Ron Paul Things You Want To Know About, But Don’t (Yet)
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
A diligent
Google search has failed to turn up a summer concert tour in promotion
of the deep thought of Tommy Thompson or Mitt Romney, or an Internet
radio station dedicated to the insight and erudition of Rudy Giuliani
or Fred Thompson.
Ron Paul, as
usual, is another matter. Here are some recent initiatives that
in my opinion deserve to be better known:
Freedom
Tour ’08. Musician Marc Scibilia is heading up this 28-city
tour, which begins in just a matter of days, promoting the Ron
Paul message via music and more. See the brief video here.
It’s impossible to imagine this not being a great time.
Revolution
By Mail. This project is designed to get Ron Paul’s #1 New
York Times bestseller, The
Revolution: A Manifesto, into the hands of as many Americans
as possible, beginning with GOP delegates and then extending to
many other sectors of society. Check
it out, and here’s
a YouTube.
The creator
of Revolution By Mail, whom I do not know personally, intends to
turn his attention in the near future to the forthcoming RevolutionBookClub.com,
to promote the formation of book clubs all over the country and
the world to discuss and learn from the Manifesto,
as well as (at some point) other books belonging to the same tradition
of thought.
Revolution
March. The rally in Washington, D.C. that Dr. Paul called
for is taking place on July 12, with the man himself as the keynote
speaker. The Freedom Tour concludes with a performance at this event.
If you’re even slightly considering attending, go ahead and take
the plunge, and bring a bunch of friends. Can you actually imagine
not enjoying yourself?
RonPaulRevolutionBook.com.
This is a grassroots project to promote The
Revolution: A Manifesto. You’ll find lots of things here,
including promotional ideas, lower-than-Amazon pricing on bulk orders,
and lots of neat merchandise.
Revolution
Broadcasting. In addition to its regular programming, this
Ron Paul-inspired Internet broadcasting venture has provided live
coverage of various Ron Paul events, and now carries the weekly
National Ron Paul Conference Call.
I have a new
program of my own there, as a matter of fact, which runs on Tuesdays
for an hour at 2:00 pm Eastern. (Episodes will
be archived here and a podcast feed will go up in the relatively
near future.) My first guest will be Bill Kauffman, author of the
excellent new book Ain’t
My America: The Long, Noble History of Antiwar Conservatism and
Middle American Anti-Imperialism. There’s no way that can
be dull.
Republican
Convention. In this
interview with Charles Goyette, Ron Paul calls for a "grand
rally" in St. Paul at the time of the Republican Convention.
Rand Paul
wants to see as many people get to St. Paul as possible. The campaign
website will have details soon.
Operation
St. Paul. The designer of the High
Tide Ron Paul television commercial is proposing that the St.
Paul area be blanketed with signs and ads promoting Ron Paul’s message
around the time of the Republican Convention in early September.
He describes the initiative and the rationale behind it here,
where there’s also a ChipIn link for donations. Here are a couple
of billboards he has designed for the occasion:


The main idea
behind Operation St. Paul is to keep spreading the word about these
ideas. What’s more, though, I think it’d just be fun to pull off.
Lots of volunteers
have put in countless hours on behalf of all these good causes.
Let’s get the word out about them.
June
3, 2008
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [view his
website; send
him mail] is senior fellow in American history at the
Ludwig von Mises Institute
and the author, most recently, of Sacred
Then and Sacred Now: The Return of the Old Latin Mass and
33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask.
His other books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free chapter
here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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