Ron Paul Snubbed on Federal Reserve Question at CNN Debate

bobbyw24

Banned
Joined
Sep 10, 2007
Messages
14,097
Texas Congressman Ron Paul, who has consistently ranked in the top three of the GOP field in 2012, was blatantly skipped last night in the CNN debate on a question to which he has dedicated nearly his entire career in government– the Federal Reserve.

Yes, he has repeatedly introduced bills to audit and end the fed, wrote a book titled End the Fed; he currently chairs the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology and has campaigned heavily on the issue nationally since 2007. But he was not given a response to the questioning the candidates’ positions on auditing the Federal Reserve.

Worst still, it was at the Tea Party debate, a movement Paul also had a hand in founding.

Watch the video:



A CBS article identified the federal reserve as a major ‘target’ in GOP debate rhetoric, but again there was no mention of Paul.

Instead, the focus hinged around reaction to Rick Perry’s ‘treasonous’ statements, in which the Texas Governor has willingly stolen Ron Paul’s thunder on an issue he fought to bring to the surface of political debate. Now that the private Federal Reserve has become an unavoidable issue, there is silence from the man who sought to reign it in. Instead, Herman Cain, himself the former head of the Kansas City Federal Reserve, got time for a response, as did Bachmann, Romeny and Santorum.

More:

http://www.infowars.com/ron-paul-sn...te/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
 
I noticed that last night and it really irritated me.

I put this on Facebook as soon as the question was asked and my friend just said--they already know what Ron Paul thinks about it and did not need to ask him.
 
I put this on Facebook as soon as the question was asked and my friend just said--they already know what Ron Paul thinks about it and did not need to ask him.

Perhaps but many watching last night might not.
 
I was fuming when this happened. They did the same thing in the debate before this one as well. This was even worse though, because they asked five people about it without asking Ron. That is fucking ridiculous.
 
I blame Paul for not demanding his time during the next question much more than I blame the media, tbh. It would've been the perfect opportunity to school the other pro-fed Republicans (like Romney), establish credibility by noting that he made the fed an issue in the first place and it would've showed that he has balls.
 
But if they had asked him that question he could have cleared up the deliberate misconception the MSM has been propigating for over four years now that he wants to put us on some Gold Standard and let it be known that he's for competing currencies. Why would they let Wolfie undercut all of that hard work?
 
But if they had asked him that question he could have cleared up the deliberate misconception the MSM has been propigating for over four years now that he wants to put us on some Gold Standard and let it be known that he's for competing currencies. Why would they let Wolfie undercut all of that hard work?

Excellent point
 
I am still beyond pissed off they skipped RP on the FED question and taxes question. Sickening decision by Wolf Blitzer. SICKENING.
 
and DELIBERATE

Absolutely. Wolf is a complete moron, however, he is not mentally disabled. He full knows well from the many times RP has come on his show that he sponsored the Audit the Fed bill AND wrote a New York Times bestseller about the Federal Reserve.

This is honestly amazing. The man that wrote/sponsored the Audit the Fed bill and wrote a NYT bestseller about the Federal Reserve was excluded form the question when almost every other candidate was asked is unfathomable.
 
Can't have someone who actually wants to reign in the Fed talk on national TV. You can, however, allow a bunch of parrots to squawk about it.
 
By continuing to get mad at the media for doing what they've been doing for decades we're fighting an uphill battle. We have absolutely no influence over that and it's to be expected. Like I said in my earlier post, the Fed is where Ron Paul hs the most credibility in the eyes of the media. If anything's important here, it's to let the campaign know that he can 'cause some serious (hehe) blowback if he would use the opportunity to attack his fellow candidates and establish credibility by demanding time on it.

It's time (for us) to stop playing victim and start showing some balls and it seems like Paul's starting to understand that by taking jabs at opponents. Now he just needs to up the agression in general.
 
Can't have someone who actually wants to reign in the Fed talk on national TV. You can, however, allow a bunch of parrots to squawk about it.

True-those candidate who answered all said "We need the Fed," but we also have to audit it.
 
Ron Paul is the reason the Fed was even a topic, and that candidates made sure to be critical of the Fed. So in that sense, Ron Paul was the real winner of that segment.
 
Media is bad, but this is Paul's fault. He could easily speak up. He's going to have to start doing that.
 
Back
Top