Alright, list me the actual positions he holds or actions he has taken that would be more accurately described as 'conservative' and then further expound on how those stances are more conservative than libertarian.
Iran sanction votes? Military aid to Israel? Support for air strikes against ISIS?
All of that. Support for some drug regulations. Only very minimal references to blowback (I know this isn't a policy per say, but it relates to a greater mindset.) Wants to partly privatize the TSA but not completely. Called Chris Kyle a "hero" (again, not a policy but related to a greater mindset. I don't see how a libertarian can call an overseas murderer a "hero" unless he's just flat out lying.) Wants to keep some foreign military bases THere have probably been other issues but those are the ones that immediately come to mind. (Note also that I am using minarchism as the standard here, not anarcho-capitalism, which I think is fair considering Ron Paul was a minarchist as well, and if I were ever to run for political office it would almost certainly be with minarchist positions.)
Don't misunderstand me. I like Rand Paul. Walter Block says Rand is 70% libertarian. That sounds fairly close to right. I plan to vote for him and support him. So, while this is criticism of Paul, its not an attack. Keep that in mind.
First, it's important to identify the characteristics that distinguish a conservative from a libertarian and then compare and contrast those distinctions with beliefs Rand holds or votes he has taken.
libertarianism is based on the non-aggression principle. That doesn't mean that it must be the libertarian's epistemological starting point. Nor is it to say that one must be perfectly consistent regarding the NAP to be a libertarian (indeed, its a PRINCIPLE after all, and we all disagree with each other on one or two things at the least.) But it does mean that the non-aggression principle plays a SIGNIFICANT role in policy debates. Ron Paul has done this, he has regularly and consistently challenged the idea of government prohibiting actions which all parties freely consent to, and he has applied these views to economic policy, gun policy, drug policy, and especially foreign policy in a fairly consistent manner. Sure, there are a few positions I could nitpick on, but all of those are things that we could reasonably disagree on even with the NAP.
I'm less sure of exactly what conservatism is, especially since there are so many different versions. Some would even call me a conservative (though I don't claim to be one.) To be clear, I am NOT saying Rand is a neoconservative. John McCain is a neoconservative. Lindsey Graham is a neocon. Rand Paul is a (mostly) constitutional conservative. Conservatives are more pragmatic in nature, more willing to intervene overseas (though not in a reflexive neocon way necessarily), conservatives aren't necessarily that ideological, conservatives think "family values" can be enforced through government intervention to some degree, they don't necessarily support total drug freedom, and they think highly of government "service" in the military and so forth. THat's not to say every conservative will hold every single one of these characteristics. BUt these are all areas where Rand is more conservative than libertarian.
I find it hard to believe that you can seriously claim that Rand is a conservative in some way or another who just so happens has some libertarian ideas. Especially when Rand's pro-libertarian positions and votes heavily outnumber those that potentially aren't.
If your version of "conservative" is the "moderate" Republicans of today, I can see your point. But I don't really think of them as conservative. When I think conservative, I think of people like Rand Paul, Justin Amash, Chuck Baldwin, Traditional Conservative [the poster] etc. I think of most modern Republicans as just being neocon authoritarians, with no real liberty oriented principles at all.
Is Rand closer to anarcho-capitalism than he is to modern neoconservatism? I'm not exactly sure how to assess something like that in the modern political paradigm, but I wouldn't really argue with you if you claimed that he was. But I'd still say that that makes him a conservative. He's localist, smaller government, more realistic on foreign policy, and pragmatic. He is NOT a believer in the non-aggression principle, total personal bodily freedom*, total foreign policy non-intervention, and a total economic non-interventionist.
*Note that I do NOT refer to abortion here, which NAP believers are on both sides on (and I'm strongly pro-life.) I refer to laws against certain consensual sexual practices, and especially restrictions on drug freedom.