Ron Paul has a 30 year history of doing the right thing in spite of some questionable endorsements at times. And he never (ever!) bowed down to establishment types like Limbaugh or Hannity...I'm not sure he's ever been invited on their show.
I know he's been on Hannity, at least once. Hannity, of course, could not pass up the opportunity to piss & whine about the snowball incident. And after that, Hannity once had the temerity to complain to Rand that he didn't understand why Ron wasn't accepting any of Hannity's subsequent invitations.
Rand has only been a Senator for 2 years, and while his voting record is pretty darned good, I'm worried about why he's so acceptable to these establishment warmongers when his Father was not.
The thing is, if all of us had been around back in the 1970s when Ron was still a noob in Congress himself, we could have expressed EXACTLY the same concerns about Ron. And I have NO doubt that there are many of us who would have raked him over the coals and denounced him as loudly, viciously and vehemently as some of us have denounced Rand. "Why is Ron endorsing and campaigning for a warmonger like Reagan? My God! The man used to be a union boss! He used to be a liberal Democrat! Ron Paul is an impostor! A sellout! A traitor! ..."
Isn't it unfair not to give Rand the same benefit of the doubt we would all like to think we would have given to Ron?
Evidently, he's playing a game...but with whom? Will Rand change them, or will they marginalize him when they figure it out?
No, Rand won't change them. Not most of them anyway. He *might* soften some of them up - the ones sincerely concerned with the future of the Republican party, anyway (as opposed to merely preserving the status quo).
And yes. They WILL marginalize him. It's already begun, in fact (the "GOP insider" poll re: 2016 POTUS contenders - Rand was not even considered).
The question isn't "with whom is he playing a game?" but "for what stakes." I really don't think he's trying to win over the establishment types like McConnell (or their shills in the media like Limbaugh). He's trying to win over the rank-and-file, without the support of whom he cannot hope to succeed. His relationships with the McConnells and the Hannitys are directed toward that purpose. Of course, the McConnells and Hannitys are, in their turn, using him for their own purposes. As ugly as it is, this is the nature of electoral politics (or *any* kind of politics, for that matter).
Will Rand be successful? If so, to what degree? Or will he succumb to the siren-song of power, prestige and the easy popularity of charismatic men who go along to get along (as so many good men have done before)?
I don't know the answer to any of those questions ... and neither does anyone else. Not even Rand himself. Anyone who claims otherwise is a fool and/or liar.
Or worse, will they change him when he sees he can go farther than his Father did by adopting Limbaugh's and Hannity's points of view.
Rand is not a stupid man. In fact, he strikes me as being remarkably shrewd. He already knows perfectly well that he can go a LOT farther than his father by "going native." He really doesn't need McConnell, Hannity & Co. to show him this. He's not perfect, and shouldn't be expected to be. He WILL make mistakes. Mistakes in strategy, mistakes in judgement, etc. When he makes them, we should hold his toes to the fire, to be sure. But we shouldn't burn him at the stake unless we're certain he's become the Devil's Servant and until he gives a real, tangible reason for concluding that has gone over to the Dark Side (by actually *doing* something - like introducing or voting for anti-liberty legislation - rather than merely because we don't like some expedient endorsement or useful alliance he's made, or because his rhetoric doesn't contain enough "red meat" to suit our tastes). He needs us, but he also needs us to understand that he needs more than JUST us.
Rest assured, he WILL be saying things that we are going to find quite alarming at times. He already has. The only thing that's important, though - the only thing that counts for anything, in the end - is what his "other hand" is doing (how he votes in Congress, and what legislation he introduces & sponsors).
That's what worries me. And there's not a whole lot anyone here can say to alleviate those concerns....I can only wait and see what Rand does, and hope I'm not disappointed again.
That is the one and only thing any of us can do. We simply don't have any more control over the matter than that. We may end up betrayed & bitterly disappointed. We may end up amazed & delighted beyond our wildest hopes. Probably we will end up somewhere in between - hopefully, somewhere closer to the amazed & delighted end of the spectrum.
I just want him to be the man his Father is.
As do I. And the signs are quite good ... so far. Only time will tell. But one thing is certain. Even if he *is* the man his father is, he won't be able to be that man in the same way that his father was. He *will* have his own idiom. Not only because he's not an exact clone of his father - he has a different temperament, experiences, etc. (as we all differ from our parents) - but because he's taking a different path than his father did. Ron has always been very forthcoming about the fact that his chief purpose has always been education and "keeping the flame alive" - NOT in "legislative success" (measured in terms of getting bills passed, etc.). Rand, though, IS shooting for legislative success. And it's going to be extremely difficult - in many ways, it's going to be much more difficult than anything his father has had to face. He has GOT to have help (i.e. more pro-liberty Congressmembers) and he has GOT to play party politics. That is going to be VERY unnerving to many of us. Many of us will not be able to stomach or tolerate it. But education will only get us so far. Sooner or later, the rubber has GOT to meet the road, or we'll get nowhere.
And time is running out.