Should Rand Paul filibuster CISPA?

If Rand does run I'll roll the dice on him, but I acknowledge that I'm rolling the dice.
Hinting at running for prez is what makes him a large part of the national discussion on x, y, & z. This generates untold media coverage of libertarian ideals even when he isn't officially running. Very few gave a flip about Ron and what he was doing until he became part of the national discussion. And yes, Rand has a very good chance at winning the nomination and the presidency. Once he becomes prez, there'll likely be a period of economic downtime and short term pain but it will rebound strongly when he unleashes the free market to do what it does and people will love him for that. The detractors will just sit on their thumbs and spin as usual and they'll become meaningless.
 
Rand obviously believes he's got a decent shot at president or he wouldn't be pushing so hard nationally like we've seen. You must know something Rand doesn't?

I have no idea what's in Rand's head. He can probably compromise to the point where he could get in. I suspect that he wouldn't even be worth supporting if he compromised that much. I believe he thinks he has a better shot than I think he has. One of us will be proven wrong, I suppose.

I have a lower opinion of the American People. I think they are mostly statists.
The last bit is the exact strategy that got Ron labeled "kook" and yeah we love him for it, because he's right, but it's clear that is not the strategy Rand is taking whether you like it or not. Rand is not his father, he has his own plans and aspirations, and I don't think that makes him a power-hungry evil statist, it just means he has a different path planned than Ron.

I don't think it makes him power hungry either. I fear what the Presidency might do to him though, if he really does win. Rand has a powerful platform that I think he should use. Then again, that's because I don't think he's going to win. If he wins, and I still recognize him, I'll admit I was wrong.
 
Hinting at running for prez is what makes him a large part of the national discussion on x, y, & z. This generates untold media coverage of libertarian ideals even when he isn't officially running. Very few gave a flip about Ron and what he was doing until he became part of the national discussion. And yes, Rand has a very good chance at winning the nomination and the presidency. Once he becomes prez, there'll likely be a period of economic downtime and short term pain but it will rebound strongly when he unleashes the free market to do what it does and people will love him for that. The detractors will just sit on their thumbs and spin as usual and they'll become meaningless.

Hinting at it is smart even if he's not going to do it.

As for him being President, I guess we'll find out in 2016.

Remember that I do still support him.
 
It'll probably pass 90-5 or something.

it passed the house overwhelmingly.

In 2012 it passed the house but failed in the senate. Interestingly enough there is more republican support for CISPA than democratic. Rand should filibuster this and force GOP senators to explain why they support Federal invasion of privacy on the Internet.
 
Rand's got to pick his battles wisely and manage his image if he wants to win the big show. Not saying CISPA isn't worthy, but he can't alienate himself and make it easier for the pundits to label him a "kook" and "unelectable" like Ron.

I absolutely agree with this. Going around making a big filibuster show about everything is a sure way to turn people off. But I think THIS issue is a very wise battle to fight.

For one, he is going to need the internet for his future campaigns. He cant rely on the media to portray him accurately.

Secondly, it could be rewarding for him to make a big stand on this. Politicially as others have pointed out, people don't want the govt having access to all their history and stuff. But also monetarily, during campaigns, there are lots of small business owners and others who have vested interest in the free press nature of the internet. Getting corporate support isn't all bad.


The only concern I have right now is the effectiveness of this... most people will be focused in on the boston crap.
 
Rand's got to pick his battles wisely and manage his image if he wants to win the big show. Not saying CISPA isn't worthy, but he can't alienate himself and make it easier for the pundits to label him a "kook" and "unelectable" like Ron.

Go with that. /s

The internet would back him.
 
I absolutely agree with this. Going around making a big filibuster show about everything is a sure way to turn people off. But I think THIS issue is a very wise battle to fight.

For one, he is going to need the internet for his future campaigns. He cant rely on the media to portray him accurately.

Secondly, it could be rewarding for him to make a big stand on this. Politicially as others have pointed out, people don't want the govt having access to all their history and stuff. But also monetarily, during campaigns, there are lots of small business owners and others who have vested interest in the free press nature of the internet. Getting corporate support isn't all bad.

exactly. He has carved out civil liberties as something no one is really against, and some are very much in favor of as the area he pushes, as it seems. He is still careful to do it in a way that he gets leadership on board for, but it seems to me that this is right in that niche.

However, I recognize Rand has a political path he is on for good or ill and I am not counting on it. I do think he should do it.
 
He should do it and throughout his speech challenge Obama to keep good on his threat and veto the bill. Indies and Libs will love it due to the issue and conservatives will love it because he is telling Obama what to do / forcing his hand.
 
Internet privacy isn't meaty like drone strikes on American's in America. A filibuster probably won't happen. He shouldn't dilute his filibustering cred with this.
 
I got a feeling waaaay more Americans, especially older republicans [that Rand needs to continue to win over], will now support CISPA in light of Boston and the recent siege on Watertown ... even though they're unrelated I think the general mood of America for the next couple weeks will be more dependent/admiring/reliant/trusting of the government to do whats right for the people.

Government CISPA is for our own good, so it must be ... right?

Rand has done an awesome job of staying in the headlines for the past couple months. I think right now, unless he's going to go tough on the FBI and visa program, he should stay out of the spotlight till Watertown is yesterday's news.

A few days ago I would have been behind a big showdown over CISPA and now my non-expert opinion is that now is not the time.
 
In 2012 it passed the house but failed in the senate. Interestingly enough there is more republican support for CISPA than democratic. Rand should filibuster this and force GOP senators to explain why they support Federal invasion of privacy on the Internet.

I'm afraid it will get 60 votes easily
 
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