I am convinced that this election is going to be very close and a few hundred, or a few thousand votes, one way or the other in some states, might make a huge difference to the outcome, as with Florida in 2000.
It's not that Dr. Paul didn't win the nomination, it's why he lost it that concerns me. When I read the Paulbots complaining about media bias against Dr. Paul, and his own party hacks working against him, I laughed. Yeah yeah yeah, they would say that, wouldn't they! Then I did some investigating of my own and lo and behold, they were telling the truth. And no, I don't think "the other side" would have treated Paul any better, or Rand or any of the other liberty-minded people, because both political parties are dominated by people who hold, or profess to hold, certain views that allow them to get into office and then progress further up the greasy pole. Someone like Ron Paul, who applies logic and common sense to a problem, as opposed to blind ideology, is always going to be at a disadvantage in such a system because political parties want drones, people who will parrot the party line and do as they are told.
No offense, but I think that particular point is sort of silly.
Rand Paul is a Republican senator. Amash et al are GOP elected officials.
The two sides aren't the same and it's reality that proves it. Denying this is simply trying to distort reality till it fits a meme.
I think there are differences between the two parties but not on anything I would describe as truly significant. Where's the difference in foreign policy? where the difference in monetary policy? where's the difference on welfare reform? where's the difference on the Patriot Act, the NDAA, drones flying over American cities? Neither candidate is going to stop the wars or the war spending, neither is going to change monetary policy, both will continue to spend money like water, both will continue the PA, the NDAA, and both will continue to allow drones to fly through domestic American airspace. And you talk about "the lesser of two evils"? How much evil can you tolerate, considerably more than me, from the sounds of it. If you don't get these things right then the rest of it is little more than tinkering around the edges; fiddling while Rome burns.
1 - There's a huge differnece in welfare reform. One party has the courage to propose something - a step in the right direction, even if not enough - the other is dominated by economic illiterates and demagogue
Welfare is hugely popular, like it or not. Say what you want about Ryan's plan and Romney's decision to pick Ryan, but coming up with an entitlement reform and picking its author showed political courage and a willingness to take risks.
Plus, I think anyone who isn't a gradualist is flat out misguided about the nature of politics. If any improvement is going to happen, it's going to be incrementally. I won't pretend that incremental improvement isn't improvement at all.
2 - Nobody is going to reinstall a metallic standard, thank God. But it's a mistake to believe this election is immaterial in terms of monetary policy. Check how Obama is filling the Fed board with inflation doves. Again, politics is about picking the lesser evil. There's a difference between a hawkish monetarist and the irresponsible crazes who believe their job is to print enough money till the GDP numbers look rosy.
You can say "well, Switzerland or Germany vs Iran or Zimbabwe... it's all the same, really". No, it's not.
3 - Yeps, the lesser of two evils.
What's the point of not tolerating evil when it comes to elections?
It's going to be there, anyway. I prefer to do my part to minimize it in the short-term, even to allow better options in the future.
The proper arena for political advocacy, to advance ideas, to stick to purism, to not compromise is not the general election.
Compromising electorally or politically doesn't imply you're compromising your principles. Two very different things.
Maybe I'm getting old and bad-tempered (and if I come off that way I apologise because that's not how my comments are intended) but sometimes in life when someone has knocked you down and walked all over you, you have to get straight back up and bop them on the nose. If you don't, chances are they will do it again.
As for repealing Obamacare, I say again, it's too late. The goodies have been promised and the electorate wants it's goodies. That's my opinion, but we'll see.
I still fail to see how that mechanism in the first paragraph is going to work.
If Romney loses, the liberals and progressives will see it as proof they can punch us in the nose really harder. It'll prove you can add 6 trillion dollars to the public debt in 4 years and get away with it. It'll prove you can spend millions in subsidies to your donors and cronies and get away with it. It'll prove you can kill the natural economy cycle with endless boatloads of regulation and get away with it. You can prove you can campaign on jealousy, resentment, class-warfare, using others people money to offer contraceptives and tv shows and get away with it.
Sorry, I'll easily take the lesser evil. It's always about the lesser evil and it'll always be. And to me there's enough of a difference in this case - as there's clearly a difference to Ron Paul, he's ruled out voting for Obama but not for Romney.