The Tea Party’s Brain

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Aug 6, 2009
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The Tea Party’s Brain

It's a hit piece, but it's good to see these creeps give Ron recognition even if begrudgingly.

One way to measure the surprising rightward political lurch of the past two years and rise of the Tea Party is to chart the relative position of Ron Paul, who has never flinched from his beliefs. He’s not alone anymore.

ron-paul-tea-party-wide.jpg

Read more.
 
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He has become its intellectual godfather—and its actual father, in the case of its brightest rising star, his son Rand Paul, Kentucky’s GOP Senate nominee. The Tea Party has overrun the Republican Party everywhere from Alaska to Kentucky to Maine, and a version of Paul’s bill to audit the Federal Reserve just passed the Senate unanimously en route to becoming law. Today, on matters of economic politics, Paul is at least as significant as any of the Republicans he shared the stage with in the 2007 South Carolina debate. :)
 
Of course, they state Keynesian economics as fact. After all "most experts" agree.

:rolleyes:

(That's not actually true, at least a plurality of American economists are monetarists).
 
Of course, they state Keynesian economics as fact. After all "most experts" agree.

:rolleyes:

(That's not actually true, at least a plurality of American economists are monetarists).

Many austrians see monetarism as a form of keynesianism. even Friedman admitted that he accepts Keynes framework, which austrians consider incorrect.
 
That was a pretty decent article. Some issues, of course, like calling him an isolationist, etc., but still pretty decent.
 
Ron Paul enjoys a deserved respect amongst the tea party crowd. Sometimes it looks like it might be his revolution after all.
 
Subtle hit piece perhaps?

There was certainly some choice words used but I wouldn't call it a hit piece. Sure, there's the old "isolationist" and "quixotic" tags always applied to RP by the media but it also highlights his close relationship with Reagan, who always gives Republicans hot flashes, and an accurate account of his personal history, which shows him to be a genuine man, not a born and bred politician. They cancel out mostly.

Hell, considering where we started with this whole thing Im tickled to even read an article like that. I even learned a few things I didn't know. Who knew that House leadership purposely stonewalled RP on committee chairman positions TWICE?

eta: the comments are great!
 
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Glad I--and others who emailed Joe Scarborough-- got some credit for giving Ron the boost.

To Paul’s delight, he is in such constant demand that he installed video equipment in his district office to spare himself the drive to Houston studios. “Before, they’d totally ignore me,” he says. “But after the housing bubble burst, people like [MSNBC host] Joe Scarborough and others started reading my speeches, and when I go on the air now”—Paul is beaming—“he’ll introduce me by reading some of my predictions from 2002, 2004, about how there’s a bubble coming and we ought to remove the line of credit to the Treasury for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”

Here's the RPF post calling for emailing Joe Scarborough.
 
Was hoping for a funny picture when I entered this thread, so I decided to make one.


teabrain.jpg
 
There was certainly some choice words used but I wouldn't call it a hit piece. Sure, there's the old "isolationist" and "quixotic" tags always applied to RP by the media but it also highlights his close relationship with Reagan, who always gives Republicans hot flashes, and an accurate account of his personal history, which shows him to be a genuine man, not a born and bred politician. They cancel out mostly.

Hell, considering where we started with this whole thing Im tickled to even read an article like that. I even learned a few things I didn't know. Who knew that House leadership purposely stonewalled RP on committee chairman positions TWICE?

eta: the comments are great!

The dirty rat bastards...

Brain Doherty (one of the reason good-uns) covered it today:

Ron Paul: Could He Win in San Francisco?

As an advocate of libertarianism in the public sphere for over two decades, I know full well most Americans get really annoyed by its consistent application. But something about Ron Paul seems to trigger some recognition in even journalists that this is a guy with a serious, well-intentioned, and possibly vitally important message.
[...]
I think author Joshua Green is highly overestimating the actual influence of Paul, or willingness to act, if and when in actual power again, in Paulian manner, of the mainstream GOP. That said, I've underestimated the power of the resurgent Ron Paul phenomenon a bit since he first announced his presidential run in January 2007 (when I was, I'm pretty sure, the first national journalist to interview him about it)...

Was hoping for a funny picture when I entered this thread, so I decided to make one.


teabrain.jpg

LOL @ the Libertarian Streak and Knowledge of the Constitution and, well, all of it. Nicely done!
 
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