Ron Paul Hits the Coastal Elite Big Time: A Mostly Positive Profile in the New Yorker
Former pop music critic and successful warrior against "rockism" Kelefa Sanneh delivers a long, long profile of Ron Paul in the New Yorker, hitting the campaign trail with him in Maine and Nevada and surveying the shape of his career. Newsletters are mentioned without being treated as the most important issue about Ron Paul, and intelligent questions are raised about his mysterious lack of appeal to the mysteriously departed "Tea Party" movement.
Some highlights that pick up the flavor of the piece:
During Paul's visit to Maine, he paid a visit to Colby College, in Waterville, where he was introduced by Paul Madore, a conservative activist and his state campaign chair. Madore began his introduction on a combative note, assailing "the A.C.L.U. and other leftist organizations" for "forcing us to constantly apologize for our Christian heritage." In fact Paul and the American Civil Liberties Union agree at least as often as they disagree, and they have worked together in the past. (In 2009, the A.C.L.U. sued the Transportation Security Administration on behalf of a staffer for Ron Paul's nonprofit organization, Campaign for Liberty, who was briefly detained in an airport after hesitating to explain why he was carrying a box of cash.) When Paul got to the podium, he thanked Madore for the introduction, but, near the end of his speech, he pushed back. "Liberty is liberty," he said. "Some people would use it for different religious values or no religious values—just so they get to make their choices." A few minutes later, before inviting his supporters to pose for pictures with him, he remembered something important. "I forgot to talk about the campaign," he said, grinning. "I'd like to get your vote next week."
My own experience on the (lack of) branded or self-conscious "Tea Party" action while on the road with Paul in the past year supports what Sanneh writes here:
In "The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism" (Oxford; 2012), the political scientists Theda Skocpol and Vanessa Williamson take the measure of the recent amorphous uprising. They find that, despite a focus on economics, Tea Party groups often entertain "socially conservative moral arguments" and don't generally identify as libertarian. "The Tea Party came, during much of 2010, to be (misleadingly) portrayed as a formidable, independent political movement that threatened to overturn the two-party system," they write. In fact, Tea Party supporters tended to be indistinguishable from conservative Republicans—the energy was new, but not the ideology. Individual Tea Partiers have become influential within the Republican Party, especially at the local level, but few people now view the movement as a threat to the political duopoly. This election season, no viable Tea Party Presidential candidate has emerged, and the Tea Party itself has been all but invisible, subsumed within the broader Republican electorate.
And Sanneh hits home why the much-feared Obama-elevating Paul third party run is unlikely:
There is only one politician whom Paul regularly praises in his speeches—a man he coyly refers to as a "senator from Kentucky." If Paul sees a future for himself in the Republican Party, it is through his son Rand, who might have an easier time than his father in attracting traditional conservatives to his cause. (During his campaign for the Senate, for example, Rand Paul declined to rule out using force to stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons.) Unlike most politicians on the verge of retirement, Paul can't accurately claim that he has nothing to lose by breaking with the party that has been his home for all but one of his years in politics. Hope for his son's prospects—and a disinclination to put him in an awkward position—might be enough to keep Paul from ending his political career with another third-party campaign. If he split the vote, indirectly helping to reëlect Obama, it might be a long time before Republicans were willing to get behind anyone named Paul.
That this long, detailed, mostly accurate and fair piece appears in such a bastion of establishment cultural and non-professional intellectual chatter as the New Yorker is yet another sign of the mainstreaming of libertarian ideas that has been encouragingly moving forward for the past decade or so, and a sign of how the Paul campaign, while not the only force behind that mainstreaming by any means, is at the very least an important and positive part of it.
For much, much more on all this, read my out-in-May book on Paul and the Paul movement, Ron Paul's Revolution, and my April cover story in Reason magazine.
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Of course the New Yorker would love Paul. He is a Republican who makes other Republicans look bad by comparison. And there is no danger of him ever being elected to anything. If Paul ever becomes the favorite to get the nomination, expect the New Yorker to suddenly discover how awful he is.
He was elected to Congress 12 times.
True. I mean national office.
I thought the US Congress was a national office. Like Senate. Like Supreme court. Like... you get it.
Unless of course you mean "elected by the entire nation." In which case the only national office is the Presidency.
And the VP.
Proposition: we need to have more national offices elected.
I didn't know the VP was elected as a separate ticket.
See, it used to be, and the results were hilarious.
Still is. The electoral college votes for prez and veep separately.
Not generally anymore. They vote for a ticket now.
That is flat out false.
When the members of the electoral college gather in their state capitals, they are, with the exception of a few states, free to vote for anyone they want for prez and veep.
The constitution requires two separate votes. The fact that everyone votes in lockstep* is beside the point.
*except when they dont, we seem to have 1 rogue elector every other election or so.
Most recent 5 examples:
2004 One idiot from MN illegally voted for John Edwards for both P & V.
2000 One vote not cast out of protest
1988 One vote for Bentsen/Dukakis instead of the reverse
1976 One vote for Reagan for President
1972 One vote for the Hospers/Nathan LP ticket
he is not. But he is still elected meaning he can't be fired by the President.
Yup, I was wrong about the Tea Party. Astonishing, really, that I abandoned my bitter cynicism even for a moment.
It won't happen again.
Kudos to you for admitting a mistake, RC. And you need to be more cynical about your cynicism.
Look, my cynicism is completely self-serving, OK?
Look, there's nothing to be astonished or apologetic or cynical about here. The great majority of those who hold strong political views are yet not ideologues. That's the way it's always been and always will be. For various historic reasons, the principal support for many libertarian stances in the USA has come from non-ideologic "conservatives", and if you want to push for reforms in that direction you should expect, and need, most of your support to come from people you'll disagree with about a lot of other things, even though they'll mostly agree with each other where they differ from you.
Except for that the GOP is to Lucy with the Football as libertarians are to Charlie Brown.
The TPers have (once again!) stabbed us in the back and thrown their lot in with that Big-Teethed SoCon Zombie from Pennsylvania.
No, it's not the GOP or TPers who are deceptive, it's just that some libertarian activists keep deceiving themselves. Don't get an exaggerated idea of your influence, and you won't delude yourself into thinking they're just like you and want exactly what you want. You can't expect the paddle you're using will move the entire boat in the direction you're aiming for; you should be satisfied that you manage to help alter its direction a faint bit from what it would be if you weren't rowing at all.
Except you aren't taking us anywhere we want to go.
I was tricked into being a movement GOPer once. Never again. You all are a pack of power hungry, warmongering liars.
No, dude.
Tea Party activists when questioned about the Tea Party's focus explicitly claimed it was about economics, spending and small government issues, specifically to avoid a socon / libertarian clash.
We now know that this wasn't true. Or at least it ceased to be true once the Tea Party reached a certain size, at which point it just became a synonym for "really conservative".
Here come the completely predictable HitAndRunpublicans to tell us how libertarian the GOP really is, and how libertarians really, really need to vote GOP.
Yawn. You should really just fuck off.
You werent wrong, you just arent True Scotsmaning it enough.
I stand behind the contention that anyone who mentions social issues while speaking as a member of the tea party, isnt, in fact, a member of the tea party.
Members of the tp hold all kinds of different social views (mostly conservative), but it isnt an issue of the tea party.
My first thoughts about the Tea Party were, "Hmmm, sounds interesting. I can certainly sympathize with some of their message, but there is no way I'm going to actually support them until they prove that they're something more than disgruntled Republicans who're trying to call themselves something different so that they don't look bad."
It seems that my hesitation was warranted.
Michelle Fields covers Vets Rally for Ron Paul:
http://dailycaller.com/2012/02.....aul-video/
Beauty AND brains... That Ms. Fields is quite the talented reporter.
It's amazing (but not surprising, I guess) how little coverage that is getting.
Adam Kokesh has the video up now:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yewKCcFSvQ
What i don't get is why they were die-hard against Obamacare but fought to protect Medicar, Medicaid and Social Security. Obviously they should get what they paid for back from SS, but surely they realize these programs will hurt younger generations? Perhaps it's because I'm younger so I'm not attached to these yet, but it seems like they had very selective outrage over "big government."
Human nature.
TEAMRED!
Somebody did an excellent analysis of this decades ago in LP News (from national). It's the reason there's been much greater support for social programs in Europe than in the USA. People don't object so much to being taxed for the benefit of others as long as they see themselves as being, over the course of a lifetime, in the same class as those others, but do object if they see it going from one class, such as a race, to another.
Because the tea party movemement isn't anti-government per se, it's about saying "this far, and no farther." Unemployment insurance is one thing, but extending benefits for 2+ years? Medicare is one thing, but putting every single thing to do with health care under the government's thumb? Loan assistance is one thing, but bailing out deadbeats while other people struggle to make the mortgage?
So, they're saying we've slid exactly the right distance down the slippery slope, and should stop now?
Got to stop sliding before one can start climbing.
That this long, detailed, mostly accurate and fair piece appears in such a bastion of establishment cultural and non-professional intellectual chatter as the New Yorker is yet another sign of the mainstreaming of libertarian ideas that has been encouragingly moving forward for the past decade or so
One fair article about Ron Paul in a boutique magazine doesn't mean that, Brian. It would be awesome if it did, but it doesn't. Do you realize how few people actually read The New Yorker? Slightly more than the readership of The Utne Reader. People like it on their coffee tables.
I love The New Yorker. Great writing and 'toons.
Not many people. And again, they only publish it when they think it is safe to assume he won't win the nomination. Why didn't they write this last year? It is not like Paul is new on the scene. Why wait until the primary season is almost done before you admit "hey this Paul guy might not be so crazy after all"?
John---magazines are not actually centrally planned by ideologically minded masters, at least not in this sense. The answer to this is likely that it took awhile for Paul to sink into Senneh's mind as an interesting character, then a fair amount of time for him to get around reporting and writing the piece.
Perhaps so Brian. But it seems like that libertarian or right leaning politicians only get favorable treatment in things like the New Yorker when they either attack other Republicans or are no longer a threat to do anything.
John---That is pretty much true, and yet I don't think it belies my (perhaps overly intellectual) belief that it's a positive thing for the normalization of libertarianism that pieces like this appear, and that I can't imagine anything like it appearing a decade ago about any libertarian activist/political figure.
Neither can I. The biggest thing is for someone to openly call for an end to the drug war and not be immediately written off as a nut.
I compare the drug war to a totalitarian state. Totalitarian states exist because every one thinks they are alone. No one knows or can risk betting on the fact that everyone hates it. The trick to staying in power is to make sure no one ever realizes just how unpopular the government is. It is the same with the drug war. It continues because no one realizes that privately it is in fact pretty unpopular. So no politician is willing to put his neck out.
That doesn't make sense. People certainly realize the drug war is unpopular at least with drug users, and in fact drug warriors are prone to exaggerate the numbers of them, or at least the amount of drugs they use. The drug war is all about the fact that there is an enemy all around us.
So, for example, the more pro-pot sentiment there is, the more anti-pot sentiment there is. They rise & fall together.
Hey goofball, did you know that a drug is named after you?
Robert,
I think a lot more people object to the drug war than you know. They just won't say so because they figure they will be branded nuts for doing so.
In the suburbs, the drug war polls well because they view as government stepping in to prevent their children from becoming addicted to some life-destroying substance.
This is where you find a swath of independent votes(rs), and hence the war will continue until they think otherwise.
It also receives support from law enforcement who views it as a backdoor to getting people off the streets who they're sure are guilty of other crimes but lack the evidence to convict them.
Gary Johnson, former two-term Governor of NM, will be the Libertarian nominee and will be on the ballot in all 50 states. He is like Ron Paul with more socially libertarian views, a solid executive record, minus the newsletter baggage. He has promised to end the drug war and give amnesty to all non-violent marijuana offenders. Check him out at GaryJohnson2012.com
God, The Utne Reader is one of the most obnoxious magazines of all time. And it's not even bad in its own way. It's just a conglomeration of other badness.
Worse than Mother Jones?
See page 40 of this .pdf for my Andy Rooney-esque complaints about UTNE back in 1997. I haven't looked at a copy in a couple of years, though.
http://www.libertyunbound.com/.....r_1997.pdf
And yes, it's WAY worse than MOJO, which actually on occasion has serious feature reporting that even libertarians could like.
I remember when I was 16 and first randomly subscribed to the Utne Reader and said OMGWTF!?!? when I got the first issue. Of course I was a brainwashed Team Player then.
Haven't actually cracked open an issue in the 25 years since. But I do hold in high regard that 20% of MOJO that actually does real reporting without slathering it with commentary.
Yes, I have that issue of Liberty. I almost referred to it as the Pest of the Alternative Press in my first post. Forgot that it was you who wrote it. Nice!
I had forgotten about Liberty. It kinda looks a bit dry and crusty now.
The Utne HQ was right across the city park from where I live - they were very wealthy New Agers, man...
Daaaamn, Brian, I want to see you put more hilarious smackdowns like that on the screen.
Nice article(s), Brian, but you were wrestling with midgets in the Utne one.
I forget about this idiotic prediction you quoted:
"Few people in the future will eat the traditional three square meals a day. Instead, they will have five snacks: 'daystart,' 'pulsebreak,' 'humpmunch,' 'holdmeal,' and 'evesnack.'"
That is some funny shit.
I am absolutely convinced that predictions for Futurists can be an endless source of hilarity.
They sent me a trial subscription some years back, I wrote to cancel complaining of how BORING it was.
Do you realize how few people actually read The New Yorker? Slightly more than the readership of The Utne Reader. People like it on their coffee tables.
I'll have you know, mister, my magazine is a timely collection of incisive, engaging articles and stories, and is also a compendium of delicious recipes. You'd be so lucky as to have us do a soft-focus piece on this Paul fellow of yours.
Maybe if you published more than every two months you could be taken seriously.
Maybe if you published more than every two months you could be taken seriously.
Well maybe if the news would stop coming at us so fast, we'd be able to keep up. These news thingies are hard!
Utne is not a *sniff* news magazine. Its ruminations are timeless.
Exactly It is a reader not a magazine. Readers are better.
And we are a "reader" not a "magazine. A Reader is more thoughtful and nuanced than a magazine. It takes time to produce that kind of quality.
Everybody I know reads The New Yorker.
Just so it doesn't sit here fermenting and screwing up Googlers from the year 2150 who are researching early 21st century magazine circulation:
At 1,047,260, the circulation of the New Yorker is nearly five times that of the Utne Reader.
(And it's at least a gazillion times more influential on the cultural front, which is why Doherty was right to spotlight this piece...)
OK wow I never even thought about it liek that before dude.
http://www.Privacy-Wares.tk
The Upper Midwest T-Baggerz I know have no concept of libertarianism -- even after I try 'splaining it.
This brought a tear to my eye.
I have many areas of disagreement with Ron Paul, and am pretty vocal about my conclusion that he would be an awful president.
But I think when one looks at the arc of his career, the reason why he went into politics, the sacrifices he made as he left the easy path of a beloved and honored country doctor in order to campaign for liberty in a city that treated him with derision and abuse, it's clear that we owe him our gratitude.
Uh...no we don't. He's a politician. He may be the least awful politician out there by a country mile, but he has gotten plenty of perks from being a Congressman.
Epi, he has gotten plenty of perks, and the double reimbursement of airline tickets scandal is exactly the sort of Harding admin-redux that makes me refuse to pull the lever for Paul.
But, we are freer than we would be because Paul amassed the seniority to chair the banking committee; because he forced Bernanke to start answering publicly for his actions; for publicizing the U.S. monetary systems' entry into the fiat money accretion disk; for highlighting the rest of the gangsters platitudes for being the empty words they were.
It could be that I'm allowing emotion to color my judgement. I like the guy. I hate his immigrant baiting. I can't believe he employed a loon like Dondero for all those years. But he did more to publicize libertarianism among the politically aware that Penn or Mencken or Le Fevre, and I honor him for it.
I'm not hating on Paul. But at the end of the day, he is a politician, and will have had to do politician stuff to be there. He may not be even as remotely dirty as your average politician, but he's not clean.
"the double reimbursement of airline tickets scandal"
I haven't heard anything about a double reimbursement. The scandal I heard about was that he was flying first class back and forth and Washington on the tax payer's dime. What was really happening was that he was buying economy tickets, but because he accumulated so many miles he was frequently given a free upgrade.
I can't find the links, but there was an audit that showed he was reimbursed by both his campaign and his congressional office for some of his tickets.
I would be very unsurprised if it turned out to be a misfeasance - a mistake that wasn't intentional rather than malfeasance.
I'd have to agree with tarran here.
Given the miniscule dollar amounts here, this really seems more like an administrative problem arising at least in part from the fact that campaign staff and congressional staff aren't supposed to coordinate activity.
When it's illegal to coordinate, expect uncoordinated shit.
He seems to take as little advantage as possible...returning part of his Congressional staff budget every year, never voting for a pay raise for himself, always flying economy except when he gets a free upgrade for accumulating miles, etc.
I'm sure he's gotten some perks, but I don't think that's what he's there for.
Shaking with Rage! They talk about "Real Rape" and an End to Contraception, Part 1
=======================================
I am shaking with rage, unable to write until now. You see, I just read one more diary about the right wing belief that women "need to pay to play". This diary may take all night to write because I am still shaking. I will try to be calm to counter their lies and statements of belief. They really do want women back under control, don't they? They really do want to take us back to 1850.
I have read comments even here from men who want to discuss the finer points of a woman's decision for abortion. Unless you are the father of that baby your opinion does not count. Even if you are the father, the final decision belongs to the pregnant woman. Period. Because its her body, not yours.
Now, let me tell you how it used to be. This is history that I know because I lived it.
I got married the first time when I was 22 in Arizona. I was still a virgin because they would not prescribe birth control pills until the marriage was advertised in church, called the bans of marriage. Then they would only start the prescription three months before the marriage date. Condoms? Only men could buy them because they were behind the counter. The pharmacist controlled who bought them. This was what it was like back then.
It wasn't that I wanted to wait until 22 to have sex, it was because I intended to go to college and get out of poverty. I knew that a pregnancy would end that dream completely. Back in 1963, the year I graduated high school, only girls who got caught with pregnancy stopped working on their dreams. I decided that wouldn't be me.
After I was on the pill enough, shortly before the wedding, I tried to seduce my fiance. He told me that we should save something for the marriage. Colder water did not exist. Later in the marriage he called me a nymphomaniac because I wanted to have sex two or three times a week. He also believed women couldn't orgasm often due to their biology. This is the crap that was taught back then. I finally got a divorce after seven years and two children.
A note on that marriage: The doctor had told him that no matter what I said on the wedding night, just keep going and break the hymen. I asked him to stop because it hurt so much, and he went right ahead. I bled so much on the hotel mattress that he turned it over so we could go to sleep. Ever the optimist, I kept going for the pleasure. Hence the nymphomaniac. This was what it was like back then.
We moved to Illinois so he could go the graduate school. I went to work, putting my college on hold mostly, taking a few classes at night. The other women in graduate housing tried to give me a "PhT" for "putting hubby through". I refused it. They thought I was nuts. This was still the era when women went to college to find husbands. But events would alter that as time went by.
I suffered from severe migraines then and the doctor told me that if I just followed my biological destiny and had a few kids, my headaches would go away. I changed my doctor, but most of them believed this was a woman's disease and did not take it seriously. This was what it was like back then.
At work, I had my bra straps snapped by a boss, had my breasts touched by men who could influence job decisions, offered raises if I slept with them, and so on. That's the way it was back then. No matter how smart or learned, I was treated as below second class. Later in the 70s when I would get married again, my boss asked me if this meant I was going to become a "lady of leisure," which meant I would quit work. I asked him "why" and he became confused.
To sum up Part 1, women were expected to get married, put their husbands through school if needed, have babies and stay at home. Another woman I knew said she went to college to be a more informed mother. I wanted school because I had a burning desire to learn, to study, for my own sake. Women were supposed to be virgins and virginal, to be taught by her husband the things the husband deemed she should know. We were virgins (good girls), mothers (sainted in our self-denial), or whores.
Yes, really this is the way it was. But that would change. Tomorrow, I return to school.
So having to pay for your own birth control (you know, like men do) is somehow going to take us back to the 1850 (or just the early 1960's)? WTF?
But what does it have to do with pretzel crisps??!!
I'm still trying to understand the point of this post. Can someone help me?
The point is that Daily Kos women geezers need to go back to sewing their grandkids some sweaters.
The Tea Party had clear fiscal conservative roots, but it was simply too nebulous to become long-lasting.
I do think it helped change the focus in the GOP at least a little bit, though you could probably argue that the continuing bad economy is what truly underlies that.
That Santorum has gotten traction in the race despite continuing to prattle on about the wedge issues of the '90s is disheartening.
When Paul got to the podium, he thanked Madore for the introduction, but, near the end of his speech, he pushed back. "Liberty is liberty," he said. "Some people would use it for different religious values or no religious values?just so they get to make their choices."
Yeah, so shut up while the state uses the public school system to shove it's anti-Christian values - which we "libertarians" happen to agree with - down your kids throats. It's a good thing that we have individual rights champions, like Ron Paul, around to remind us that, "liberty is liberty".
The public skool system I came from was entirely pro-Christian.
I'm sure none of the faculty was familiar with Che.
Billy Graham, yes.
After reading this article it makes mores sense why Fox News supports Santorum after having a big supporter of the TEA party. It appears that Fox News is more concerned about social conservatism than economic conservative.
This surprises you?
Fighting the culture war pays well.
I'm a Sarah Palin admirer, an Allen West supporter, and a Ron Paul voter.
The Tea Party I belong to is alive and well.
Don't Tread On America!