mdh
Member
- Joined
- May 17, 2007
- Messages
- 3,033
Over the past few weeks, it's become pretty clear that there are a lot of folks who love the message that Ron Paul brings to the table. Folks from a lot of backgrounds... political and otherwise. Rich, poor, Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians, whatever else... I've started to see a lot of in-fighting over stuff... things that're really complicated subjects where there are plenty of facts, and 10x as many speculations. There're people who are spreading BS because they think it's the truth. There're people who are spreading BS because they know it's not the truth. What's the BS? What's the truth? The only truth that matters in the context of Ron Paul's political campaign is that these are microcosms of what we're fighting for. We can fight for greater justice without knowing the truth on all of these individual issues. Our enemies are real. But who our enemies are, and how they act, is far less important to us than who we are, and how we act, including towards people we don't agree with, and including towards people who we suspect may even be our enemies. When you're on a public forum of any sort talking to our enemies, you're not just talking to them, you're talking to everybody who can see it, both live and in the future (this applies a lot to various web forums too).
Among us, there are a wide variety of believes about the truth of 9/11, how the fiat currency system works, globalization, and a number of other hot-button topics. They're big issues. They're important ones. They get people riled up in a big way. They get people angry. But is this really the context for arguing those points? Do we want to show our enemies how divided we are on some of these issues? Do we want to make our worst weaknesses so public? Worse yet, do we want to do the job of tearing this movement apart on our own? Our enemies are banking on divisions amongst Ron Paul's supporters. It's thought that no one can bring together people from such disparate backgrounds and end up successful. Are they right?
Most of the arguments are pointless by and large. What really matters are Ron Paul's positions, and how we feel about them. Plenty of folks have disagreements - I've met people who believe in open borders who support Dr. Paul, countless secularists, and countless evangelical religious folks... More and more people, from a wider variety of lifestyles, political backgrounds, etc are joining every day because something Dr. Paul says or stands for resonates with them.
We need to be welcoming, not argumentative, towards these folks and eachother.
Among us, there are a wide variety of believes about the truth of 9/11, how the fiat currency system works, globalization, and a number of other hot-button topics. They're big issues. They're important ones. They get people riled up in a big way. They get people angry. But is this really the context for arguing those points? Do we want to show our enemies how divided we are on some of these issues? Do we want to make our worst weaknesses so public? Worse yet, do we want to do the job of tearing this movement apart on our own? Our enemies are banking on divisions amongst Ron Paul's supporters. It's thought that no one can bring together people from such disparate backgrounds and end up successful. Are they right?
Most of the arguments are pointless by and large. What really matters are Ron Paul's positions, and how we feel about them. Plenty of folks have disagreements - I've met people who believe in open borders who support Dr. Paul, countless secularists, and countless evangelical religious folks... More and more people, from a wider variety of lifestyles, political backgrounds, etc are joining every day because something Dr. Paul says or stands for resonates with them.
We need to be welcoming, not argumentative, towards these folks and eachother.