sailingaway
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Editor’s note: Yahoo News asked young libertarian-minded voters to share why they’re drawn to the either the Libertarian Party or to libertarian political principles in general. Here’s one first-person account we received this week.
FIRST PERSON | Any Iowan will tell you, it's difficult to live in the Hawkeye State and not be politically involved. Walking into coffee shops, riding the city bus, eating lunch on campus, shopping at the store—you hear the political conversations buzzing constantly, even years out from caucus night.
However, my political interest only flared in the classroom, on the debate team, and to satisfy my enjoyment of arguing with friends; candidates and party politics intrigued me very little. In high school, I flew the Republican flag, but I never could quite ignore the doubt in the back of my mind that my logic was faulty.
When I was admitted to the University of Iowa on a pre-med course with the future goal of applying to NASA, I had no intention of furthering my political understanding. Being a "red" player would only matter to me on Election Day and that would be that.
It was during my Sophomore year at Iowa in late 2007, that I realized I might not be able to write off politics so easily. In an astrophysics class one day I noticed large, bold letters scribbled on the chalkboard: "Google Ron Paul!" I had no idea who Ron Paul was and assumed he might be an astrophysicist, or at least a scientist. So, I did it. I googled Ron Paul. And he wasn't exactly the James A. Van Allen that I had envisioned; he was something completely different—something that would eventually change my life.
As I read more on Dr. Paul, I encountered for the first time someone in politics who employed logic consistently throughout his policy positions and adhered to his principles strongly. As my own political philosophy developed, I soon came to the conclusion that the libertarian philosophy was indeed the only political ideology rooted in logic throughout its entire application.
It became quite clear to me that most “representatives” in Washington had no interest in liberty or the Constitution. The burden caused by bad policy and an ever-increasing national debt that would be thrust onto the backs of my generation while both major parties treated endless borrowing and spending as the solution for nearly every problem. Though there are some principled exceptions, neither party’s Establishment seems interested in principle when power is at stake.
After my encounter with Ron Paul and subsequent research, for better or worse I left the natural sciences and began to study political science and economics. I also joined my campus' Students for Austrian Economics club and Young Americans for Liberty (YAL) chapter.
Since that fateful day in 2007, I became a campus activist through Young Americans for Liberty, seeking to educate students on the principles of liberty; and now, at 25, I've become more involved in the local Republican Party. I was eventually made the State Chair of Iowa for YAL, a role through which I was able to lay the foundation to be one of the very first hires of the Ron Paul 2012 presidential campaign and ultimately the youngest national delegate from Iowa to the RNC.
http://news.yahoo.com/from-astrophysics-to-politics-and-a-change-in-philosophy-204145928.html
I hope other installments are as good!
Those here during Ron's campaign will remember Ani.
