Ron Paul's opinion of Blacks

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GREAT POST:dance::dance::dance::yes::yes::yes:
 
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GREAT POST:dance::dance::dance::yes::yes::yes:

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Rule Number 3. No "N" words. If you can't express yourself without resort to calling your fellow brother or sister an "N" -- then you don't belong on this board. :mad:


Peace,

QueEx
 
Do Black Americans Believe Ron Paul Is Racist?


source: Huffington Post

Ron Paul: Civil Rights Act Of 1964 'Destroyed' Privacy


WASHINGTON -- Despite recent accusations of racism and homophobia, Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) stuck to his libertarian principles on Sunday, criticizing the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964 because it "undermine[d] the concept of liberty" and "destroyed the principle of private property and private choices."

"If you try to improve relationships by forcing and telling people what they can't do, and you ignore and undermine the principles of liberty, then the government can come into our bedrooms," Paul told Candy Crowley on CNN's "State of the Union." "And that's exactly what has happened. Look at what's happened with the PATRIOT Act. They can come into our houses, our bedrooms our businesses ... And it was started back then."

The Civil Rights Act repealed the notorious Jim Crow laws; forced schools, bathrooms and buses to desegregate; and banned employment discrimination. Although Paul was not around to weigh in on the landmark legislation at the time, he had the chance to cast a symbolic vote against it in 2004, when the House of Representatives took up a resolution "recognizing and honoring the 40th anniversary of congressional passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964." Paul was the only member who voted "no."

Paul explained that while he supports the fact that the legislation repealed the notorious Jim Crow laws, which forced racial segregation, he believes it is the government, not the people, that causes racial tensions by passing overreaching laws that institutionalize slavery and segregation. Today's race problems, he said, result from the war on drugs, the flawed U.S. court system and the military.

"The real problem we face today is the discrimination in our court system, the war on drugs. Just think of how biased that is against the minorities," he said. "They go into prison much way out of proportion to their numbers. They get the death penalty out of proportion with their numbers. And if you look at what minorities suffer in ordinary wars, whether there's a draft or no draft, they suffer much out of proposition. So those are the kind of discrimination that have to be dealt with, but you don't ever want to undermine the principle of private property and private choices in order to solve some of these problems."

Paul's comments on how to improve race relations come at an interesting time, following the recent revelation of a series of racist and homophobic newsletters that were published under his name in the 1980s and 1990s. Paul has denounced the newsletters, and he says that although he was the publisher, he didn't write or review any of the offensive comments in them -- only the "economic parts."

"I'm the true civil libertarian when it comes to [race relations], and I think that people ought to, you know, look at my position there, rather than dwelling on eight sentences that I didn't write and didn't authorize and have been, you know, apologetic about," he told ABC's Jake Tapper on Sunday. "Because it shouldn't have been there, and it was terrible stuff."
 
Re: The Official Ron Paul Thread

Libertarianism is destructive to low income families who largely require govt assistance. It's basically an only the (financially) strongest survive type of deal. Black communities are not there yet and will suffer most.
[*]Libertarianism strips the constitution down to its bare essence, of which black folks were never itended to be a part of. The govt will not be required to protect the very civil rights my ancestors fought diligently for.

...these points.

The poster is comparing apples to oranges, not to quote Herman Cain :)

Libertarianism is simply a way of life. The inequity in the black community is directly a result of monetary theory. Every economic solution for the last 30 years has been papered over by "printing more money". It is because of this inflation that our jobs have been out sourced and the "middle class" hass been wiped out.

"In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. If there were, the government would have to make its holding illegal, as was done in the case of gold. The financial policy of the welfare state requires that there be no way for the owners of wealth to protect themselves. This is the shabby secret of the welfare statists' tirades against gold. Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the 'hidden' confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of property rights." - Alan Greenspan, Gold and Economic Freedom
 
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James Williams of Matagorda County, Texas recounts a touching true story. Living in a still prejudiced Texas In 1972, his wife had a complication with her pregnancy. No doctors would care for her or deliver their bi-racial child. In fact one of the hospital nurses called the police on James.

Dr. Ron Paul was notified and took her in, delivering their stillborn baby. Because of the compassion of Dr. Ron Paul, the Williams' never received a hospital bill for the delivery.

Ron Paul views every human being as a unique individual, afforded the rights endowed by our creator and codified in the Bill of Rights.

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James Williams of Matagorda County, Texas recounts a touching true story. Living in a still prejudiced Texas In 1972, his wife had a complication with her pregnancy. No doctors would care for her or deliver their bi-racial child. In fact one of the hospital nurses called the police on James.

Dr. Ron Paul was notified and took her in, delivering their stillborn baby. Because of the compassion of Dr. Ron Paul, the Williams' never received a hospital bill for the delivery.

Ron Paul views every human being as a unique individual, afforded the rights endowed by our creator and codified in the Bill of Rights.

Damn, people hated you that much to not deliver a bi-racial baby; the bar was set so low on this story that just delivering a baby does not impress me.

I heard Don Black the guy behind Stormfront calling assimilation genocide, that is how strongly they feel about it.

"Racial purity was the driving force between Southern culture's strong prohibition of sexual relations between white women and black men, but ironically, the same culture encouraged sexual relations between white men and black women, which produced a large number of mixed-race (mulatto) offspring.[45]"

:hmm::hmm::hmm:
 
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Many Ron Paul Supporters Ignore, Dismiss Newsletter Controversy

fingers-in-ears.jpg
 
Re: The Official Ron Paul Thread

Libertarianism is simply a way of life. The inequity in the black community is directly a result of monetary theory. Every economic solution for the last 30 years has been papered over by "printing more money". It is because of this inflation that our jobs have been out sourced and the "middle class" hass been wiped out.


I don't have any problem with people living their philosophy, I challenge the idea of libertarianism as a governiing philosophy for the United States as a whole.
 
Another racist rant from Ron Paul

@3:31 "I would pardon all blacks convicted of non-violent drug crimes"

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Has Pres. Obama made a policy announcement regarding the War on Drugs? For some reason, I think Snoop should reach out to Ron

Snoop Dogg Busted for Weed At DHS Checkpoint

(CNN) -- Hip hop star Snoop Dogg faces a drug charge after border agents searched his tour bus along the same stretch of a west Texas highway where singer Willie Nelson was busted in 2010, a Texas sheriff said.

Snoop Dogg, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, "freely admitted" that three prescription bottles filled with marijuana cigarettes were his, a statement from the Hudspeth County, Texas, Sheriff said.

The entertainer's representatives did not immediately respond to CNN's request for comment.

The rapper, like Nelson, is an outspoken proponent of pot and he is known to have a license to use prescription medical marijuana in California.

The bust happened early Saturday at his bus approached the U.S. Border Patrol Checkpoint located in Sierra Blanca, Texas, at the U.S.-Mexico border about 85 miles southeast of El Paso, the sheriff's statment said.

"During a routine check of U.S. citizenship the inspecting Border Patrol agent detected the odor of marijuana emitting from the inside of the vehicle and requested the driver to pull into the secondary inspection lane for further inspection," the statement said.

A drug-detection dog sniffing inside the bus "alerted to a trash can located at the rear of the vehicle where a red prescription bottle containing rolled marijuana cigarettes were located," the statement said. Two other containers with marijuana, weighing in all total of 0.130 pounds, were also found, it said.

"Snoop Dogg freely admitted that the marijuana belonged to him and he was placed under arrest by U.S. Border Patrol agents and detained," it said.

He was cited for possession of drug paraphernalia, given a court date of January 20 and released, the sheriff said.

Willie Nelson settled his November 2010 Hudspeth County pot bust with a plea deal that reduced his marijuana possession charge to possession of drug paraphernalia and imposed a $500 fine.

The west Texas prosecutor who handled Nelson's case had suggested Nelson, a treasured icon in the Lone Star state, could pay just a $100 fine if he'd serenade the court with his 1975 hit "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain." The judge quickly vetoed that offer.

"You can bet your ass I'm not going to be mean to Willie Nelson," Hudspeth County Attorney C.R. "Kit" Bramblett told CNN at the time.

Bramblett was in court Monday and unavailable to comment on how he might handle Snoop Dogg's prosecution.
 
I myself could careless if Calvin Broadus is busted for drug violations. He and those like him have done damage to the image of Black Women, something that I think is just as bad as his glorification of the 'Pimp" image.

Again, Paul does make many legitimate indictments on the political system. The inequities of drug enforcement and the run away American military empire to name just two. But his simplistic views of the reasons for racism and how federal laws have caused the under lying feelings of whites resentful is just something that won't allow me to take him seriously.
 
Lamar isn't pairing Ron Paul and Calvin Broadus to support the conclusion that Paul (and Broadus, for that matter) is good for Black people, is he :confused:

:lol::lol::lol:
 
What Are Blacks To Do About Ron Paul?

By William Reed, NNPA Columnist –

Republican presidential candidate Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas) has come under fire over allegations that a newsletter he edited years ago contained racist commentary. The old geezer is being punk’d by people Black voters really should be leery of instead of quoting. Publicizing of comments published in the 1980s and 1990s reeks as a the latest agenda to mis-educate Black voters. To charge Paul with “racism” is misleading.

Ron Paul is far from being a foe of Black Americans. He is to be admired as a man of principles and a comrade in foiling America’s imperialists and the war crowd that probably were sources of the racially-charged commentaries. In contrast to what has turned up, if Blacks look a little closer they’d see that Paul’s political positions are in line with those preached and practiced by Martin Luther King, Jr. MLK’s position on foreign policy was vastly more similar to Paul’s than it is to any other presidential candidate.

Paul is hardly the racist that the mainstream media would have Blacks believe him to be. Blacks have more in common with Paul’s opposition to America’s penchant for imperialistic wars and absurd rationalities behind them like “Manifest Destiny” and “American Exceptionalism” than with President Obama.

Think about it, Paul has been on the national scene for 30 years. He has been labeled “conservative”, “Constitutionalist” and “libertarian”, but never “racist.” Much of Paul’s opposition comes from fear in some pro-Israel circles that Paul reflects an ascendant faction that has little use for a foreign policy so tilted toward Israel. Paul is not “a mainstream man” and the only candidate seeking to change the status quo in America. A medical doctor, Paul advocates ending the drug war and fixing a biased court system that unfairly targets and punishes minorities.

Paul may have made enough people mad enough to punk him, but Blacks have to be discerning in knowing what his actual views toward us are. Over the years Paul’s positions have remained clear and transparent. He hasn’t wavered in his voting or policy ideals. What candidate can you name that is more serious on fiscal matters? Paul wants to get rid of many federal agencies and would like to audit and perhaps abolish the Federal Reserve Bank. Paul advocates an end to the death penalty and, as president, plans to bring all military troops home.

People tied to the military/industrial complex loathe Paul the most. He labels their banter against Iran “warmongering” and states: “In all wars minorities suffer the most. So I hope that they join me in this position … against the war in Iraq… and the war on drugs.” What other candidates will stand up and say “I will pardon … everybody convicted for non-violent drug acts and drug crimes. This is where the real discrimination is … the judicial system … that I’m attacking.”

Paul brings a breath of honesty and accountability to the 2012 presidential races. Blacks of all political stripes would benefit from an honest debate during this season about campaign finance reform, military spending, torture of enemy combatants, immigration, the Federal Reserve, free trade agreements, gay marriage and prison sentences for drug use Paul’s candidacy brings about. In his opposition to American imperialism, Paul provides a certain appeal to people who see through the lies fuelling the Bush/Obama foreign policy: using the American military on behalf of the banks and multinationals. An unbridled military industrial complex is against the interest of any thinking American, and many voters are starting to rethink America’s foreign policy. For these views, Paul has growing appeal among Americans and is being “played”; as he’s portrayed as a racist on racist mediums.

As the primaries play out, look at Paul for practical political positions that help our nation. Black voters should move beyond the newsletters in judging Paul. Try judging his efforts to end a “war on drugs” that has contributed to the mass incarceration of the poor and people of color, you’ll find him far from racist and quite progressive.
 
the thread that shouldve been made was "Obama's opinion of Blacks".

If he's not talking to us like we're his Children in order to apease his White audience...he rarely says much about Blacks at all. And thats partly via orders from his Admin and partly from his own clouded perception of Black America.

At this point....I bet an Obama's opinion of Blacks thread wouldnt be too far off from a Racist Ron Paul's opinion of Blacks. Obama would just word it differently and it wouldnt sting as much due to the fact that he's Black himself.
 
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the thread that shouldve been made was "Obama's opinion of Blacks".

If he's not talking to us like we're his Children in order to apease his White audience...he rarely says much about Blacks at all. And thats partly via orders from his Admin and partly from his own clouded perception of Black America.

At this point....I bet an Obama's opinion of Blacks thread wouldnt be too far off from a Racist Ron Paul's opinion of Blacks. Obama would just word it differently and it wouldnt sting as much due to the fact that he's Black himself.

Why don't you start one; and be sure to use specific examples.
 
Lamar isn't pairing Ron Paul and Calvin Broadus to support the conclusion that Paul (and Broadus, for that matter) is good for Black people, is he :confused:

Not at all, what I'm trying to get people to understand is that; Ron Paul is attempting to bring the "War on Drugs" into the spotlight to have a meaningful debate on a national stage. The message mirrors a lot of the sentiments of posters on this board. We've read countless posts from "Muckraker" addressing the inequality of the justice system, well.............Ron Paul agrees but the military-industrial-complex, Israeli PACs, BIG Media & Thought1 have to use some newsletters, that Paul didn't even write, to try to assassinate his character. The shit is laughable. Wall Street, Rush, Hannity, Thought, Romney, CNN, FOX, BSNBC etc. are scared of Paul but his message is WINNING amongst the "little people".

Honestly, I haven't heard Pres. Obama or Holder come out with such a forceful & principled opinion regarding the "War on Drugs", Obama represents the "status quo". No, Obama should support the position just to "help" blacks, he should be leading the national debate because the "War on Drugs" is a failed policy period. Unfortunately, these Big Govt policies disproportionately affects "our" communities.
 
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Ron Paul agrees but the military-industrial-complex, Israeli PACs, BIG Media & Thought1 have to use some newsletters, that Paul didn't even write, to try to assassinate his character.


Was his name on it?

Many Ron Paul Supporters Ignore, Dismiss Newsletter Controversy

fingers-in-ears.jpg
 
Ron Paul says "True Racism" Exists in the Nation's Judicial System
And Thought1, Hannity & Romney Ignore the Message​

fingers-in-ears.jpg


Source
Ron Paul must have known the question was coming. For weeks, he had been dogged by charges that newsletters published in his name in the 1980s and 1990s contained racist content.

So he probably wasn't surprised when ABC News' George Stephanopoulos asked him during a televised debate three days before the New Hampshire primary how that could have happened without his knowledge. But no one on the stage with the Texas congressman — not the other contenders for the Republican Party's presidential nomination who bristle with contempt for their libertarian colleague or the panel of journalists wielding the questions — was ready for Paul's answer.

Dwelling on something he didn't write but has assumed responsibility for and apologized, Paul said, diverts attention away from the "true racism" in this nation's judicial system that disproportionately imprisons blacks for their involvement in drug crimes.

And when Paul finished what The Associated Press later called "a positively leftist rant," there were no follow-up questions, no clamoring from the other candidates to have their say on the issue. There was just a moment of uneasy silence — and then a commercial break. When the debate resumed, there was no return to Paul's charge of unequal justice, an indifference that is a haunting metaphor for the nation's failure to address an issue that is even worse than Paul suggests.

In 2010, 69 percent of all people arrested in this country for committing crimes were white. Blacks were just 28 percent, according to the FBI. These percentages have remained steady every year of the past decade. During this same period, roughly twice as many whites as blacks were arrested each year for drug crimes, according to the FBI annual Crime in the United States report.

Despite this, nearly half of all persons incarcerated throughout the first decade of this century were black. More than a liberal rant, that's the ugly reality of a criminal justice system that, as Paul correctly noted, prosecutes and imprisons blacks in disproportionate numbers.

That none of the other Republicans — who are chomping at the bit for the right to challenge President Barack Obama's re-election — would align themselves with Paul on this issue doesn't surprise me. The GOP's strategy for winning back the White House is devoid of any serious appeal to black voters and lacks any real concern about the lingering vestiges of racism inflicted upon blacks, who are overwhelmingly Democrats.

Forget all their pious talk about being Americans first. Paul's unanswered "rant" exposed them all — Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, Jon Huntsman and Rick Perry — as crass partisans who won't risk upending the conventional wisdom about crime and punishment in this country when their political butts are on the line. They don't want to derail their campaigns by giving any credence to an issue that many right-wing voters they are courting likely would discount.

"If we truly want to be concerned about racism, you ought to look at a few of those issues and look at the drug laws, which are being so unfairly enforced," Paul said as the network cut to commercials, and all the presidential wannabes on stage with him undoubtedly heaved a big sigh of relief.

Who else could you vote for?
 
I don't think there's much disagreement here about the unfair enforcement of the drug laws. My question is why would Paul want (as he claims) to be President when he could do more to effect drug laws in Congress where laws are actually made?
Spend that campaign money on a Senate run, where he and his son could be a real Libertarian force and would have quite a few Democrats and Bernie Sanders, an Independent, to help them do something.
 
I don't think there's much disagreement here about the unfair enforcement of the drug laws. My question is why would Paul want (as he claims) to be President when he could do more to effect drug laws in Congress where laws are actually made?

Upgrade, I can't answer that question but we know he has been in Congress a long time. His legislation is short & easy to read. Unfortunately, his compadres attempt to write him off as a kook, crazy or even a racist :eek: The run for presidency only "attempts" to create dialog for change people want to see. Now, thanks to RP, the Federal Reserve is part of the national discussion

Let's be real;

When he speaks on unfair enforcement in this "War on Drugs", he meets resistance from the prison industrial-complex

When he speaks on inequalities regarding monetary policy, he meets resistance from the financial industrial-complex

When he speaks out against the "War on Terror", he meets resistance from the military industrial-complex. But RP gets more donations from troops than any other candidate combined....Obama included!

Don't forget Bain Capital owns ClearChannel........"Big Media" will stop at nothing to assassinate Ron's character

This is how a candidate can be so hated amongst the "right" & the "left". I gotta leave y'all wit a lil somethin to illustrate how the monied interest will continue to screw us if Ron is not the nominee.

w-billionaires.jpg
 
LOL. Let's Be Real. You know Ron Paul is a a kook, crazy [and] or even a racist - which is why in the end you always resort to your single most important issue: the Federal Reserve. You're a single issue dude, and Ron Paul happens to share your most fervent passion: the Federal Reserve.
 
source: Atlantic


MLK Day Fact Check

Jan 8 2012, 12:40 AM ET 298

Andrew repeats an interesting claim that I've seen all over twitter tonight:
Chuck Todd notes that Ron Paul voted for the MLK national holiday. Gingrich voted against. I find the notion that Ron Paul is a racist to be preposterous.
Again, I make no claims about the contents of Ron Paul's heart. I've never met him, and consider such things beyond the bounds of the ultimately knowable. But Ron Paul's voting record is a different matter.


But first here's Ron Paul on Martin Luther King Day in his newsletters:

Boy, it sure burns me to have a national holiday for Martin Luther King. I voted against this outrage time and time again as a Congressman. What an infamy that Ronald Reagan approved it! We can thank him for our annual Hate Whitey Day.


It has been alleged that these are Lew Rockwell's words, not Ron Paul's. One would think that Rockwell would be familiar with Paul's record, as he was his longtime Chief of Staff.


But, fair enough. Let us assume that Rockwell was, indeed, in error. Paul's supporters link to his Yea vote on this 1979 bill as evidence that he supported an MLK Holiday:

TO AMEND H.R. 5461, MARTIN LUTHER KING HOLIDAY, BY DESIGNATING THE THIRD MONDAY IN JANUARY RATHER THAN JANUARY 15 AS THE LEGAL HOLIDAY.
But this actually isn't the bill for the holiday. The text doesn't even claim that. More importantly, the date is wrong. This vote was taken on December 5, 1979. The vote for the King holiday was actually taken on November 13, 1979:

The bill was called up in the House on Tuesday, November 13, 1979...When the final vote was taken, 252 Members voted for the bill and 133 against--five votes short of the two-thirds needed for passage.
I'm sorry to report that one of those Nay votes, as you can see here, was cast by one Ronald Paul. I'm sorry to further report that Paul again voted no on the 1983 bill that passed.


If we are to take the version of events proffered by Ron Paul's defenders, the Congressmen voted for a holiday which his Chief of Staff publicly denounced as "Hate Whitey Day." In Ron Paul's own name, no less. This version of events should inspire skepticism even in a Paul admirer. I am happy to report that in some, it did.


I want to reiterate--again--that I make no claims on the heart of Ron Paul. How he truly feels about black people is best left to Paul and his conscience. His actual record, however, is wholly subject to the wiles of google.
 
Upgrade, I can't answer that question but we know he has been in Congress a long time. His legislation is short & easy to read. Unfortunately, his compadres attempt to write him off as a kook, crazy or even a racist :eek: The run for presidency only "attempts" to create dialog for change people want to see. Now, thanks to RP, the Federal Reserve is part of the national discussion

Let's be real;

When he speaks on unfair enforcement in this "War on Drugs", he meets resistance from the prison industrial-complex

When he speaks on inequalities regarding monetary policy, he meets resistance from the financial industrial-complex

When he speaks out against the "War on Terror", he meets resistance from the military industrial-complex. But RP gets more donations from troops than any other candidate combined....Obama included!

Don't forget Bain Capital owns ClearChannel........"Big Media" will stop at nothing to assassinate Ron's character

This is how a candidate can be so hated amongst the "right" & the "left". I gotta leave y'all wit a lil somethin to illustrate how the monied interest will continue to screw us if Ron is not the nominee.

w-billionaires.jpg



That question I asked goes to the heart of whether Paul sincerely wants to be a real agent of change or just a shrill huckster who enjoys the limelight and wants to make some money. When there is a clearly more effective means of getting done whatever it is you want done and you purposely bypass it, you're not serious, at least not to me.
 
You know Ron Paul is a a kook, crazy [and] or even a racist

Before the victory's won, some would be misunderstood and called bad names and dismissed as rabble-rousers and agitators, but we shall overcome.
- MLK

which is why in the end you always resort to your single most important issue: the Federal Reserve. You're a single issue dude, and Ron Paul happens to share your most fervent passion: the Federal Reserve.

True, How can it not be the focal point, they have a monopolistic control of the issuance of currency & credit!
 
That question I asked goes to the heart of whether Paul sincerely wants to be a real agent of change or just a shrill huckster who enjoys the limelight and wants to make some money. When there is a clearly more effective means of getting done whatever it is you want done and you purposely bypass it, you're not serious, at least not to me.

It's as if you're assuming Paul has not introduced legislation to this effect in the past. And we know that's not true. We need the proper "push" from the grassroots. It would be nice if the Pres. led the discussion on the "War on Drugs" but.....

If anything, this whole process should show us how our politicians are controlled by the monied-interests, right & left.

As long as he is active in his campaign efforts, "the people" will benefit from his efforts to bring "honest" dialog to the nation's attention.
 
It's as if you're assuming Paul has not introduced legislation to this effect in the past. And we know that's not true. We need the proper "push" from the grassroots. It would be nice if the Pres. led the discussion on the "War on Drugs" but.....

If anything, this whole process should show us how our politicians are controlled by the monied-interests, right & left.

As long as he is active in his campaign efforts, "the people" will benefit from his efforts to bring "honest" dialog to the nation's attention.

Not my point really. The fact that he chooses to accumulate all this money and attention for a seat he can't win instead of one where the possibility of success is much higher and the effect he would have on his issues would be greater and more direct makes him ring false.
I would rather throw my interest and possible support behind someone who actually wants to get things done not jump on an egomaniac's bandwagon because he says a couple things I agree with (while saying a host of things I disagree with or he's just a blatant hypocrite on).
 
My Point Exactly:



Has Pres. Obama made a policy announcement regarding the War on Drugs? For some reason, I think Snoop should reach out to Ron

Snoop Dogg Busted for Weed At DHS Checkpoint

(CNN) -- Hip hop star Snoop Dogg faces a drug charge after border agents searched his tour bus along the same stretch of a west Texas highway where singer Willie Nelson was busted in 2010, a Texas sheriff said.

Snoop Dogg, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, "freely admitted" that three prescription bottles filled with marijuana cigarettes were his, a statement from the Hudspeth County, Texas, Sheriff said.

The entertainer's representatives did not immediately respond to CNN's request for comment.

The rapper, like Nelson, is an outspoken proponent of pot and he is known to have a license to use prescription medical marijuana in California.

The bust happened early Saturday at his bus approached the U.S. Border Patrol Checkpoint located in Sierra Blanca, Texas, at the U.S.-Mexico border about 85 miles southeast of El Paso, the sheriff's statment said.

"During a routine check of U.S. citizenship the inspecting Border Patrol agent detected the odor of marijuana emitting from the inside of the vehicle and requested the driver to pull into the secondary inspection lane for further inspection," the statement said.

A drug-detection dog sniffing inside the bus "alerted to a trash can located at the rear of the vehicle where a red prescription bottle containing rolled marijuana cigarettes were located," the statement said. Two other containers with marijuana, weighing in all total of 0.130 pounds, were also found, it said.

"Snoop Dogg freely admitted that the marijuana belonged to him and he was placed under arrest by U.S. Border Patrol agents and detained," it said.

He was cited for possession of drug paraphernalia, given a court date of January 20 and released, the sheriff said.

Willie Nelson settled his November 2010 Hudspeth County pot bust with a plea deal that reduced his marijuana possession charge to possession of drug paraphernalia and imposed a $500 fine.

The west Texas prosecutor who handled Nelson's case had suggested Nelson, a treasured icon in the Lone Star state, could pay just a $100 fine if he'd serenade the court with his 1975 hit "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain." The judge quickly vetoed that offer.

"You can bet your ass I'm not going to be mean to Willie Nelson," Hudspeth County Attorney C.R. "Kit" Bramblett told CNN at the time.

Bramblett was in court Monday and unavailable to comment on how he might handle Snoop Dogg's prosecution.
 
source: Washington Post

Ron Paul signed off on racist newsletters in the 1990s, associates say

Ron Paul, well known as a physician, congressman and libertarian , has also been a businessman who pursued a marketing strategy that included publishing provocative, racially charged newsletters to make money and spread his ideas, according to three people with direct knowledge of Paul’s businesses.

The Republican presidential candidate has denied writing inflammatory passages in the pamphlets from the 1990s and said recently that he did not read them at the time or for years afterward. Numerous colleagues said he does not hold racist views.

But people close to Paul’s operations said he was deeply involved in the company that produced the newsletters, Ron Paul & Associates, and closely monitored its operations, signing off on articles and speaking to staff members virtually every day.

“It was his newsletter, and it was under his name, so he always got to see the final product. . . . He would proof it,’’ said Renae Hathway, a former secretary in Paul’s company and a supporter of the Texas congressman.

The newsletters point to a rarely seen and somewhat opaque side of Paul, who has surprised the political community by becoming an important factor in the Republican race. The candidate, who has presented himself as a kindly doctor and political truth-teller, declined in a recent debate to release his tax returns, joking that he would be “embarrassed” about his income compared with that of his richer GOP rivals.

Yet a review of his enterprises reveals a sharp-eyed businessman who for nearly two decades oversaw the company and a nonprofit foundation, intertwining them with his political career. The newsletters, which were launched in the mid-1980s and bore such names as the Ron Paul Survival Report, were produced by a company Paul dissolved in 2001.

The company shared offices with his campaigns and foundation at various points, according to those familiar with the operation. Public records show Paul’s wife and daughter were officers of the newsletter company and foundation; his daughter also served as his campaign treasurer.

Jesse Benton, a presidential campaign spokesman, said that the accounts of Paul’s involvement were untrue and that Paul was practicing medicine full time when “the offensive material appeared under his name.” Paul “abhors it, rejects it and has taken responsibility for it as he should have better policed the work being done under his masthead,” Benton said. He did not comment on Paul’s business strategy.

Mark Elam, a longtime Paul associate whose company printed the newsletters, said Paul “was a busy man” at the time. “He was in demand as a speaker; he was traveling around the country,’’ Elam said in an interview coordinated by Paul’s campaign. “I just do not believe he was either writing or regularly editing this stuff.’’

In the past, Paul has taken responsibility for the passages because they were published under his name. But last month, he told CNN that he was unaware at the time of the controversial passages. “I’ve never read that stuff. I’ve never read — I came — was probably aware of it 10 years after it was written.’’ Paul said.
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A person involved in Paul’s businesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid criticizing a former employer, said Paul and his associates decided in the late 1980s to try to increase sales by making the newsletters more provocative. They discussed adding controversial material, including racial statements, to help the business, the person said.

“It was playing on a growing racial tension, economic tension, fear of government,’’ said the person, who supports Paul’s economic policies but is not backing him for president. “I’m not saying Ron believed this stuff. It was good copy. Ron Paul is a shrewd businessman.’’

The articles included racial, anti-Semitic and anti-gay content. They claimed, for example, that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “seduced underage girls and boys’’; they ridiculed black activists by suggesting that New York be named “Zooville” or “Lazyopolis”; and they said the 1992 Los Angeles riots ended “when it came time for the blacks to pick up their welfare checks.’’ The June 1990 edition of the Ron Paul Political Report included the statement: “Homosexuals, not to speak of the rest of society, were far better off when social pressure forced them to hide their activities.”

It is unclear precisely how much money Paul made from his newsletters, but during the years he was publishing them, he reduced his debts and substantially increased his net worth, according to his congressional and presidential disclosure reports. In 1984, he reported debt of up to $765,000, most of which was gone by 1995, when he reported a net worth of up to $3.3 million. Last year, he reported a net worth up to $5.2 million.

The newsletters bore his name in large print and featured articles on topics ranging from investment advice to political commentary. Frequently written in first person, they contained personalized notes, such as holiday greetings from Paul and his wife, Carol.

The Washington Post obtained dozens of copies of the newsletters from the Wisconsin Historical Society. Texas news outlets wrote about them in 1996, and the New Republic published extensive excerpts in 2008. The issue resurfaced late last year, when Paul’s presidential campaign picked up momentum. The extent of Paul’s involvement and his business strategy had not been known.

Paul’s publishing operation began through a nonprofit organization he created in 1976, the Foundation for Rational Economics and Education, which advocates for limited government and a free market. The group, founded the year Paul entered Congress, published Ron Paul’s Freedom Report, mostly a collection of his congressional speeches and commentaries.

In 1984, just before losing a Senate bid and leaving Congress, Paul formed Ron Paul & Associates. He soon began publishing the Ron Paul Investment Letter, initially offering mostly economic and monetary information. Texas tax records listed Paul as president of the business, his wife as secretary, his daughter, Lori Paul Pyeatt, as treasurer, and a longtime Paul associate, Lew Rockwell, as vice president.

<ARTICLE>Ed Crane, the longtime president of the libertarian Cato Institute, said he met Paul for lunch during this period, and the two men discussed direct-mail solicitations, which Paul was sending out to interest people in his newsletters. They agreed that “people who have extreme views” are more likely than others to respond.

Crane said Paul reported getting his best response when he used a mailing list from the now-defunct newspaper Spotlight, which was widely considered anti-Semitic and racist.

Benton, Paul’s spokesman, said that Crane’s account “sounds odd” and that Paul did not recall the conversation.

At the time, Paul’s investment letter was languishing. According to the person involved with his businesses, Paul and others hit upon a solution: to “morph” the content to capi*tal*ize on a growing fear among some on the political right about the nation’s changing demographics and threats to economic liberty.

The investment letter became the Ron Paul Survival Report — a name designed to intrigue readers, the company secretary said. It cost subscribers about $100 a year. The tone of that and other Paul publications changed, becoming increasingly controversial. In 1992, for example, the Ron Paul Political Report defended chess champion Bobby Fischer, who became known as an anti-Semitic Holocaust denier, for his stance on “Jewish questions.’’

Paul has said he wrote portions of the economic sections. The people familiar with his business said there was no indication that he wrote the controversial material.

Rockwell was the main writer of the racial passages, according to two people with direct knowledge of the business and a third close to Paul’s presidential campaign. Rockwell, founder of a libertarian think tank in Alabama, did not respond to phone calls and e-mails requesting comment. In 2008, he denied in an interview with the New Republic that he was Paul’s ghostwriter.

Paul “had to walk a very fine line,’’ said Eric Dondero Rittberg, a former longtime Paul aide who says Paul allowed the controversial material in his newsletter as a way to make money. Dondero Rittberg said he witnessed Paul proofing, editing and signing off on his newsletters in the mid-1990s.

“The real big money came from some of that racially tinged stuff, but he also had to keep his libertarian supporters, and they weren’t at all comfortable with that,’’ he said.

Dondero Rittberg is no longer a Paul supporter, and officials with Paul’s presidential campaign have said he was fired. Dondero Rittberg disputed that, saying he resigned in 2003 because he opposed Paul’s views on Iraq.

The July 15, 1994, issue of Survival Report exemplified how the newsletters merged material about race with a pitch for business. It contained a passage criticizing the rate of black-on-white crime when “blacks are only 12 percent of the population.’’ That was accompanied by two pages of ads from Ron Paul Precious Metals & Rare Coins, a business Paul used to sell gold and silver coins.

“The explosion you hear may not be the Fourth of July fireworks but the price of silver shooting up,’’ said one of the ads.

Hathway, the former Ron Paul & Associates secretary, said: “We had tons of subscribers, from all over the world. . . . I never had one complaint’’ about the content.

Hathway described Paul as a “hands-on boss” who would come in to the company’s Houston office, about 50 miles from his home, about once a week. And he would call frequently. “He’d ask, ‘How are you doing? Do you need any more money in the account?’ ” she said.

The company also had an office in Clute, Tex., near Paul’s home, which it shared with Paul’s foundation and his campaigns at various points, according to Hathway and Dondero Rittberg.

In 1996, as Paul ran for Congress again, his business success turned into a potential political liability when his newsletters surfaced in the Texas media. Paul was quoted in the Dallas Morning News that year as defending a newsletter line from 1992 that said 95 percent of black men in the District are “semi-criminal or entirely criminal” and that black teenagers can be “unbelievably fleet of foot.”

“If you try to catch someone that has stolen a purse from you, there is no chance to catch them,” the newspaper quoted Paul as saying.

Paul won reelection, then dissolved Ron Paul & Associates in 2001. His nonprofit foundation is still in operation.
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