Ron Paul brought his revolution to the Gator Nation Monday night, delivering a well-burnished message of expanding individual liberty and restricting government intrusion to about 3,000 fans at the O’Connell Center.
Paul, 77, a 12-term congressman from Texas and a veteran of three presidential campaigns, plied his craft like the political pro he is, hitting familiar themes and delivering a string of folksy, populist slogans. The event was sponsored by Accent Speaker’s Bureau, which paid Paul $55,000 to come. The event was free to the public.
“I am delighted so many young people are interested in the cause of liberty,” he said to thunderous applause. “It’s not that complicated to defend liberty. The goal is to seek peace and prosperity with limited government intrusion in our lives and the affairs of other nations.”
Paul would return to those themes, repeating them throughout his hour-long speech, offering simple solutions for complex problems. War? Stay out of it. Drugs? Let people be responsible for themselves. The economy? Let the free market do its thing.
“This country was the freest and wealthiest nation. That is not the case anymore,” he said, citing a $5.7 trillion debt to foreign nations, eliciting loud boos.
The fact that he gave his speech on April 15, the filing deadline for federal income tax returns, was not lost on Paul, who called it Bad News Day. “We should get rid of the income tax,” he said to cheers.
Noting that North Korea is in the news, he said that he was in high school in 1950 the first time the U.S. got involved in the Korean conflict, “and we never left.”
His solution: get out of Korea and let them resolve their differences and peace would come before you knew it.