Why Ron Paul is the wrong choice in 2012.

Let’s play a game. Don’t worry, it’s easy! It just takes a bit of common sense to answer these questions.

Do you remember what happened the last time that the “free market” was allowed to run itself? When, you know, trillions of dollars were trading hands in the form of confusing derivatives, some of which were based on confusing mortgages sold to people who couldn’t afford them by the banks who made, profited from, and invested in said derivatives?

Oh, that’s right. That was the deepest recession since the Great Depression. A recession that America is still recovering from, one which has destabilized the economies of countries around the world, and one which still threatens the economic prosperity of virtually every person alive. It hardly makes sense to let the actions of major banks go unwatched and to defer completely to the “free market” which knocked the world over less than four years ago.

Would you cut funding for special education? How about environmental protection? Would you essentially shut down the thin barrier that prevents coal and oil producers from blowing off the tops of whatever mountains they please and polluting whatever oceans they want? Would you devastate some of the neediest people in the country by completely revoking their rights to affordable housing? Would you let businesses run virtually unaccounted for? Would you prevent the distribution of funding to states on projects that run the gamut from forest protection to environmental cleanup?

I seriously doubt that anyone would. Yet there is one man, running in third place for the Republican nomination, who plans to do just that. He also wants to cut taxes on businesses by almost half, cancel regulations on the ways that big banks operate, close down the sole real method of regulating the economy (the Federal Reserve), extend huge tax giveaways to the rich (and make sure their heirs can inherit all of their money, untouched by any governmental body), and slash the jobs of thousands who currently work within the federal government.

This man wants to “return…responsibility for security to private property owners”, which ostensibly means that everyone in America should arm themselves immediately. He wants to do away with accounting requirements that ensure that at least some of what businesses do is, well, accountable. He wants to make sure that America walls itself off from the world by eliminating foreign aid — because people who are dying of hunger in the Horn of Africa can obviously sort out their whole famine situation without one of the world’s largest donors — and he wants to substantially cut back on American defense spending.

Paul insists that he is the candidate of personal liberty, a man who would restore America to its great former self. Yet his platform of endless spending cuts, and the elimination of virtually every regulation that has survived the onslaught of business-sponsored conservatism manifest in every Republican executive and legislative branch since Reagan’s heyday will not do that. It will splinter an already-unequal nation into a dystopia with an insanely wealthy minority that has its tax-evading fingers in the halls of Congress (almost like the one which exists today!), and a middle class that will slowly be crushed under the constant maneuvering that businesses take in search of profit.

If Ron Paul were really a libertarian, he wouldn’t be a Republican. He wouldn’t associate himself with a corrupt party that essentially serves as the public relations department for the American corporation. He would stick to his obviously flawed principles, unfettered by the dainty fringe of lobbying money and a commitment to destroying the government that once made America the great country it is.

Our game’s almost over. Just a few bonus questions remain: What about a woman’s right to choose? What about the separation of church and state? Someone who focuses on individual freedom and has a powerful commitment to reducing regulation would never touch either of those liberties, right?

Well, no. Not if you’re Ron Paul. If you were he, you would support the complete integration of church with state —blatantly ignoring an interpretative statement of Thomas Jefferson that has been repeatedly cited by the Supreme Court as a logical way to understand the First Amendment — and arguing, despite mountains of evidence to the contrary, that America was founded as a Christian nation.

If you were he, you would plan to pass a law that would undo Roe v. Wade and prevent women from seeking abortions for any reason, while simultaneously defining life as beginning at conception. You would regulate deep into the personal lives of women around the country in a standoffish, paternalistic way, and disregard American constitutional traditions which keep religion out of government and ensure the right to free association.

You would pretend to be a libertarian. You would pretend to be the answer to America’s problems, a panacea for the angry white man whose votes you seek. But even then, you would be a horrible, horrible choice.

Gary Gerbrandt ’14 (garygerbrandt@college) is arming himself with liberalism before his right to defend himself is taken away. 

 

A commitment to fiscal consistency and the rise of the American economy.

First, it is important to note that the presidential election is not about race, religion, socioeconomic level or marital status. It is about what will be best for the United States of America in the years to come. Second, track records matter. Actions speak louder than words, and so the true value of any candidate should be measured first by what he or she has done, and then by what he or she will do. Third, Americans need to learn to prioritize. Instead of hanging their hopes on a fictitious political savior who merely runs a campaign of ‘Change’ and ‘Hope’ rather than taking concrete action, they should be focusing on what really matters: money and national defense (in all of its forms). Everything else needs to take a backseat.

Before the economic crisis began, Congressman Paul was one of the loudest voices that warned the rest of Congress of what was about to take place. As the crash approached, he was heavily criticized by the establishment media and even by many of his fellow Republicans because he would not back down from his warnings about where big government policies were leading America. When those predictions came true, however, the President and leaders in Congress used the economic chaos as an excuse to expand government intervention and power on an unprecedented level. Congressman Paul believes that excessive spending, artificial credit, and market manipulation crashed our economy, and no one should be surprised that these same policies continue to prolong the suffering for millions of Americans. His solution to this is manifold. First, he plans to veto any unbalanced budget Congress sends to his desk. Second, he will refuse to raise the debt ceiling so politicians can no longer spend recklessly. Third, he will fully audit (and then end) the Federal Reserve System, which has enabled the more than 95% reduction of what our dollar can buy and continues to create money out of thin air to finance future debt. Congressman Paul claims these policies will allow the worth of the United States Dollar in relation to foreign currency to grow and hopefully return our currency to its former strength.

As for national defense, Congressman Paul believes that there is nothing more important than a strong United States of America. The country was strong once, and can be strong once again if steps are taken in the next term. As an Air Force veteran, Ron Paul believes national defense is the single most important responsibility the Constitution entrusts to the federal government. His plans on national defense center mainly around a simple concept: the United States is not the world’s police. Mull that over for a moment. Acting as the world’s policeman and nation-building weakens our country, puts our troops in harm’s way, and sends precious resources to other nations in the midst of an historic economic crisis at home. The way things stand, taxpayers are forced to spend billions of dollars each year to protect the borders of other countries, while Washington refuses to deal with our own border security needs. As president, Congressman Paul will make securing our borders the top national security priority and avoid unnecessary long and expensive land wars that bankrupt our country. If and when war becomes necessary, unlike some of his predecessors, he will follow the guidelines written in the Constitution, asking Congress to declare war before starting one.

Ron Paul is the right choice for America for a number of reasons, but mainly because, despite the fact that he is a Republican, he does not particularly care for partisan politics, and instead directs his focus towards what will be best for the country that he loves, the country that he risked his life for, and the country that he plans to serve to the best of his capabilities for years to come. A vote for Ron Paul in 2012 declares a love for America and a hope to see our nation reclaim economic stability and confidence on the world’s stage.

Anonymous ‘1776 is a true patriot and will undoubtedly vote for Ron Paul in the upcoming election.

 

We Are the 1%

There is something poignant about the sight of a small huddle of tents neatly pitched in the triangle of grass at the feet of the John Harvard statue. There may be fewer students than there are tents, but this is part of #OccupyHarvard’s particular charm; it’s classic David and Goliath. It is a small group of students standing up for the common welfare against a university that is, they say, little more than another selfishly motivated corporation. They want a university for the 99%, and they claim to represent and speak for that 99%; yet, something is not quite right. Simply put, the Occupy Harvard movement as it stands is inherently contradictory, as Harvard students already are the 1%.

Although this statement—the declaration that Harvard students are, whether they like it or not, the 1%—is obvious to outsiders, many Harvard students will go to great lengths to prove that they are in fact representative of the 99%. “I’m on full financial aid!”, one might protest. “I am from a small family farm in South Carolina,” says another. “I’m middle-class!”, say the rest. They are right. Socio-economically speaking, the vast majority of Harvard students are not from families who make a minimum of $516,633 per year. (We’ll leave the financial statuses of the nearly 40% of Harvard students who receive no financial aid up to speculation.) Furthermore, many Harvard students will never join the socio-economic 1%, whether it’s due to personal “failure” or to the pursuit of career paths wherein the accumulation of wealth is not the ultimate objective. However, the definition of “the 1%” has now exceeded the parameters of economic status. In the national discourse “the 1%” now means the highest level of privilege in American society, and to argue that Harvard students are not included in this 1% is both foolish and deceiving.

Harvard has always been, is, and will always be a bastion of privilege.  The only difference between Ye Olde Harvard and the Harvard of today is that back then enormous privilege was what you needed to get in, and today enormous privilege is what you are given once you get in. This privilege afforded to Harvard students is not necessarily an economic privilege, though if you want to land in the highest economic bracket, a Harvard degree makes for a pretty decent launching pad. This modern privilege is the privilege of opportunity.

Harvard students, through some combination of work, brains, and luck, are given the top 1% of academic, occupational, and intellectual opportunity in the world. We are taught by the greatest minds in their fields, are empowered to participate in and even change the course of the flow of new and exciting ideas, are presented with grants to study and live in China and Uganda for the summer, are given exclusive access to the largest private library system in the world, are flamboyantly courted by Bain & Co. and Goldman Sachs, and are supported by a campus community whose wealth of tutors, counselors, advisors, and peers make it all possible. We are so, so privileged.

If Occupy Harvard wants to be taken seriously, its students need to recognize that they are the 1%. They also need to recognize that even if Harvard does make serious institutional changes, it cannot become a “university for the 99%,” because it is Harvard. It is by definition and design a place of immeasurable privilege. However, this does not mean that Occupy Harvard is inherently hypocritical. The basic ideological platform of the Occupy movement is that the 1% has a responsibility to the 99%. When the students at Occupy Harvard can recognize that they are the 1% and then still take seriously their responsibility to the 99%, they will honestly represent the Occupy movement.

Meghan Brooks ’14 (meghanbrooks@college) is very, very grateful to be in the 1%. 

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