my theory is that most of Ron Paul's supporters are from outside the GOP. Which is why he should go iNDY. The GOP is way too stupid to see the light. They want to lose.
I voted Libertarian when I was in Iraq in '04. Then when I got home I registered Democrat (because I thought I threw my vote away in Iraq). But I ONLY did it to protest the war. I still considered myself Libertarian (even though I am for controlled immigration and pro-life initiatives sponsored by the Fed gov't SHORT of any criminalization of it).
Never have been or will be a Republican.
Among those delegates that I coordinated in Texas, Reagan Republicans and converted neocons outnumbered third-party types 3-to-1. And the influence of the Reagan Republicans and converted neocons was much stronger. We're having an effect on the GOP already. When the GOP gets trounced this Fall, we have to be ready to step in, take the leadership spots that are abandoned, and tell them how to win. Barring some unforeseen power shift in the country, the Revolution will occur through the Republican Party. Leaving the Republican Party makes you a distraction instead of a Revolutionary.
This was the first election I was able to take part in, having just turned 20 a few weeks ago. I considered myself a Democrat mostly because my parents are Democrats and I never really knew much about politics before I discovered Dr. Paul. Only 6 months ago I was completely clueless about anything. I remember I had a paper due for an English class back in December, and it had to be on one of the people running for President. I ended up not even doing it because I didn't know anything and didn't feel like basically filling my paper with a whole lot of fluff. Had I known more about Ron Paul at the time I'm sure I would've aced the assignment.
I now see myself as more Libertarian than anything else, though I'm a registered Republican.
This was the first election I was able to take part in, having just turned 20 a few weeks ago. I considered myself a Democrat mostly because my parents are Democrats and I never really knew much about politics before I discovered Dr. Paul. Only 6 months ago I was completely clueless about anything. I remember I had a paper due for an English class back in December, and it had to be on one of the people running for President. I ended up not even doing it because I didn't know anything and didn't feel like basically filling my paper with a whole lot of fluff. Had I known more about Ron Paul at the time I'm sure I would've aced the assignment.
I now see myself as more Libertarian than anything else, though I'm a registered Republican.
I leaned towards Democrats (because I never saw a true Republican before - just Neocons) but honestly didn't give a crap about politics.
Then the true Republican showed up and I found out I was a hardcore Republican all along.
Kevin,
It's good you were able to do a self-evaluation and come to conclusions about how you really feel. I'd like to know more about how people gravitate toward the Democratic Party. Any more thoughts about why they choose that party? I'm thinking a lot chose like you did initially, but don't do much research after that. With the Republican Party as it stands today, I can certainly understand the difficulty in differentiating the 2 main parties.
FF