People can criticize the way Rand ran his campaign or his staff but the bottom line is Rand had to deal with more "outsider" competition than Ron ever had to deal with. Bernie to the left, Trump for the racists, and Cruz to the right.
Who was Ron's biggest competitor? Kucinich?
On Reddit and other liberal places only you'd see a lot of people liked Rand but Bernie was their guy, a lot of people on here jumped on the Trump train of idiocy, and several even went to Cruz as the guy with a chance to win.
So yes Rand could have ran a better campaign but the competition he had to deal with was a lot greater than Ron ever had to go through.
I thought we were a movement that understood the free market. When something becomes popular, competition naturally comes in. Yet this movement is badly misinterpreting the results of Iowa. "Liberty is not popular! The hawks won!" Bull feces! The only true "hawk" candidates to do well in Iowa were Hillary Clinton (who seems to have won Iowa off some questionable coin tosses) and Marco Rubio who came in third on the Republican side. Oh but some "Cruz said make sand glow" and "Trump said bomb/steal the oil". (You can't bomb it and steal it at the same time.

) Ignore the rhetoric and look at the policies. Both Trump and Cruz have taken U.S. boots in the ground in Syria off the table. The hawk candidates are ready to send in boots on the ground to Syria. Trump and Cruz have taken no-fly zones over Syria off the table. The hawks are ready a complete no fly zone over Syria and a confrontation with Russia. Ben Carson split the difference by only calling for a no fly zone over the Turkey/Syria border to keep the Russians out of Turkey, but he has not called for a general no fly zone over Syria. So
in the top 5 candidates on the Republican side, only Marco Rubio is the true hawk, he came in third, and somehow the hawks one? Bat guano! And sadly, neither Ron nor Rand have made the proper analysis of what happened in Iowa. In response to "Did the hawks win", Ron and Daniel McAdams conceded defeat of non-interventionism in Iowa,
when non-interventionism actually won in Iowa, and then rambled on about how "Sure the killings in Paris and San Fransisco were bad, but we have violence in the inner city too."
WTF Ron Paul? Here is the difference. The average American is smart enough to know how to avoid inner city violence. Don't go to the inner city. Or if you do go be very aware of your surroundings. What makes terrorism so scary is, there's literally nothing you can do to protect yourself besides concealed carry, not legal in many of the places you need to go like airports, most college campuses, and government buildings, and hope for the best. When it comes to terrorism there is no "inner city" for you to avoid. (Okay. Maybe you can just move out to the country and get everything that you might need from the city by ordering online.)
The problem is that Ron seems to have forgotten the difference between non-interventionism and passivism. And by extension the rest of the liberty movement seems confused too. Rand's been all over the map. Voting for sanctions against Iran and signing the Tom Cotton letter which stated "Screw you Iran. We don't have to keep the deal that Obama is negotiating with you." To then saying latter "Let's at least see of Iran is going to comply before we tear up the agreement." I understand what Rand was trying to do. I also understand,
from a marketing perspective Rand failed in his attempt! The non-interventionists were against the sanctions and the Tom Cotton letter. And yes I've heard all of the "spin" as to why it "really wasn't so bad" and that "Rand is playing chess and everybody else is playing checkers." Well
marketing is NOT chess! Marketing poker! Everything you do is a gamble and you have no control over the hand you are dealt or the hand that the other guy plays! And politics, if you haven't figured this out yet, is marketing! So the gamble Rand made was "If I vote for the sanctions and sign the Tom Cotton letter, but explain why a made the sanctions not so bad and give a good reason for the Tom Cotton letter then I can keep all of my dad's base while expanding it to the people that don't like my dad's foreign policy. After all....it worked in Kentucky." The problem with that logic is that in 2010 the establishment was running against Rand (Mitch McConnell fundraising for Trey Grayson, John Bolton cutting anti-Rand TV commercials) and both the teocons and the libertarians were willing to look past the fact that Rand was not their ideal candidate because both hated the establishment candidate and the power behind it. But 2016 is a much different story. The Ron Paul base was hoping that some of the things Rand said during the campaign, like Gitmo should be kept open and a military tribunal should be used because if there was evidence obtained from detainees through torture it would be thrown out in a civilian court and "that would be a problem" (actually it would be thrown out in a military tribunal too), or disavowing the position he stated when campaigning for Ron that Iran getting one nuclear bomb would not be a threat to the U.S. (Iran is not suicidal despite what the neocons on talk radio want you to believe.) But in 2016 the establishment was not running against Rand. "Oh but what about John McCain and Lindsey Graham?" They are neocon hasbins. Mitch McConnell is establishment and he endorsed Rand....and he is the kiss of death to political candidates these days. How good did his endorsement and fundraising do Trey Grayson? Why did we not learn from Trey Grayson and stay away from Mitch "the most hated Republican on talk radio" McConnell as possible? That's as good question to ask Jesse "Hold our nose and support McConnell" Benton.
So back to 2016. In the debates Rand said things ultimately that would make us proud. Like "Maybe we shouldn't tear up that Iran agreement." Great! But that distanced him from the very teocons he won in 2010. But listening to talk radio the two charges I heard the most against Rand were "He supports amnesty for illegal immigrants and he's for means testing of social security which turns it into welfare." That was it. They weren't harping on the foreign policy issues. Rand had soft peddled that enough to satisfy them and many of them had changed positions. Some, like Michael Savage, were now against the Iraq war. Trump and Carson, at one point the top two leading contenders, had never supported the Iraq war. And Cruz and taken the opposite position of the neocons who said Obama pulled out too soon to instead say "We didn't leave Iraq soon enough."
The problem Rand ultimately ran into is that it took him a while to articulate a response to ISIS.
It should not have taken any time to do that because nothing anyone might pose to the NON-STATE "Islamic State" counts as interventionism! Interventionism means meddling in the internal affairs of a legitimate country that has not attacked you. The "Islamic State" is
not a state, and its brutal and publicized murder of an American journalist counts as an attack. So anything done in coordination with the legitimate governments of Iraq and Syria against the Islamic State terrorists within their borders is
NOT NOT NOT interventionism. If the Iraqi government were to say "Would you please nuke this part of our country? We don't have nukes and we think that's the only way to stop ISIS from advancing", that would be brutal, it would be cruel and it would be stupid. But it would
not be interventionism. Trying to cause regime change in Syria, whether it is through military force, or financial support of "peaceful protesters"
IS IS IS interventionism.
Rand could have won this election and moved the ball forward on non-interventionism by saying this. "The rise of ISIS is exactly what I predicted when I said we shouldn't be army rebels in Syria. There are no moderate rebels in Syria. It was a faction of the so called Free Syrian Army that turned over that unfortunate American journalist to ISIS who then slaughtered him like an animal. Here is how we much respond. We need to recognize that ISIS is our number one enemy now, not Assad in Syria or Al Maliki in Iraq. We need to work with Assad and Al Maliki to take out ISIS and any group that is currently seeking the same aim as ISIS. The rebels in Syria should have one week to reach a cease fire with Assad after which time they will be considered legitimate targets of the U.S. Air Force. All aid to rebels in Syria from the U.S. must stop immediately. The U.S. is calling on other nations to stop sending any funding to any militant group in the region immediately. The one exception to this rule should be the Kurds as they were willing to stand up and keep fighting ISIS when the Iraqi army fled. Any country that is sending money to ISIS or is allowing its citizens to send money to ISIS will be considered an enemy of the United States and will be at the risk of economic sanctions. Any country buying ISIS oil or allowing it to flow across its borders will be at risk of being considered an enemy and that includes NATO ally Turkey. Turkey must control its border with Syria to keep ISIS oil out. The U.S. should be prepared to assist Turkey in that effort. But if that border is not sealed than Turkey's status as a NATO ally should be reviewed."
^That is the kind of statement that would have won Iowa.