WD-NY
Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2011
- Messages
- 1,787
LOL So Ron Paul supporters switched from Paul to Romney?
Can you blame them though? His answer was pretty sub par imo.
The establishment media has been playing with dynamite by attempting to 'gotcha' Paul on the student loan/debt issue since Meet The Press. They're so out of touch that they honestly seem to think that they can hang Paul on this issue when the truth is, this is one subject that millions of Americans seem in agreement with Paul's diagnosis.
So when the attacks first began I honestly believed that that student loans had the potential to be this campaign's "They attack us here because we're over there" position (aka - a mind-blowing, game-changing moment that backfires on the MSM because they mistakenly assumed that the people would buy into their superficial treatment of the issue and demagoguery of Ron Paul's position).
And yet, several weeks later, in the middle of a big debate on a big college campus... with Cain crashing hard, Newt rising fast and opportunity knocking loudly on Ron Paul's door... we get the good fortune of some establishment puppet/reporter who calls on Paul to "explain how ending student loans would make college more affordable".
As the question was being asked, I couldn't help thinking that the MSM's hubris had once again clouded their judgement and provided us with another BIG opportunity. No way is Paul going to go all philosophical given the mood of the moment and the simple fact that the student loans/debt issue/question = THE PERFECT ISSUE FOR RON PAUL. And yet, what we got was a can of 'everything-but-the-kitchen-sink-soup'!
Usually, I don't dwell on such things, but given all the time that Paul has had to put his thoughts on student debt/loans into better order, I must admit that his answer has me a bit deflated - mostly because it reminds me of his resistance to debate prep and message consistency. I mean, their pre-question video included a clip of a college kid pointing out the massive disconnect between the rate of inflation and the rate of tuition "inflation". And yet, the reporter still had to ask "but how will they pay for it??" ::sigh::
The other part of it is that the student loan/debt bubble = a perfect step stone into Ron Paul's diagnosis of the housing and healthcare bubbles (re: gov't subsidies > higher prices > massive consumer debt). It's a SIMPLIFIED, easier-to-understand-since-there-are-10x-less-moving-parts issue that clearly demonstrates the negative effects consumer (in this case, kids and their parents) suffer as a result of govn't meddling within a previously free-market.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=D2eq2nZ6J6g#t=364s
Bringing up the constitution when answering the student loan question should be LAST on his list of points to make... First should be the fact that ending student loans would bring down tuition rates. The solution to high prices isn't larger loans... all that does is create an entire generation of indentured students who have spend decades paying off 4 years of college.