Personally, I support both. I prefer Gary for his more socially liberal views. I want to see all qualified candidates in the debates and may the best candidate win! (Note: I know being at this forum what 99.999...% here think that is!) Question #1: Having both in the race, it is likely one will eventually drop out, but that person is likely to endorse the other. That said, wouldn't having them both there possibly bring more supporters to libertarian ideas? (Gary bringing the more socially liberal ones and then supporting Paul could bring him extra support or vice verso.) Question #2: If you truly support Ron's ideals then why do you want the media controlling who gets to speak?
Finally, as you know I had a petition running to get him in the debate, but another one surpassed mine. The petition is not an "Support Gary" petition, but an, "All voices should be heard." I still remember Fox's treatment of RP in 2007. It wasn't fair then, but I wasn't politically active at the time. Sign if you want, share if you want, it's your choice and won't fault anyone who doesn't and many people have signed and commented their support for another candidate(I.E. "I support XXX, but all candidates should be heard"). It currently stands at 955 signatures. It's your choice and you have a right to your opinion, I just think he has the right to have his opinion be heard.
http://www.change.org/petitions/cnn-let-gary-johnson-in-the-debate
From a Reason magazine interview after his announcement:
"Reason: What do you think of Gary Johnson’s announcing his candidacy? Is it good for your cause to have another candidate with very similar ideas in the race?
Paul: The other side has dominated for years. Everyone represented their views as modified Keynesianism, and they don’t present an alternative on foreign policy. But the Republican Party had a history where we had less interventionist foreign policy and sound money and personal liberties [were valued], so having two, three, or four candidates who believe in them is good."