An Open Letter to the Catholic Community in Behalf of Ron Paul
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
In the tradition
of Walter Block’s Open
Letter to the Jewish Community in Behalf of Ron Paul and Laurence
Vance’s Open
Letter to the Protestant Community in Behalf of Ron Paul, I’d
like to say a few words to my fellow Catholics.
Never in my
life have I felt as strongly about a presidential candidate – or
about any politician, for that matter – as I do about Dr. Ron Paul,
Republican congressman from Texas. I’ve gone from being someone
so disgusted with politics that I can’t bear to read about it to
being a political junkie, avidly following the activities and successes
of this great man.
As an American
historian, I am not aware of any congressman in American history
whose voting record is so stellar, and so consistently in accord
with the Constitution.
Beyond that,
Ron Paul is not a panderer. He’ll speak to an interest group and
tell them to their faces that he has opposed and will continue to
oppose funding their pet projects. Lobbyists know they’re wasting
their money if they try to wine and dine him. He recently spoke
before the national convention of an organization aimed at protecting
the interests of a particular ethnic group, and began by saying:
"Somebody asked me whether I had a special speech for your
group, and I said, no, it’s the same speech I give everywhere."
Already by
1981, Ron Paul had earned the highest rating ever given by the National
Taxpayers Union, received the highest rating from the Council for
a Competitive Economy, and won the Liberty Award from the American
Economic Council for being "America’s outstanding defender
of economic and personal freedom."
Dr. Paul, who
entered Congress in 1976 and returned to his medical practice in
1984, picked up where he left off when he returned to Congress in
the 1996 election. I do not expect to see his like again.
He is also
a good and decent man, who really is what he appears to be when
you hear him speak. As a physician at an inner-city hospital, Ron
Paul provided medical care to anyone who needed it, regardless of
ability to pay. He never accepted money from Medicare or Medicaid,
preferring to provide free care instead. That’s what people in a
free society are supposed to do: be responsible for themselves,
and then lend their assistance to those who are vulnerable and alone.
Ron Paul is
a candidate who doesn’t insult his listeners’ intelligence, who
answers the questions he is asked, and who doesn’t simply say whatever
his audience wants to hear. And unlike other major names in the
race, Ron Paul doesn’t have to run away from his record, which reveals
an unswerving commitment to peace, freedom, and prosperity that
is second to none in all of American history.
Although I
would have supported Ron Paul back before I converted to Catholicism,
I think Catholics will like what they see when they examine his
record. Over at Defend Life, Ron Paul comes out decisively
on top in a study of the candidates’ positions on the issues
according to the guidelines recently established by the United States
bishops. (If anything, I think this study understates Paul’s
compatibility with Catholic teaching.)
On education
and home schooling, Ron Paul is the clear winner. Fred Thompson,
John McCain, and Duncan Hunter all voted for the execrable No Child
Left Behind Act, and Governors Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney have
both come out in favor of it. Ron Paul – as did the Republican Party
itself not so long ago – opposes any federal role in education,
which is the responsibility of parents and local communities.
In other words,
Ron Paul believes in a little something called subsidiarity, which
happens to be a central principle of Catholic social thought. Subsidiarity
holds that all social functions should be carried out by the most
local unit possible, as opposed to the dehumanizing alternative
whereby distant bureaucratic structures are routinely and unthinkingly
entrusted with more and more responsibilities for human well-being.
On home schooling,
Ron Paul has proposed legislation giving tax credits worth thousands
of dollars to reimburse the educational expenses of home-schooling
parents, as well as those of parents who send their children to
other kinds of schools. What presidential candidate speaks like
this?
Parental
control of child rearing, especially education, is one of the
bulwarks of liberty. No nation can remain free when the state
has greater influence over the knowledge and values transmitted
to children than the family. By moving to restore the primacy
of parents to education, the Family Education Freedom Act will
not only improve America’s education, it will restore a parent’s
right to choose how best to educate one’s own child, a fundamental
freedom that has been eroded by the increase in federal education
expenditures and the corresponding decrease in the ability of
parents to provide for their children’s education out of their
own pockets.
When it comes
to abortion, Ron Paul – an obstetrician/gynecologist who has delivered
over 4,000 babies – has been a consistent opponent of Roe v.
Wade, which he rightly considers unconstitutional. But he has
no interest in the failed strategy of the past 35 years whereby
we sit and wait for a remedy in the form of good Supreme Court justices.
His HR 300 would strip the federal courts of jurisdiction over abortion,
as per Article III, Section 2 of the Constitution. That would overturn
Roe by a simple congressional majority.
Then we could
see who is sincere on the issue, and who is just exploiting it for
votes. Few in either party really want to see the abortion status
quo overturned, since it means they can’t scare their supporters
into sending them as much money anymore.
Upon the Pope’s
death in 2005, Ron Paul paid
tribute to John Paul’s consistent defense of life. On another
occasion, he offered an additional tribute, of the sort few politicians
would utter:
To the secularists,
this was John Paul II’s unforgivable sin – he placed service to
God above service to the state. Most politicians view the state,
not God, as the supreme ruler on earth. They simply cannot abide
a theology that does not comport with their vision of unlimited
state power. This is precisely why both conservatives and liberals
savaged John Paul II when his theological pronouncements did not
fit their goals. But perhaps their goals simply were not godly.
Speaking of
John Paul II, it is important to remember that that pope was a strong
opponent of the U.S. government’s attack on Iraq, sending his personal
representative, Cardinal Pio Laghi, to Washington shortly before
the commencement of hostilities in order to insist to the president
that such a war would be unjust. The Pope’s first comments after
the war broke out were these: "When war, as in these days in
Iraq, threatens the fate of humanity, it is ever more urgent to
proclaim, with a strong and decisive voice, that only peace is the
road to follow to construct a more just and united society."
Before his
election as Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was asked
if a U.S. government attack on Iraq would be just. "Certainly
not," came the reply. He predicted that "the damage would
be greater than the values one wishes to save."
After the war
ended, Ratzinger said: "It was right to resist the war and
its threats of destruction…. It should never be the responsibility
of just one nation to make decisions for the world." "There
were not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq,"
he elsewhere observed. "To say nothing of the fact that, given
the new weapons that make possible destructions that go beyond the
combatant groups, today we should be asking ourselves if it is still
licit to admit the very existence of a ‘just war.’"
Hundreds of
thousands lost their lives in this obviously avoidable war, a war
that was based on falsehoods that we would have laughed at if they’d
been uttered by Leonid Brezhnev. But since they came from the White
House we cheer as for a football team, and duck the appalling material
and moral consequences. A country that (by regional standards) once
had an excellent health care system, opportunities for women, liberal
gun and alcohol laws, and – yes – lots of immigrants, was turned
into a disease-ridden basket case, filled with dead, wounded, and
malnourished children, for no good reason.
That’s just
wrong, and it isn’t "liberal" to say so.
Likewise, Ratzinger/Benedict
is not a "liberal" for opposing the war. He is a moral
conservative, but a man whose conservatism is more mature than the
sloganeering jingoism of so much of what passes for conservatism
in today’s America. Ron Paul is an equally sober and serious statesman,
and for that reason was one of very few Republicans with the courage
and the foresight to oppose this economic and moral fiasco from
the very start.
It is especially
satisfying to learn that in the second quarter of 2007, Ron Paul
received more donations from active duty and retired military personnel
than any other Republican candidate. By the third quarter, he was
receiving more than any other presidential candidate, Democrat
or Republican. Want to support the troops? Then support Ron Paul.
My main argument
to you, though, is not a specifically Catholic one. It’s one that
should resonate with anybody who values honesty, integrity, and
decency. Ron Paul is a good man who believes in justice and the
Constitution, and who cannot be bought. His ten terms in Congress
have proven that again and again.
And that is
why the media fears him. Unlike the rest of them, Ron Paul is unowned.
Now every establishment
hack out there wants you to vote for one of the business-as-usual
candidates. Are you really so happy with the establishment that
its endorsement or cajoling means anything to you? If anything,
it should make us all the more interested in Ron Paul – the one
candidate the establishment fears, since they know their game is
up if he should win.
Far from being
in the unhappy position of a candidate whose children won’t even
speak to him, Ron Paul is fortunate to have family members all over
the campaign trail on his behalf. He has been married to the same
woman for 50 years, and has been blessed with five children and
eighteen grandchildren. There are some family values.
Just think:
for once, you don’t have to choose the lesser among evils. You can
finally vote for someone. You can not only be happy, but
actually honored, to cast your vote for Ron Paul.
But don’t just
vote for him. Find out about him, and get out there and spread the
word.
November
21, 2007
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [view
his website;
send
him mail] is
the author of How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization. He
won first prize in the 2006 Templeton Enterprise Awards for The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy,
and his book The
Church Confronts Modernity was published in paperback this
year by Columbia University Press. An editor of The Latin Mass
magazine for eleven years, Woods has appeared in Inside the
Vatican, Catholic World Report, Catholic Historical
Review, Catholic Social Science Review, New Oxford
Review, Crisis, This Rock, and the Journal
of Markets & Morality.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
Woods Archives
|