortion." He maintains that
the federalization of abortion law is not based on constitutional
principles, but on a social and political construct created out
of thin air by the Supreme Court. Since the federal government has
no authority to involve itself in the abortion issue, a federal
law banning abortion in the states would be just as wrong as Roe
v. Wade.
Ron Paul believes
that marriage is first and foremost a religious matter, not a government
matter. He does not think social problems can be solved by constitutional
amendments or government edicts. Taken to its logical conclusion,
the turning of regulation of domestic family relations over to the
federal government means that presumably anything can be federalized.
Because the federal government has only been granted limited, enumerated
powers by the Constitution, Dr. Paul maintains that it has no role
whatsoever regarding marriage law. Although the states should enforce
marriage contracts and settle divorces, they too should otherwise
stay out of the marriage business. It should also be pointed out
that Representative Paul was a cosponsor of the Marriage Protection
Act, which would have removed challenges to the Defense of Marriage
Act from federal courts’ jurisdiction. The Defense of Marriage Act
(PL 104-99) was passed to ensure that no state would be forced to
recognize a same-sex marriage, even if the said marriage occurred
in another state. Although Dr. Paul was not in Congress at the time
the Defense of Marriage Act was passed, he has stated that he would
have voted for it.
Like all patriotic
Americans, Ron Paul despises flag burning. He believes that the
offensive conduct of a few does not justify making an exception
to the First Amendment protections of political speech that the
majority considers to be offensive. Because he believes that freedom
of speech and freedom of expression depend on property, Dr. Paul
considers making flag burning a federal crime to be an attack on
private property. However, he does support overriding the Supreme
Court case that overturned State laws prohibiting flag burning.
Ron Paul is
against constitutional amendments banning abortion, same-sex marriage,
and flag burning precisely because he is following the Constitution
he swore allegiance to. Another reason he opposes these amendments
is because he is an advocate of that forgotten constitutional principle
of federalism. He considers the division of power between the federal
government and the states to be one of the virtues of the American
political system. To alter this balance would endanger self-government
and individual liberty. Dr. Paul is in favor of letting state legislatures
decide social policy because federalism was established to allow
decentralized, local decision-making. Following the Ninth and Tenth
Amendments, he favors all authority over matters not specifically
addressed in the Constitution remaining with state legislatures.
Although some
Protestant Christians think that because Ron Paul holds to many
libertarian ideals that he is also a libertine, nothing could be
further from the truth. The essence of libertarianism is that it
is wrong to threaten or initiate violence against a person or his
property. Force is justified only in self-defense. Libertarianism,
as explained by Murray
Rothbard, the twentieth century’s greatest proponent of it,
is a political philosophy that
holds that
the only proper role of violence is to defend person and
property against violence, that any use of violence that
goes beyond such just defense is itself aggressive, unjust, and
criminal. Libertarianism, therefore, is a theory which states
that everyone should be free of violent invasion, should be free
to do as he sees fit except invade the person or property of another.
Libertinism
is a way of life that might be considered hedonistic or sympathetic
to "alternative lifestyles." A libertine might be a libertarian,
a liberal, a conservative, a socialist, a progressive, or an anarchist.
He might be a member of the Libertarian Party, the Democratic Party,
the Republican Party, some lesser-known third party, or no political
party. One does not have to be a Christian to oppose libertinism,
as Walter
Block has superbly shown. Conservative Republicans are not immune
from libertine behavior, as we can see from the recent scandals
in Congress.
Other Christians
falsely believe that since Ron Paul opposes the war on drugs that
he supports drug use. As a physician, Dr. Paul knows firsthand the
harmful effects of mind-altering narcotics. He believes that drug
addiction is a social problem, not a crime. He has pointed out that
for the first 140 years of our country’s history we had no federal
drug war yet far fewer problems with drug addiction and crime. Dr.
Paul opposes the drug war because it encourages violence, has led
to the unnecessary prison overpopulation, has wasted hundreds of
billions of dollars of the taxpayers’ money, has been used as an
excuse to attack our civil liberties and personal privacy, has been
an excuse to undermine our financial privacy, has promoted illegal
searches and seizures resulting in innocent people losing their
lives and property, criminalizes the actions of legitimate physicians
who act in good faith when prescribing pain relief drugs, threatens
the effective treatment of chronic pain, and corrupts our police,
the military, border guards and the judicial system.
Some Protestants
who consider themselves evangelicals have wrongly concluded that
since Ron Paul opposes giving foreign aid to Israel he is pro-Palestinian
or anti-Semitic. Congressman Paul is opposed to giving foreign aid
to Israel for the simple reason that he opposes giving foreign aid
to any country. Foreign aid is, after all, money that has been taken
from American taxpayers – money that most of them would not voluntarily
send overseas if they had a choice. Any individual American who
desires to assist someone in another country is perfectly free to
do so. Dr. Paul’s perspective is that of the Founding Fathers: America
should not intervene in the internal affairs of other nations. He
believes that our meddling in the Middle East has only intensified
strife, conflict, and violence. Both sides have more military weapons
as a result of our foolish and unconstitutional foreign aid. Some
of our foreign aid even winds up in the hands of terrorists. For
more on Ron Paul and the question of foreign aid to Israel, see
Walter Block’s "An
Open Letter to the Jewish Community in Behalf of Ron Paul."
Ron Paul opposes
the Iraq war precisely because he supports the troops. He is a patriot
in every sense of the word. He opposes federal court jurisdiction
over the question of whether the phrase "under God" should
be included in the pledge of allegiance. And unlike many in the
Bush administration who avoided military service, he served as a
flight surgeon in the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam conflict.
Because Dr. Paul loves this country and all of its people, he is
opposed to endangering the life of U.S. soldiers in unnecessary
foreign wars that only enrich federal contractors. He is therefore
pro-life in an absolute sense. He believes that the best way we
can support the troops is to bring them home, not just from Iraq,
but from all of the countries in which the United States has troops
stationed. Then Americans can proudly serve in the military knowing
that they are engaged in real national defense.
It is conservative
Republicans who support pre-emptive war, bloated defense and intelligence
budgets, secret military tribunals, torture of "enemy combatants,"
extraordinary renditions, an increasingly militarized society, the
violation of basic civil liberties, undue government secrecy, and
domestic spying programs who are neither real nor genuine.
The
Answer
Protestant
Christians who love liberty, respect the Constitution, and believe
in the freedom to live their live and practice their religion without
the heavy hand of government hanging over their heads should be
drawn to Ron Paul like a magnet.
As a Baptist
myself, I realize that some Baptists don’t consider themselves Protestants.
In this article I am using the term Protestant in its broadest
sense. Therefore, this open letter is addressed to them as well.
But religion or no religion, if your creed is liberty, then Ron
Paul is the man.
November
14, 2007
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from Pensacola, FL. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. His latest
publication is War,
Foreign Policy, and the Church. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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