KingNothing
Member
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2011
- Messages
- 6,662
I shall kindly refer to the post just above yours as it preemptively responded to your post better than I ever could.
Your post was perfect, but it wasn't difficult to see where the other side would take it. That's not to say that folks in this movement are just politicizing the issue. I don't think that's true. I think there's a very sincere anti-Corporate, populist sentiment at the heart of the Ron Paul movement. Most of the time that is fine, appropriate and completely justified. But in a meta-sense, it isn't. Your paraphrasing of Paul shows why. Corporations are comprised of people, and those people must have rights and accountability under the law. The anti-corporate sentiment should only be directed at those run by individuals who cheat, lie and steal. And even then, the focus should be on the people who committed the crimes, not necessarily the abstract entity -or the idea of the entity- that the criminals are associated with. Hating collections of people who work together to turn a profit, in general, because Ken Lay is an asshole seems odd... no?
As an aside, Paul really is a master of language. It's difficult to demagogue while perfectly maintaining logic and principle, but he always manages to pull it off. That skill is one of the most important things that we can learn from him.
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