December 31, 2011
Progressives and the Ron Paul fallacies
Glenn Greenwald in Salon:
The Ron Paul candidacy, for so many reasons, spawns pervasive political confusion — both unintended and deliberate. Yesterday, The Nation‘s long-time liberal publisher, Katrina vanden Heuvel, wrote this on Twitter:
That’s fairly remarkable: here’s the Publisher of The Nation praising Ron Paul not on ancillary political topics but central ones (“ending preemptive wars & challenging bipartisan elite consensus” on foreign policy), and going even further and expressing general happiness that he’s in the presidential race. Despite this observation, Katrina vanden Heuvel — needless to say — does not support and will never vote for Ron Paul (indeed, in subsequent tweets, she condemned his newsletters as “despicable”). But the point that she’s making is important, if not too subtle for the with-us-or-against-us ethos that dominates the protracted presidential campaign: even though I don’t support him for President, Ron Paul is the only major candidate from either party advocating crucial views on vital issues that need to be heard, and so his candidacy generates important benefits.
Whatever else one wants to say, it is indisputably true that Ron Paul is the only political figure with any sort of a national platform — certainly the only major presidential candidate in either party — who advocates policy views on issues that liberals and progressives have long flamboyantly claimed are both compelling and crucial. The converse is equally true: the candidate supported by liberals and progressives and for whom most will vote — Barack Obama — advocates views on these issues (indeed, has taken action on these issues) that liberals and progressives have long claimed to find repellent, even evil.
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Comments
Courageous.
Madness makes strange bedfellows.
Posted by: Dredd | Dec 31, 2011 3:11:40 PM
It's been said that "If you truly know Ron Paul yet do not support him for your president in 2012 then you are either a crook or a coward."
Has anyone been able to disprove that? Can someone who truly knows Ron Paul but doesn't want him as president be both?
Posted by: Dave | Dec 31, 2011 8:07:24 PM
Ron Paul is not presidential material. Period.The word "circumspect" is not in his vocabulary.
That said, the guy sure says a lot of the right things.
http://youtu.be/bM19T9lS7Ao
Posted by: John Ballard | Jan 1, 2012 6:05:23 AM
Here's the part of Ron Paul I'm not confused about: he published racist newsletters under his own name for many years. He should be the libertarian candidate for dogcatcher, not president.
Posted by: Anderson | Jan 2, 2012 10:04:25 AM
It's a sad state of affairs when, in a desire to find a ray of light amidst the murk of American electoral politics, progressives can only come up with a little bit of qualified praise for the candidacy of a man who happens to say, on a minority of the topics he addresses, the right things for the wrong reasons.
Posted by: Kai Matthews | Jan 3, 2012 12:42:37 PM
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