speciallyblend
Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2007
- Messages
- 20,351
i was democrat, then heard Harry Browne ,was lp for 12 yrs. Then heard Ron Paul and joined the republican party!!
I used to be of the neocon breed, and am pretty embarrassed about some of the things I used to say, especially about Paul. Watching some old youtube clips, some of the things that I agreed with, are now the things that make me squirm.
But I guess I'm not the only person who's made this transition. Hopefully we can help convert others in time for 2012.
this whole thread rocks and especially seeing folks who say they were neo-cons and now support Ron Paul. Makes me want to focus on neo-con republicans and stop wasting my time on non-republicans so we can get Ron Paul the 2012 gop nomination!!
Thanks
One of the reasons I made this poll was to find out who our target audience should be. The other was just to get a little bit of history on some of the members here.
liberal who had not voted for the dems since Bill Clinton's first term (voted 3rd party since) mostly for Nader. Kucinich was the only dem who caught my eye, but the media never covered him so his campaigns did badly.
Funny enough Michael savage is what kind of changed me, he constantly bashed republicans like no other right wing host...
This thread shows exactly why we can't go writing off Neo-Cons and others.
If some visit this forum with questions, don't flame them out of the site. Don't treat them as idiots and sheeple.
One night I happened on an epic youtube of Ron Paul, I spent the next two hours watching everything RP on youtube. This was after the primaries (I voted Romney). Once I got bit by the RP bug, it took me a while (and a lot of reading) to wholly embrace the philosophy and understand how it works in economics, foreign policy, domestic affairs, etc. It's complicated stuff.
Please, in the future, especially in this election cycle and the 2012 race, let us be hospitable and engaging, and not holier-or-smarter-than-thou. We might actually win this thing.
was a Joe Biden Supporter.. which is self explanatory lol.
You're not kidding!For a while there, it almost felt like my head was spinning from all the new data I was taking in and all the old erroneous notions I found I had to throw out. It was thrilling, terrifying, exhilarating, heartbreaking, and I wouldn't trade the experience for anything.
Still working on my parents... I've made significant progress, but still a long ways to go. I've gotten my dad to concede that we need to remove our troops from overseas, but he still feels we should back Israel in war because they're our ally. Any ideas on how to go about convincing him otherwise?
It wasn't quite as radical a journey though, as yours, mine was from a pretty standard "lock 'em up and throw away the key, turn it all into a glass parking lot, it's all the liberal's fault" kind of neo-con but with a strong distrust of government streak.