Here is my little confession to the world at large: I’m
a Ron Paul supporter. This might not seem like much in the way
of a confession, but for me it represents something of a coming
out. No, I’m not some aging red-diaper baby who has only
now seen the light. It’s more like a reawakening. Let
me explain.
In my most youthful and idealistic years I labored in the vineyards
of conservo-libertarian think-tankdom. They were not necessarily
bad years; in fact, I met lots of dedicated and wonderful people,
most all of whom I consider friends to this day. Together, we
toiled tirelessly to produce studies, reports, commentaries,
and policy briefs full of logic and evidence and reason explaining
why this or that political or economic course of action would
yield the most desirable outcome in terms of justice, prosperity,
morality, decency, and simple human dignity.
But eventually, I grew disenchanted with the whole project.
It began to dawn on me that we could churn out report after
report warning of the malevolence and stupidity of any given
government proposal and extolling the fairness and wisdom of
the best alternative policy decisions – and yet it would
never matter. And the reason it would never matter is because
those to whom the studies, reports, commentaries, and policy
briefs were most obviously addressed did not care about things
like logic and evidence and reason. They were corporate media
hacks and politicians, and what they care about most is popularity
and power – things that only the most disordered of personalities
place at the pinnacle of their Maslowian hierarchy of needs.
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In the years since my exodus from "The Movement,"
as we used to call it, I’ve (understandably, I plead)
become a bitter, curmudgeonly cynic on the subject of all things
political. I decided my father, who once told me he hasn’t
voted in any election since Nixon became president and who believes
all politicians are thieves and parasites, is absolutely right.
Like Dad, I do not suffer fools and their B.S. gladly, with
the result being that I cannot read newspapers or stand watching
even 30 seconds of any TV "news" at the risk of my
boiling blood greatly curtailing my personal longevity. I’ve
become a principled nonvoter and, in the process, annoyed some
of my friends and utterly baffled my girlfriend.
But I digress. I met Ron Paul a few years ago, while I was
still toiling in those aforementioned vineyards. He was, just
as he appears in his current campaign, a warm, affable, sincere
man who firmly believes that what he’s doing is in the
best interests of his fellow Americans. We spent some time together
in a car driving to Hillsdale, Michigan, where he was to give
a speech at the college there, and it was a wonderfully refreshing
drive. In my life in think-tankdom, Dr. Paul was far from the
first or only politician I interacted with. What he was was
a normal human being who happened to hold a seat in the U.S.
House of Representatives. And as far as I know, to this day,
he is the only member of Congress to enjoy this distinction.
So when I say I’m a Ron Paul supporter, I want it to
register with as much impact as possible. I hate politics and
politicians. I hate the stage-managed presidential dog-and-pony
shows. Excluding public hanging, I have never truly supported
any politician for anything, whether Democrat, Republican, Libertarian,
or nebulous independent.
But today, I sent in a donation to Ron Paul’s campaign.
Why?
In 2000, I was convinced that Bush, Jr. vs. Gore might very
well be the most awful presidential election ever conceived.
In 2004, I thought Bush vs. Kerry was the worst "choice"
ever. And now here we are in 2008, and the terrible prospect
of Hillary Clinton vs. John McCain exceeds the capacity of the
English language to describe its truly monumental dreadfulness.
No, I don’t believe in electoral politics, and I’d
rather spend my time and money on more personally gratifying
endeavors, like any normal fellow would, but I think that, after
the last eight years of misrule under the scion of a family
of mediocrities, Dr. Paul might be the last hope for America
to recover some sense of itself as something other than a retarded,
belligerent, imperial suicide.
On the day when I present my papers to the heel-clicking goon
in a ski mask demanding to know why I am leaving the land of
the allegedly free and the home of the selectively brave in
favor of some tropical island that does not have soldiers in
more than 130 countries, I at least want to have the peace of
mind knowing that I tried. I tried as much and as often as my
circumstances and temperament allowed.
Ron Paul won’t win the Republican nomination, but I don’t
care about that. I care about the message the existence of his
candidacy powerfully perpetuates. And that message is, "Dear
Corporate Politico-Media Complex: I will not be told what to
think or who to support, nor will I ever again appear to approve
of your vast criminal enterprise. Kindly kiss my rear end, now
that you’ve been exposed to the entire world for the evil
phonies that you are."
If for nothing else, I thank you now for this, Dr. Paul.