Flagg wrote:General Brock wrote:Stark wrote:Are you saying Ron Paul's racist newsletter is ok because he's trying to raise awareness of racism?
I'm saying the newsletters don't matter because Ron Paul isn't racist and his policies would deny institutional racism.
Prove this. All of it.
I thought I already did so.
Ron Paul has repeatedly said he's not a racist, and anyone who credibly knows Ron Paul agrees with this. None of his official campaign statements or actions or votes as a Congressman suggest Ron Paul is anything other than an anti-racist libertarian constitutionalist.
Ron Paul addresses a bastion of institutional racism directly with his promise to end the war on drugs. The early war on drugs was focused on
marijuana and Hispanic Americans. The modern war on drugs disproportionally penalizes African Americans. Ron Paul has openly stated he would end the war and pardon those convicted of non-violent rug crimes, and treat drug addiction as an illness, not a criminal offense.
Furthermore, Ron Paul's supports States rights in their legalization of marijuana for medicinal use. There is nothing inherent to State's Rights that automatically says State rights will translate into racism. The origin of States' rights was Thomas Jefferson's Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, that asserted States had the right to ignore any laws they regarded as unconstitutional, in response to violations of individual rights inherent to the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1878. States may have used that as an excuse to support segregation, but they could just as easily have used states rights to defend minorities had the political will been there, as it was in the Northern states. In the end, discriminatory states lost on civil liberties arguments anyway. Its unclear to me how a theoretical and unlikely rolling back of the clock by state on civil rights is somehow more real than the very real Federal trampling of constitutional rights.
The erosion of civil liberties is just discounted out of hand. Despite the fact its a lot more serious than racism alone. The first American citizen killed by extrajudical presidential fiat was not a white christian, but a brown muslim. That O-Blam!-Aaaa is a black man does not sanctify the appearance of bigotry in the least, as he was acting on the advice of a secret panel of advisers; they can't be identified, let alone questioned, let alone voted out of office.
As hard as I've looked, the hate Ron Paul bandwagon is predominantly a white elitist/wannabe elitist phenomenon. There are no significant non-white commentators outside
Al Sharpton prepared to condemn Ron Paul over the newsletters, and even Sharpton relies on a white commentator to deliver the knife.
This automatically raises questions as to the validity of the anti-Pauls use of this argument. The conclusion that the racism charge is not aimed at convincing
minorities, or helping them in any way, but rather, to give a politically correct excuse for a 'swing' vote of white small-c conservatives and soft liberals to not vote Ron Paul, is inevitable.
Its just so much easier to identify examples of populist support for Ron Paul across racial and economic boundaries, and contrast it with corporate media hostility to Ron Paul and grassroots anti-Pauls. The only way to counter this is with white guilt, making whites feel embarrassed abut supporting Ron Paul and returning to the status quo, and breaking any nascent solidarity as individuals on common ground based on individual worth across income level and race.
Its would appear that a trump 'race' card is being played by the anti-Pauls. It is the only one they can play against him to any effect, not because Ron Paul is racist, but because many people are racist and prefer the polite institutional racism of the status quo, and has become the tipping factor atop any other intellectually conceited and defeatist doubts about Ron Paul.
Its also working; somehow the values behind antiwar, antiracism, pro-constitutionalism, pro-civil liberties, and fiscal responsibility are less important than hating Ron Paul. Somehow it is expected that no-one will notice those values are being thrown out under the pretext of hating Ron Paul. Ron Paul is a latter day Hypatius. Some eunuchs have come out with bags if fiat gold to remind the Blues, the emperor favours them (for now), and the Ron Paul is a Green, and this Revolution is supposed to be as over as the Nika revolts.
One wonders, how long supporters of the "1%" has known about the Ron Paul newsletters and how it is that the issues and values Ron Paul promotes are now tied to go down with him. So many Americans won't do whatever it takes to see those values triumph, while those who oppose the core of American values, will do whatever to takes to see them off into the dustpan of history.
That's just sad to see and more disturbing to watch in action than anything I've ever encountered exploring the fringes of the 'net, and I've obviously tapped into some pretty wild flights of fantasy and departures from reason.
A superficial play on racism cynically trumps the guts of real racism - and a whole lot of other real social ills - addressed by Ron Paul's five main points of antiwar, antiracism, pro-constitutionalism, pro-civil liberties, and fiscal responsibility.