Rand Paul: Republicans Can Only Win if "They Become More Live and Let Live"
"I think Republicans could only win in general if they become more live and let live," Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) tells Reason TV at Lincoln Labs' Reboot Conference, which was held July 18-20 in San Francisco.
Paul sat down with Nick Gillespie to talk about the future of the GOP, the need to reach the 80-million-strong Millennial Generation, why having a strong national defense doesn't mean constant military interventions, and what Washington, D.C. can learn from the entrepreneurial culture of Silicon Valley.
When asked whether he would vote to end the taxpayer-funded Export-Import Bank, which helps foreign companies buy U.S. products, is widely seen as a leading example of corporate welfare, and is coming up for a vote in September, Paul replied:
Absolutely. If I'm a Republican and I'm going out and saying, "We have limited resources and we can't have everyone on food stamps," by golly I need to be a Republican who says "we're not giving one penny of corporate welfare."
About 13 minutes.
Interview by Nick Gillespie. Edited by Paul Detrick. Shot by Detrick and Tracy Oppenheimer. Music by Podington Bear and photos by Elvert Barnes and thisisbossi.
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Below is a rush transcript of the conversation. All quotes should be checked against the video.
REASON: Hi I'm Nick Gillespie with Reason TV, we're at the reboot 2014 Conference and we're talking with Senator Rand Paul from Kentucky. Senator, thanks for talking with us.
RAND PAUL: Glad to be with you, Nick.
REASON: What can the rest of the country learn from Silicon Valley?
PAUL: Y'know I think the amazing thing out here, is the relentless energy and drive to move forward, and they don't wait to say "Hey, how can government fix this, or how can even somebody else fix it?" They fix it themselves or they find a niche, like they find taxi cabs have a monopoly and they ask "how are we going to stop a monopoly?" and they start Uber. So I think it's just the amazing ingenuity and amazing that they're not going to wait for somebody else to do it.
REASON: They're not even thinking about government, they're getting on with their business and then dealing with it afterwards.
PAUL: Right.
REASON: What can Silicon Valley learn from other parts of the country?
PAUL: Well I think one of the things is that Silicon Valley went pretty Democrat, they supported the president. I think they just need to reevaluate and say, "All the things we do here, the success of Silicon valley, would that happen if we had a big government that had internet taxes and internet regulation? Would Silicon Valley have ever developed if big government got in the way of the development of the internet?" In fact, people say that the beauty of the internet and why it's developed so phenomenally is that every other industry we have in the country is heavily regulated. It's one of the few industries that really has very little regulation.
REASON: Why do you think Silicon Valley has gotten more politicized, at least since the Microsoft anti-trust case in the early 2000s? Why has it gone so Democratic then?
PAUL: I don't think they're complete comfortable in either party. And I know you and Matt [Welch] have written about the demographics of where people are, and I truly believe the conclusion that a plurality of people are no longer Republican or Democrat. Silicon Valley I would put right in that demographic. If you ask people out here, "Are you more fiscally conservative? Less taxes than the president? Less regulations?" they'll say, "Yeah, I'm more conservative than the president." "Are you more moderate, more liberal than the Republicans on social issues?" They'll say, "yes." They don't fit neatly in either category. I think they're primed for someone who would come to them with a message that's not entirely Republican and not entirely Democrat.
REASON: You gave a speech here at the Reboot Conference and you were talking about how a company like Uber, or many internet services, they create their own regulation where even the drivers and the riders are being regulated. Does that new model of regulation work in, say, the coal industry? Can you do that new form of regulation in old industries?
PAUL: I don't know, that's a good question. But there is a question of externalities that in a way the two parties regulate but a third party is affected like air pollution and things. Many libertarians over time have written over how property rights should be able to stop pollution, or limit pollution, although it's fairly complicated in the sense that it's not an all or none. Sometimes society will tolerate somewhat. We all drive cars. We all have electricity. So there's some emissions and we have to, as a society, develop what is acceptable. Could that be done by the crowd responding to pollution? I'm not positive, but I do think that there are many things where government becomes overzealous in regulations, whereas the crowd, the people who buy stuff and judge as you sell it to me, they want a good product, but they also want an honest product that's fair and without safety concerns. It's a better role for the crowd to regulate things than the government because the government only knows the downside of regulation, they don't look at the upside of employment and distribution of products.
REASON: Talk a little bit about benefit corporations. You've been speaking a lot about that, and that seems to be pretty much in tune with Silicon Valley or the tech community. What is a benefit corporation and why do you think they're important?
PAUL: A benefit corporation allows a corporation to do something they think is good for the environment or good for people and they don't have to look as strictly at their bottom line. To me it goes along with the freedom argument that if you own your business, you tell your shareholders what you're going to do. You either always maximize profit or you're gonna mostly maximize profit and sometimes do things for the environment. I think businesses should have that freedom. I've supported something called a B-Corporation that allows you to file and say "Y'know what? Sometimes we're going to do something that's a bit more expensive when we get rid of our waste because we believe in keeping the environment clean."
REASON: This seems to be part of a broader social movement where work is a form of self-expression in a way that it may not have been 50 or 60 years ago.
PAUL: To me, if you talk about the health of the psyche, or the health of the soul, I think work's an amazing thing. It's a lot like what [Cato Institute president] John Allison says is "earned self esteem." No one can give you self esteem. Self esteem's important, and we've got a culture that loves self esteem so we want to give it to everybody. It's like "2+2=5" and "oh Johnny, we want you to feel good about that." Johnny needs to learn that 2+2=4 and then he can feel good about it and then he'll earn his self-esteem. It's also that, really our culture, we need to really reinforce with people how important work is, not as punishment, but as reward. And so, from a governmental point of view, that I want everybody to work. I will have plans that will have everybody work, not as punishment but as reward.
REASON: Foreign policy is an issue that you're at loggerheads a lot with, not just with establishment Democrats like Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton but with members of the Republican party like Chris Christie, John McCain, recently Rick Perry. What is your foreign policy vision and how do you answer people who say you're a "namby pamby isolationist" who just wants to lock everything into a Fortress America?
PAUL: I think anytime anyone uses the world "namby pamby" we all fight so if you say that again that'll probably lead to fisticuffs.
Seriously, the number one priority of the federal government is to defend the country. It's in the constitution, it's constitutional, it's a priority. And for me, if you ask me, when tax dollars are sent by the people to Washington, where's the priority? To me the priority is in defending the country. Now when we get beyond that, then we would say, "How often should we be involved with a civil war in Syria?" I think there's a spectrum from, "we're never involved anywhere in the world" or, "we're always involved everywhere in the world." I think for many years, particularly the last dozen or so, we've been very close to everywhere all the time. I think there have been times in our history (Eisenhower, Reagan, the first George Bush) where we were much more towards the middle where we said "y'know what? War's the last resort. When we go, we vote on it in Congress, the people's representatives have to vote. That's what the constitution says. We go reluctantly." Or as Reagan said in one of his first inaugurals which I really like, he said, "Don't mistake our reluctance for war for a lack of resolve." I think that's a good way of putting it. We should be reluctant for war and I think America wants is someone who will defend the country, someone who's wise, and someone who's not eager for war.
REASON: How can this be a hard sell to Republicans? To the establishment they're like, "No, this is all wrong." I mean Dick Cheney is having his fifth or 10th heart attack every time you say something like that.
PAUL: I think a few people in Washington don't really represent even the Republican movement. If you ask people right now, "Should we send American GIs back into Iraq," a majority of Republicans will say "no." In fact, what I would allege is that if we had 100 American soldiers who were volunteers and they were sitting here in the audience, and you were to ask them, "Do you think that we should go back, do you think you should be sent back?" I think they'd say "no" now. So I think really the opinion has shifted but I think the policy-makers are, a lot of the time, a decade behind the public.
REASON: Do you think it's going to be hard to untangle the military industrial complex that Eisenhower and other people warned about because when you start to say, "Y'know what?" And with the budget plans you put out it's not like you increase the baseline defense spending either by much or if at all. But the contractors, all the people who are one the tip for military industrial work, that's a lot of money.
PAUL: Today I ran into a guy who says, "I was military, my son's military," and he worried about a strong national defense. Even this gentlemen when I say that I believe it's a priority, but then I say, "You know what? We should audit the pentagon because we can't have a strong national defense if we're paying 1000 dollars for a hammer or 1000 for a toilet seat. So even if you do believe national defense, which I do, is a priority, you can't write unlimited checks because you'll bankrupt the country. The quickest way to decline and fall of America is bankruptcy. People have said that the biggest threat to our national security is bankruptcy. So really, I think believing in reasonable spending, even in military is a strong national defense position.
REASON: Reason recently did a poll of millennials, a national poll. Only 22% called themselves Republicans or leaned that way. Millennials, there's 80 million of them, they're the future demographically. They overwhelmingly identify in favor of gay marriage, in favor of pot legalizing, in favor of vaping and online gambling. Can the Republican party shed the social conservative issues which seem very central to its concerns? How is that going to work? Can they win millennials without becoming more libertarian?
PAUL: I think Republicans can only win in general if they become more "live and let live." Grover Norquist will talk about this sometimes, this "leave me alone" coalition. But in order [for the party to] work—and this is what a lot of people don't realize this and they say "oh well we want the Republicans to be the pro-choice, pro-gay marriage party—it may not be that but it may be that there are people in the Republican party that have those positions and some who don't, and that we all get along because we believe in limited government and we acknowledge that the federal government isn't going to be involved in some of these issues anyways. And I think that "live and live, agree to disagree" kind of amalgamation of people in the party will allow us to be big enough to win. I agree with you a lot on young people but I think also some other libertarian issues like right to privacy, the NSA overzealousness. Young people are concerned about their cell phone, that's the main thing they do with every hour of every day. I think if we became the party that's going to protect their privacy, you could get a large switch of Republican vote.
REASON: Final question: The Export-Import Bank is coming up for reauthorization. This is an FDR program from the mid-1930s; it helped subsidize purchases of American goods and the Soviet Union, it is one of the clear cases of crony capitalism. You voted against reauthorization in 2012. Are you going to vote against reauthorization again, yes or no?
PAUL: Absolutely. If I'm a Republican and I'm going out and saying, "We have limited resources and we can't have everyone on food stamps," by golly I need to be a Republican who says "we're not giving one penny of corporate welfare." I'm not for giving corporate welfare and I think a lot of people, if they knew that we had to cut all the corporate welfare in order to have a more reasonable government that can pay for itself, I think all of a sudden people would say, "that's an honest Republican." What they don't like is a Republican who says "I'm cutting the food stamps but by golly I'm keeping the corporate welfare." It's an untenable position and Republicans need to cast that off.
REASON: Alright, we'll leave it there. Thank you Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky for talking to Reason TV at the Reboot 2014 Conference. I'm Nick Gillespie.
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FUCK THAT WHACKO BIRD CRAZY RACIST AQUA BUDDHA ISOLATIONIST SCARY PERSON!!!1!!111
/Redstablishment
The McLame, Graham, and McConnell types are crapping themselves over this guy. Probably prefer Hillary. That means he is the right guy.
Finally a video I'm probably interested in, and the second damned paragraph has the word millenial in it! FUCK!!!
But what do Millenials (PBUT) think about this?
When I see the word millenial on Reason I feel like tracy jordan in 30 rock when he says:
"Did he just say the word 'pumpkin' to me? -Yo! I'm bugging. I can't do this.
I am imagining what that must look like, cause I've never seen 30 Rock.
I swear you cannot find a clip of it ANYWHERE on the internet!!!
Why on Earth would I look that up and watch it?? Srsly...
Because it's doubleplus super extra awesome... Seriously, funniest show in years. That parts from the pilot
You used to say, live and let live (you know you did ... you know you did ... you know you did...)
RINO.
"Well, we WISH he were...."
The Redstablishment
Lot of hand movement in that. I hope he doesn't speak around any nervous cops.
Unfortunately too many Rs think "live and let live" = mandate traditional marriage and right-to-life.
"Live and let live ... as long as you're living like I think you should."
Yeah, Libertarians can win more with "live and let live". More... of the white vote! Libertarians are more than 95% white. They have bigger problems with minorities than the GOP, which really says something. Most blacks, hispanics, and asians are either socially conservative or socially liberal. Almost none of them are socially "libertarian" in the true sense of libertarianism (even social liberals have religious-like principles, i.e. PETA types, militant atheists,etc.).
Libertarianism is basically like agnosticism: lots of people dabble in it, but eventually they make up their minds and join with one of the two sides or the other. I woke up a while back. It's basically a cult that worships the Constitution and founding fathers, but then IGNORES the fact that the Founders themselves banned pornography, and their cult figure Thomas Jefferson, the most "libertarian" founder, literally wanted cutting off genitalia as a punishment for homosexuality.
Jingo|7.27.14 @ 4:11PM|#
"I woke up a while back."
That's a shame. Go overdose on something and die.
What a mature response, Sevo. Anyone disagrees with you and they should die. Sounds like Authoritarianism. You're in denial.
WTH does this even mean? Libertarians are (if they truly honor liberty - that is, freedom) socially liberal.
Sounds as though your only exposure to libertarianism is via liberal media who, because they don't want the money spigot to their voters and viewers to be turned off, strive to disparage libertarians due to their normally economically conservative stance.
Keep coming back, though. You learn something,
No, I donated the max amount to Ron Paul back in '08, my whole family supported him back in 1988, etc.
I just read the words of the founders and realized how I'd been fed lies about how they are supposedly libertarian. They are social conservatives in every sense. George Washington, Alexander Hamilton and most other founders would probably challenge most libertarians to a duel and shoot them dead for implying the First Amendment protects pornography for example.
Even Jefferson, the most "libertarian", was FAR to the right of today's so-cons on homosexuality for example (he basically wanted them killed but advocated for castration as an alternative).
Libertarians have to admit their policy views have nothing to do with the Constitution or the founders, and have everything to do with their generally atheist (libertarians are more atheist than Democrats or Republicans) worldview, a sort of libertine, hedonist worldview.
If you believe in the Bible, God is KING of Kings. It constantly condemns rebellion, sexual perversion, commands to pay tribute to Caesar (the dictator of a fallen Republic), and generally everything libertarians are standing for today.
Um, son?
Yeah, screw having a rational debate. Close off your mind and attack all who disagree! That's the way!
"I woke up a while back."
Yeah that clozapine's a hell of a drug. Glad to see you're up and about again.
I'm the one making clear comments on your ideology, while you resort to random, nonsensical, Ad Hominem attacks. It is quite clear to everyone who is on drugs.
"I think if we became the party that's going to protect their privacy, you could get a large switch of Republican vote."
We'll limit who can see your e-mail, but we still want to control who you sleep with. Oh, and what your 'GOD' looks like; oh yeah, and as soon as we're elected; no matter what we said; the first thing we'll do is vote to repeal Roe v. Wade, yeah, that's it!
"We'll limit who can see your e-mail, but we still want to control who you sleep with"
You think that sounds odd, but that's EXACTLY the position of the Founding Fathers. They were against the British snooping on their letters, but they were all for banning pornography and Thomas Jefferson, the most "libertarian" of them, was for cutting off the genitals of homosexuals (this despite him NOT being a christian!).
Do you have any examples of Ye Olde Banned Pornograpgic Woodcuttes that they were so opposed to?
Because I'm sure now that this has been mentioned twice that there's some substance to it... other than something akin to a histiorical version of UFO citings.
The fact that there have been 'decency' standards that have changed over history has little to do with anything to do with classical liberal thinking, or the threads between Thomas Paine, the Declaration, and modern Libertarianism.
BTW you're fucking retarded
You lack understanding of U.S. History, there have ALWAYS been law against obscenity which included pornography in the 18th century. The problem with a specific law to reference is there is none: it was considered up to each state as a 10th amendment right to ban pornography as they wished. ALL states had banned it within a few decades of the founding of the nation.
Also, the 1st Amendment doesn't even prevent the establishment of a state religion. It only says CONGRESS shall make no law, not the states. This is why many states HAD OFFICIAL STATE RELIGIONS (this is never taught in school!). Massachusetts had one and mandatory attendance with required tithes for ALL CITIZENS until the 1830's. You could choose the denomination you went to, but had to go to a church. It was ruled constitutional (although repealed eventually to win votes from lazy constituents that didn't like going weekly).
BTW Ad Hominem prove you lack intellectual honesty.
Founding Fathers ? libertarians.
Although libertarians believe the Founding Fathers were the greatest minds of their time, there is no reason to hold the same beliefs they did about everything.
Of course, I can't shake the feeling you're talking out of your ass, 'Murcan.
You seem to be projecting with that last sentence! You said, "They were the greatest minds of their time" but then you deign to think you have a better mind than them? You reject their thinking on morality, which are the VERY things they thought a Republic depended on.
The only difference between the American Republic and the violent "Reign of Terror" French Republic, or the genocidal Roman Republic, or the Hitler-electing Weimar Republic, or the corrupt Italian Republics of the Medieval ages, was that the American Republic was founded by a Puritanical Aristocratic elite who valued honor, faith, and who settled a rugged frontier which taught them independence.
The frontier was gone by the 1930's as California/Arizona was well settled by then, so socialism began to take root. Now you want to do away with the one thing left that made America "exceptional"? The one thing America had that makes it's republic different from the 40 civil-war ridden African Republics, or the genocidal People's Republics?
Really turn America into a full fledged secular Republic and America will have NOTHING to unite it.
There is no more religion, ethnicity, or language uniting America. All that unites it for now is the fact it's prosperous. But prosperity always fades. Hard times always come. When it does, there will be no more glue holding America together.
Then it just becomes another Balkanized hellhole.
Heck, the founders even allowed state religions, just not a "federal established religion". Massachusetts for example had a state religion and had MANDATORY church attendance until the 1830's and everyone had to pay tithes. It was considered Constitutional by the judges of the time, who by the way, grew up during the Revolution/creation of the Constitution and knew exactly what it intended.
It wasn't until around the 1930's with the rise of Communism/Socialism in America that some judges ruled against states having religious laws.
because today is exactly like the 1830s. And hey, all those judges who ruled against certain laws - was there a document that provided a framework through which they could do that? Who established that framework? You can go back to sucking the Team dick of your choice now.
Real mature. Ad Hominem really makes your point, huh? That libertarians are a bunch of hedonist atheists is made all the more apparent when you insult others instead of debating.
As for the judges, when they ruled for example that sodomy was legal they actually used the UK and EU's laws to justify their decision. No joke. They ignored the US Constitution and pulled a DIFFERENT country's laws to justify changing OUR laws. It's judicial tyranny.
Unfortunately too many Rs think "live and let live" = ........right-to-life.
Crazy, isn't it? Live and let live really means live and let kill, obviously.
Yeah, that's the one thing that really aggravates me about certain pro-choice libertarians: a refusal to acknowledge that, depending on definitions, it is perfectly logical and consistent to be a pro-life libertarian.
I support legal abortion, but I agree that one can reach a strongly anti-abortion position on libertarian grounds. It's an area where I don't think the proper position is obvious. I disagree with Pro-life libertarians, but I respect their views.
Republicans don't need to attract Millenials. They'll never be cool and that's OK. How about just telling the truth about the out-of-control government and articulating what needs to be done to fix it? Oh right, that will never happen because they're too focused on trying to be Democrat-lite.
How is any political party perceived as cool. I challenge anyone to find one cool politician. Just one.
Elizabeth Warren.
*ducks*
TIM in heap big trouble for many moons.
Now THAT'S funny!
Bill Clinton, circa 1992?
1992 me is unimpressed, unless there is a tie-in to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles or dinosaurs.
Jimmy McMillan - The Rent is Too Damn High! guy....he's cool.
I can see that one.
Vermin Supreme also seems like he'd be cool to hang out with.
Vermin Supreme 2016 !!!
Vermin Supreme received way more votes than Gary "GayJay" Johnson in the 2012 New Hampshire Primary.
BECAUSE HE'S A MORE SERIOUS CANDIDATE
I'm certain many people still consider Obama cool.
Isn't Libertarianism itself just an attempt for white people to try to look "cool"? That's why Libertarians are more than 95% white. It's like social agnosticism mixed with the most farthest-to-the-right fiscal conservatism (which whites like but minorities are usually fiscally liberal).
But eventually everyone wakes up from that social agnosticism as well and takes a side socially speaking, either for their religions or against them. Whites are just more cowardly socially so they gravitate towards libertarianism to try to not piss off either side.
I have no idea of the exact demographics of libertarians. But your attempt at race-baiting is un-impressive.
It has nothing to do with being white or un-white and you know it. It has to do with the desire to protect the freedom to keep the fruits of one's own labor.
Christ, who let this guy in? Just give him some change so he'll go away.
I TOLD you to close the door after you came in!
Gary Johnson
Does he count?
Given that Republicans already have the majority of governorships, control of the house and look to be favored to take the Senate in the midterms, exactly why is it everyone feels compelled to offer them advice on what they need to do to win? Are they a failure unless they win every election or what?
Good point, but arguably Rs that are doing better at the state level are already following Paul's advice, at least on fiscal and to a lesser degree social and defense matters.
State and district-level elections don't carry as much weight as presidential elections in people's calculations of these things. Plus facts and evidence have no place in these matters.
The only reason they don't is because our state governments have budgets that are like 5% of the size of the federal budget.
Really people need to focus the party into an autonomous movement, similar to the SNP (minus the socialism), or into a party for independence (separation).
At the current rate, the federal government will collapse in 4-5 years when the next bubble pops anyways and THEN we'd leave. Rather leave before the Titanic sinks, rather than try to escape onto a life raft.
And the GOP is deluding itself about demographics, and Libertarians are deluding themselves to think they can fix the demographic death spiral because they have it WORSE than the GOP: Libertarianism is over 95% white. Heck, the RINOs in the GOP pushing for amnesty must know it'd be the death of libertarianism. Hispanics have almost no libertarians, and the new "millenials" that Reason keeps touting are actually the MOST pro-government generation to ever emerge with most of them in favor of government-run healthcare and a myriad of borderline communist policies.
95% of members of environmentalist and animal rights groups are white so by your idiotic logic, amnesty will destroy these movements as well.
"THEN we'd leave"
"WE?"
Is that a turd in your pocket?
I don't know exactly what make one either libertarian or Hispanic. But Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio are libertarian and Hispanic when it suits the narrative.
But keep on playing!
You forgot to mention Thomas Jefferson and balls, dude.
Well, that is definitely how Rs would win my vote, but what evidence is there that this is a path to electoral victory? I could see a case for Rs going even more theocrat and protectionist to win -- not that I would want for this to happen, but it's in line with what a very activist part of their base (and a decent portion of the general populace) would like to see.
Protectionist, maybe. Theocrat? I dunno. I don't see that winning national elections.
Protectionist for the blue collar vote. Theocrat(-lite) for the activist base and wimmins vote. No, the gay marriage issue won't fly if you push too hard on it, but porn n' drug bans still fly in some sectors and doesn't get very much pushback. Some sort of feminist-lite, theocrat-lite feel-good moralism could very easily win over votes and activists.
Well by your definition the founding fathers were "Theocrats" since they banned pornography and allowed state religions (Massachusetts for example had a state church and MANDATORY attendance until the 1830's and it was ruled constitutional by judges who grew up in the Revolution).
Even the agnostic Thomas Jefferson (who criticized Christianity and tore out Jesus' divinity from his Bible) was for castrating homosexuals as punishment for their sexual orientation. Not because of religious views but because he thought they were disgusting people.
So on that note, do you hate the Constitution and the Founding Fathers?
Do you hate God? Or will you side with the Founders and their religion?
No, he didn't. The text of the 1777 law states
Only someone mendacious could willfully misread the intent of the law to mean what you suggest.
"Only someone mendacious could willfully misread the intent of the law to mean what you suggest."
I dunno. Abysmally stupid might do it, too.
Not only does it demonstrate mendacity, but, even if it were true it would be irrelevant.
I really dont liek the way that dude looks.
http://www.AnonToolz.tk
Actually, we have one party, The DemoPublicans, with a left wing and a right wing. They pretend to be two parties, but in reality they are only one. They (the DemoPublicans) rule the country by decree, and will continue to do so in the foreseeable future. Other parties exist, but only on paper. They (the other parties) should be able to have candidates take part in the Presidential debates, but of course they do not. They are "Paper Tigers". In a way, this is a national "tragedy", but it is going to take another 25 years before this problem can be fixed.
They tried the idea of third party candidates participating in presidential debates way back when Ross Perot ran the first time. After the way he stole so much of the vote away from the two major parties - particularly Bush - you can bet your ass that will never be allowed again.
Can Rand win without a sex change? I hope so.
-jcr
Having tits wouldn't hurt.
+1 Schumer
Isn't that what the ex-Gov of Virginia said?
Just make sure you don't have any shady deals in your past - like the ones that Dems get a pass on - or you'll be toast under a pile of SOS.
Sarcasm Button On:
Comrades! In order to have a true socialist paradise, we must control every aspect of everyone's life. People are intrinsically wild, and if not controlled, will follow their most base instincts such as thinking for themselves, writing poetry and smoking pot. The only way to stop such anti-collective behavior is to have a political officer from the state watching your every move and listen to every word you make. Only then you can have socialist freedom. Words and deeds must be recorded for the greater good. The counter-revolutionaries must be discovered and stopped at all costs. Otherwise, our benign socialist paradise will be infected with the cancer of freedom. The state must be ever vigilant in stopping people who chose to think for themselves. But have no fear, comrades. We have our glorious elitists and their loving militarized police force at the ready to crush anyone evil enough not to conform to the dictates of the state. Eliminate all dissent, and you will have the freedom to choose what the state tells you what to choose...and isn't that what all true socialists want? To be free from the repressive belief of liberty?
Sarcasm Button Off
Socialists care if you smoke pot or write poetry? If you want to take on government overreach maybe you should write rand Paul and ask him why he supports a constitutional amendment outlawing abortion.
Well seeing as how Mao treated drug users and how Pol Pot treated poets and other intellectuals, yes, it does seem like socialists care about those things.
Damn, AmSoc. Mock-Star just handed you your ass.
Smoking too much pot will make for less productive citizens.
Poetry that criticizes the wrong groups is verboten.
/average prog
Ick. I guess I'm not staying at the w in sf any more knowing that it host conservatopiapalooza. Eh... There are better hotels in sf. I like the orchard garden inn at the entrance of china town. The w is the hotel you stay at after a night out on moly.
I like the part where rand muses if Silicon Valley would be the same without the government. You mean without Stanford, or berkeley or the uc system or the Golden Gate Bridge or Arpanet. No, rand, Silicon Valley wouldn't be the same.
I didn't 't get through the entire conversation as I was busy canceling my hotel reservation at the W. Did nick ask him about gay marriage, abortion, or the new alliance between evangelicals and their new best buds in the LP?
Since when do you have enough money to make reservations at the W? Didn't you have a foreclosure in your past?
I have issues with Rand Paul, but he's spot on here. The decline of the Republican party started in the early 70's when it turned its back on Barry Goldwater and started embracing the moral majority platforms of Jerry Falwell.
Thanks for wiping the old comments...really.
Could also stand to wipe some of the new ones.
There is a smorgasbord of stupidity above.
Jingo; new Tulpa sock or general brain-damaged troll?
Probably a one-off. But Tulpa's still here, one way or another.
Seriously.who is this Jingo clown?
I thought it was Amerikan.
Salondotcom strikes again:
Good idea, but first they should repel the second law of thermodynamics. That alone would make most of the core economic laws invalid.
Fuck that. Why not repeal the laws of gravitation? Why should only rich people afford to fly?
Poor people should be able to jump off of building and just fly to their destinations! It'll also save a bunch of emissions.
You forget the obvious benefit of repealing and replacing the laws of gravitation.
It will cure obesity!
If you repeal the second law, gravity can't stop you from flying *and* you don't have to worry about pesky little unintended consequences like the air going away.
I thought Twitter cancelled their account.
"They Become More Live and Let Live"
How does that explain the progressive victories? Is there any party less "live and let live"?
But they offer free shit in exchange for the bondage.
Good point.
Lenin could never have guessed his phrase would most appropriately classify future Democratic voters.
Live and let live = tolerance. The root of tolerance is properly actuated disinterest. Expansionary Government is the complete opposite of disinterest. GOP = Expansionary Government. It wouldn't seem the circles of the Venn Diagram intersect very well.
Well, yeah. The attitude by both parties is more legislation and regulation. That's how you fix bad legislation and regulation. You add more or you replace it. Outright repeal just isn't a thought. The only argument between the parties is over the content of these rules backed by violence, not their existence.
Good old John Kerry, perhaps the worst so-called "diplomat" in American history.
Kerry's cease-fire plan might as well have been penned by Khaled Meshal.
Ever since the Nov 2013 nuclear deal w/ Iran (which Israel objected to and was in the end not consulted on final details), they've pretty much told John Kerry to go fuck himself, and have become increasingly incensed by uninvited American diplomatic intervention that seems to have no ones interests in mind except for Obama's domestic political appearance.
The Israelis are acutely aware that Obama and his admin see Israel mostly as something to use to market *themselves* to the American people with... which has been a dynamic at play ever since Reagan, but rarely done in such a bald and self-interested fashion. cutting the Israelis out of our negotiations with Iran was effectively telling them that we'd sell out their security concerns for cheap if it means short term benefits politically for Obama.
(he did the deal mostly to deflect freakouts about the ACA at the time, and show he was 'doing something')
This more recent effort is a similar gesture aimed at no ones benefit other than the President, who wants to look 'involved' in a situation but not responsible for it. Which seems to be his S.O.P.
"Ever since the Nov 2013 nuclear deal w/ Iran (which Israel objected to and was in the end not consulted on final details), they've pretty much told John Kerry to go fuck himself, and have become increasingly incensed by uninvited American diplomatic intervention that seems to have no ones interests in mind except for Obama's domestic political appearance."
I guess they'll be sending all that foreign aid back then and we can stop vetoing UN resolutions for them?
Bo, why not demonstrate you're not a complete fucking idiot and do a simple diagram for yourself showing how the democratic party is split between extremely pro-Israel rich jewish liberals and extremely anti-Israel progs/radicals/college professors et al... which means that they will always maintain a fucked up nonsensical policy of endlessly both funding and criticizing the Israelis.
And the GOP has a similar version of the same, albeit far more strongly biased towards a Pro-Israel Christian coalition.
Of course, you're NOT a total fucking idiot, and you already knew that. You're just asking because you're being a dick trying to engage in more useless troll-aerobics. Thanks.
How is this responsive at all to what I wrote?
Worse than Hillary Clinton?
yes. If there was one single issue hilary could have claimed to have had some actually experience with and knowledge of, it was dealing with the Israelis.
Hilary comes from the older, more pro-israel part of the Democratic party, while Kerry seems to take his views from the more-critical younger FP crowd (EU influenced) that thinks the US should do more to browbeat/strongarm the Israelis rather than accommodate/nudge them.
I don't necessarily think one policy is 'better' than the other per se, as I personally think we should unilaterally cut all ties and let them bomb the fuck out of whomever they want and say, "we tried! not our problem anymore".
But as far as being 'diplomatically astute'? yeah, hilary was better w/ teh jooze. Kerry is the megasuck.
"yeah, hilary was better w/ teh jooze. Kerry is the megasuck."
It's almost as if Kerry's proposal was essentially to reintroduce Clinton's 2012 cease fire agreement.
the opposite of what Kerry told them less than 24 hours earlier
He was for it before he was against it.
it might as well have been penned by Khaled Meshal
It is worthwhile to try to understand what life looks like from the Vietcong's point of view.
...
I will say Kerry is still infinitely better then Clinton at his job.
Given Clinton's drastic mishandlings of Egypt, Pakistan, Russia, etc. its hard to bash Kerry simply by contrast.
But Clinton actually did do some effective jawboning of the Israelis in 2010
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09......html?_r=0
She got them back into direct talks with their neighbors. It was doomed to failure, but it was still the most significant moment for 'multilateral engagement' in the last decade.
Kerry can't so much as get a cup of coffee. They make fun of him in public, to his face. In the 'diplomacy' world, where Face-Saving is everything, this is death.
Well I think one of the things is that Silicon Valley went pretty Democrat, they supported the president. I think they just need to reevaluate and say, "All the things we do here, the success of Silicon valley, would that happen if we had a big government that had internet taxes and internet regulation?
Another Republican who doesn't know what net neutrality is. Rand, nerds in Silicon Valley don't agree with your ignorant idea of "internet regulation".
Weak.
So are you cashing out on Tuesday night?
Palin's Buttplug|7.27.14 @ 7:02PM|#
"Lefty lies again"
Fuck off, turd.
Though it does show that the super wealthy want everyone* to be economically equal.
*Except for themselves.
How is net neutrality not regulation?
Net neutrality is regulation, but because Obama supports it, Butt Face supports it.
Simple as that.
There is no way to characterize net neutrality as anything other than a regulation (and a NAP violation, for that matter).
Most of the time, when somebody says "Net neutrality", they want the government to cut down to size some part of the internet they think is too big.
"And the trees were all kept equal, by hatchet, axe, and saw..."
Since Ive met Rand Paul and he is from my city in Bowling Green ky all I can s is Washington politicas is playin on him deeply. One day the GOP leans on him to say this,ten next its this then may he will finally get toay what he wants to say.
When your the number 1 guy that can likely be the candidate for president coming up you have to play ball with the guys that haveyour cash ie the GOP in this case and its RINO controlled top layer!
If Rand can be Rand you wont hear half the leftist crap out of his mouth as you hear these days..............
Live and let live would be words he would say and mean at least the Rand I know!
So Bo destroyed the other thread...
...
... here we have the Highbrow-Stylings of 'Jingo, Unchained'....
... really, are people so sure Bo is a real person, and not just the most 'lifelike' Tulpa-sock? because it seems sometimes like Bo alternates appearances with these other screaming retard-handles.
It's silly to lump Bo in with 'Murcan.
Why would that be?
Because, while Bo sometimes won't let certain arguments go, he is generally an honest-to-goodness libertarian.
'Murcan, on the other hand, is clearly a race-baiting homophobe who cares more about the "purity" of the American "race" than economic freedom.
Leagues apart.
Being a libertarian is a bug, not a feature for Gilmore.
They're both cunts.
who cares about their superficial political leanings? its paper thin, regardless.
I strongly disagree.
About them both being cunts? I can offer you limitless examples....
Yes, GILMORE, about Bo being one, and that he has superficial political leanings.
It's fine. I know I can't persuade you. But I just wanted you to know what I thought about it.
Bo is a True libertarian. Everyone knows this.
No, as you can see it is Gilmore who knows the depths of one's true allegiance to the philosophy of freedom.
I always thought you were Tulpa after a few wine coolers.
Is this your 'cry for help' way of proving you're the other troll as well? Just can't help yourself?
How many in are you today? Two and a half?
Are they *still* not inviting you to the ragers at your "party capital" college?
We don't drink wine coolers, alas.
I suspected that you drank wine coolers.
When you look back on your "body of work" today, are you proud of the result? Is it gratifying to spend unlimited amounts of time arguing but never winning?
If college students were assigned to read that thread as a homework assignment, what do you think their impression of you would be? Honestly.
Bo is a law student doing homework.
I honestly think the thread would be seen as the usual sad in-group mindedness of some of the conservative leaning posters such as yourself Playa.
Do yourself a favor: show someone that does not share your political leanings the conversation and ask them, who was being a jerk, sloopy and gilmore who leap to cursing insults quickly and often, or myself who doesn't treat people that way even when they disagree with me.
See what I mean? He's a True libertarian. Unlike us.
Do yourself a favor: show someone that does not share your political leanings the conversation and ask them, who was being a jerk, sloopy and gilmore who leap to cursing insults quickly and often, or myself who doesn't treat people that way even when they disagree with me.
That removes the context where you do this constantly on multiple threads.
At some point the hostility becomes warranted because your sophistry becomes so grating and tiresome.
Where 'sophistry'='disagreeing with the conservatives on the board' about anything.
About *everything*. There. FIFY
You conservative say some strange things, but, no, I don't disagree with you on everything.
No, it's constantly spitting hairs and making specious arguments for no purpose other than to provoke those kinds of responses.
You offer very little insight into anything.
If you were inclined to dislike someone because he upset your political buddies fest, then you might see his not accepting people's overgeneralizations as 'splitting hairs,' no?
Perhaps. But in this instance you really do nothing but split hairs and act argumentative for no reason.
There are plenty of intelligent discussions on this board between libertarians that disagree on social issues and issues like immigration and such.
Those contrast greatly with the mountains of crap that form when you start an argument with Playa or Gilmore or any other person here.
I'm curious, who tends to start with the cursing, namecalling and the like in those discussions?
Arguing in bad faith is worse than name calling and that's exactly what you do most of the time.
At least you seem to think jumping to name calling is not ideal, and while I have never recalled you protesting that when your ideological comrades do it, that does seem a good concession.
As to bad faith, do you really think I don't, to use today's examples, believe that Jefferson is a terrible front man for liberty or that I am hesitant to call a man I don't know a liar?
How to cook - "Bo Cara Esq"
- Take 8 parts badgering
- add healthy dose of snotty condescension
- layer with intellectual dishonesty
Serves: no one
"As to bad faith, do you really think I don't, to use today's examples, believe that Jefferson is a terrible front man for liberty or that I am hesitant to call a man I don't know a liar?...Do you dispute that it is NOT 'baiting' to simply raise a number of questions in a form of statement, without ever actually saying anything of substance, but suggesting that what you seem to be saying is being somehow 'complicated', as it were? And do you not find the perpetual use of pedantic expressions, wrapping banal observations in a series of rhetorical devices, such as those used supra, as failing to add any substance to any particular claim? I do not see how this violates the NAP, so your objection strikes me as yet another example of how un-libertarian and conservative you must be for even suggesting so, or do you disagree?"
Bo Cara Esq.|7.27.14 @ 9:47PM|#
"I'm curious, who tends to start with the cursing, namecalling and the like in those discussions?"
I do, asshole!
Your insulting attempts at misdirection are worthy of it.
"overgeneralizations"? Ha! There's no sugar coating it!
You defended 200 Tons of Lead guy. It was stupid to do it. You know it, I know it, and everybody else knows it. The guy lied. Period.
BTW, Sloopy's calculations were far too charitable. Most people plink with .22lr, which would put the round count at around 5 million rounds.
Why are you defending the liar? Are your gun control views actually what you say they are?
This is really what it boils down to, is it? You want me to join in on the pileon, the 'two minute hate' if you will, and anyone who won't must be some traitor to the (internet) community or something.
If you go back and look at the discussion chronologically, I noted that his claim just had to be exaggerrated by a different route than sloopy's. But I was willing to say that did not necessarily make the guy a 'liar' (maybe he heard that number and mindlessly repeated it, or maybe he just got it wrong, not every stupid thing said is a lie). I don't trumpet it but I am a fairly religious guy and I try not to call someone a 'liar' when such doubt remains.
Interestingly I've found in most social settings people ADMIRE that, but in this warped discussion group there are people who think that THAT is being a jerk. It's bizarro, and if you'd leave the bubble long enough I think you'd find that's a pretty consensus take on that.
But here's what is the oddest: despite the charges that I am an inquisitorial jerk unwilling to let an argument go, here you are half a day later on a totally separate thread bringing it up and arguing about it. Again, Bizarro land.
Watching you all rip on each other reminds me of how I troll liberal girlfriends so I can get that really awesome hate sex.
Fucking this.
About Bo being a vapid sophist who is only here to say as much as he can without saying anything at all.
I honestly prefer PB to Bo.
I've seen worse.
You serve to make "Palin's Buttplug" appear 'intelligent, informed, and classy'.
Beyond that you are less useful than a wet tampon.
You really try to hard Gilmore, do you need it that bad?
While I don't agree with Bo on everything, comparing him to Buttplug seems hyperbolic and irrational.
Bo seems to argue from a set of legitimately held beliefs. Buttplug is just a troll who frequents this board because he apparently lacks friends or offline social interaction and seeks attention from anyone who'll give it to him. I suspect most of his positions are done solely to gain a reaction...much as a child acts out to anger a parent because they don't care whether it's good attention or bad attention they're getting.
Very different animals...whether you find Bo annoying or not, he's still in a class above Buttplug. Most people here are.
UCrawford|7.28.14 @ 12:13AM|#
"Bo seems to argue from a set of legitimately held beliefs"
Granting the benefit of the doubt, that is possible. But Bo's sophomoric attempts to defend the beliefs are worthy of scorn.
Bo's arguments are typically insulting; he seems to expect that no one notices the mendacity; that people here are not bright enough to notice his written sleight-of-hand.
Ha, ha, Bo! Very funny! I certainly hope you're self-satisfied that you're oh so "clever".
According to your Mom.
Eh, he's hardly the only arrogant libertarian on this or any other board. 🙂
Hell, most of my posts on non-libertarian threads are probably seen as insufferably smug. I won't pretend to have followed his work that closely, but very little that I've seen from him ranks anywhere near Buttplug's, Socialist's, Tony's, or Tulpa's standard verbal diarrhea.
If you are being truly honest here, then I guess there's nothing to discuss. You have my sympathies. Best wishes.
Keep it Golden there, Playa Manhattan.
Don't get me wrong. You truly are annoying. But I do have moments of sympathy. If you can look back on that thread and think that you come across as anything other than an asshole, I feel sorry for you. I can only imagine what your life is like, and for that, I sympathize. It sucks to be you, and you know it.
You are really hilarious. But perhaps you are right, and I won't get invited to any meet ups via Reason Magazine's blog cite. I will try to muddle through that kind of rejection, somehow.
So the US Embassy evacuated Libya yesterday....
but meanwhile, Democracy Continues to Flourish...
....and apparently big things are going boom... =
Fuel storage tanks that supply Tripoli were hit on Sunday by rockets igniting a huge fire near the international airport, the National oil corporation (NOC) said.
"It is a tank of 6 million liters of gasoline and it is close to others containing gas and diesel," NOC spokesman Mohamed al-Alharari said. "The firefighters are trying to counter the fire but if they cannot, a big disaster will happen" he added.""
A quick background on the shortlived post-Ghaddafi political scene
Its unclear whether the 'you broke it/you bought it' lesson applies for Obama as well as Bush. The Obama admin *did* seem somewhat interested in the country up until that thing with the protesting, etc.
Did Obama blame Youtube again?
i'd be surprised if they even mention it. Yes, they'll be asked about it, but i still think they'd rather bury this story and highlight *how nasty the Israelis are*... because it serves their purposes better. its more 'urgent' (despite being a re-run of basically the post 2006 Hamas-election fighting)
Libya is just more evidence of this administration's incompetence concerning the one area the Executive Branch has legitimate authority.
To me the worst area is in that of clemency and pardons. Take all of Obama's talk about addressing criminal justice reform, it could be done with a stroke of a pen under his powers tomorrow if he were in any way serious about it.
That would involve him taking responsibility for something and taking a position. His entire life since he started college has revolved around not taking positions that could later be used against him and his political career...on anything.
When someone's spent 40 years of their life being a disingenuous shitweasel who avoids any responsibility, it's not something that gets changed in five or six years.
[knock, knock] Opens door, looks around; doesn't look dangerous...
I don't recall an out-and-out, visible, bragging, fraud on the 'sharing economy' before.
A scammer (or two) ran a pitch on Kickstarter, the claim is a $40K total, delivers nothing. Then uses Air BnB to occupy a condo, refuses to pay, refuses to leave, and now brags he'd do it again:
"Airbnb squatter: "Would squat again""
http://blog.sfgate.com/techchr.....uat-again/
This AIN'T a free market; CA 'renter's rights' laws took care of that, but the question is whether the web can now make this guy (or these guys) a pariah such that no one loses more money.
MARKET FAILURZ!!! NEED MORE REGULATIONZ!!!!
Yeah, the article is in a lefty rag, and they are notably NOT sympathetic to tech solutions that aren't yet under the thumb of the government.
Fuck 'em.
It's astounding how these people who are in close proximity to and the beneficiaries of the astounding wealth creation of the relatively free market tech sector are completely oblivious to the benefits of the free market.
Familiarity breeds contempt.
I'm afraid it's just plain stupidity. See the supposedly 'educated' Tony and commie-kid; both truly hateful parasites.
And *proud* to be such ignoramuses!
Thanks for your contribution to this discussion.
/eye roll
Not even with your dick.
CRIPPLE FIGHT!!!!
Gee whiz, Smack. You're right. The nomenclature is all goofed up. Surely your more sophisticated taxonomy will catch on immediately.
Not even with Joe from Lowell's or Tony's.
Tulpa's?
OK, Weigel's maybe.
OK, Weigel's maybe.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDQk4lGSEJQ
What is the power that the Constitution denies to all levels of government?
Maybe pro-life libertarians realize the issue isn't so black and white like the way you describe it.
Basically, there is a conflict of negative rights: the woman's right to control her body vs. the fetus's right to live.
There is no easy answer, as much as you imply there is. I don't know what the proper policy should be, but to be so dismissive of pro-life concerns amounts to hand-waiving away their otherwise consistently logical position.
Silly assertion is silly.
What lie did I tell?
As to the Ninth Amendment, I can read it just fine, thanks. How you get that the Ninth Amendment automatically dispenses with the difficulty of reconciling the negative-rights conflict I described is beyond me.
So you assert that Ron and Rand Paul have never read the Constitution, because they are...what? Pro-life?
The libertarian brand is totally toxic, but not libertarian values.
You're distortions don't help.
According to Hihn, a woman's right to (a capital "L") liberty means being free to kill her unborn child. It's right there in the Ninth, see?
Michael, libertarians don't operate on the Constitution, as I pointed out with my earlier posts about how the founders banned obscenity.
But I'll bite on your pro-life question. How can you deny the baby's right to life? The real question is not whether a woman has a right to murder her baby, but rather AT WHAT POINT does life start?
I personally think life starts a few weeks after "conception" (Catholics who think spilling sperm is murder have skewed the debate). But when there is a heart beating (usually around seven weeks) it is a life.
And frankly, any woman who has failed to stop her pregnancy after 6-7 weeks was at SOME point ready to have the child. Their irresponsibility is no justification for stopping the beating heart of a child.
Michael, you do realize all of the founding fathers banned abortion right?
That said they were of roughly my position that once the heart starts beating, it's a life and thus it's murder. Although their laws said when the baby begins moving (around 3 months), then it is alive and thus murder to kill it.
*facepalm* It's like those people claiming the first amendment protects pornography. The founding fathers banned both of those things. It's only crazy hedonist libertines who try and pretend the founders intended something different from what they actually wrote...
But then again the founding fathers rarely discussed abortion because ALL of them were in favor of laws banning adultery and fornication.
Discussing abortion becomes irrelevant when the only legal sex is with your wife.