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Individual Rights

Kundera writes of a balcony scene in the winter snow of 1948 Prague. Clementis offers his fur cap to the new leader Gottwald. Later Clementis is purged by the Communists and airbrushed from all the photos. All that remains of Clementis is the fur cap on the Gottwald’s head.

In the end, all that remains of any of us is our reputation. Mine has been sullied over the past week by lies and innuendo.

I’ve spent the past 14 months traveling around the Commonwealth, giving over 400 speeches, and talking to thousands of Kentuckians.

Throughout these speeches, I never once had reason to discuss the Civil Rights Act of 1964, much less call for the repeal of this settled law 44 years later.

So you can imagine my shock when my wife called the day after the election to tell me that Jack Conway was on MSNBC saying – outright lying – claiming that I had called for the repeal of the Civil Rights act. Even though these lies were evident by watching the video footage, commentators on MSNBC and elsewhere have been repeating it as fact for over a week now.

If you watch any of my interviews you’ll see, I never stated that I did not support the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and I certainly never called for its repeal.

I was asked if I supported the Civil Rights Act of 1964. I stated that “I like the Civil Rights Act in the sense that it ended discrimination in all public domains, and I’m all in favor of that.” In response, the interviewer asked me about private domains, and I did what typical candidates don’t – I discussed some philosophical issues with government mandating rules on private businesses. I think the federal government has often gone too far in regulating private citizens and businesses.

I made comparisons to the first amendment and how it allows people in a free society to say things that may be abhorrent, but that is a challenge of a free society. I was speaking abstractly, not to any piece of legislation, since in general my political views are rooted in the rights of the individual over the state.

The interviewer then brought me back to the literal world of life in 1964, saying “But it’s different with race, because much of the discrimination based on race was codified into law.” In the video you’ll see me agree with him, ending the discussion by saying, “Exactly, it was institutionalized. And that’s why we had to end all institutional racism and I’m completely in favor of that.”

I think that statement is very clear. This did not stop my opponent and the liberal media from implying that I meant the opposite.

I am unlike many folks who run for office. I am an idealist. When I read history I side with abolitionists such as William Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglas who fought for thirty years to end slavery and to integrate public transportation in the the free North in the 1840’s. I see our failure to end slavery for decade after decade as a failure of weak-kneed politicians.

I cheer the abolitionist, Lysander Spooner, who argued that slavery was unconstitutional 20 years before the Civil War. I cheer Lerone Bennet when he argues that the right of habeas corpus guaranteed in the body of the Constitution should have derailed slavery long before the Civil War.

Only when the brave idealists, the abolitionists, finally provoked the weak-kneed politicians into action did the emancipation proclamation come about. Our body politic has enough pragmatists, we need a few idealists.

Segregation ended only after a great and momentous uprising by idealists like Martin Luther King who provoked weak-kneed politicians to action.

In 2010, there are battles that need to be fought, and they have nothing to do with race or discrimination, but rather the rights of people to be free from a nanny state.

For example, I am opposed to the government telling restaurant owners that they cannot allow smoking in their establishments. I believe we as consumers can choose whether to patronize a smoke-filled restaurant or do business with a smoke-free option.

Think about it — this overreach is now extending to mandates about fat and calorie counts in menus. Do we really need the government managing all of these decisions for us?

My overriding principle is this: I believe in the natural right of all individuals to have their God-given liberty protected. And that’s why I believe that the Civil Rights Act was necessary, and that I would have voted for it.

I have long been a fan of what Martin Luther King wrote, “that an unjust law, is any code that a numerical majority enforces on a minority but not make binding on itself.”

Now the media is twisting my small government message, making me out to be a crusader for repeal of the Americans for Disabilities Act and The Fair Housing Act. Again, this is patently untrue. I have simply pointed out areas within these broad federal laws that have financially burdened many smaller businesses.

For example, should a small business in a two story building have to put in a costly elevator, even if it threatens their economic viability? Wouldn’t it be better to allow that business to give a handicapped employee a ground floor office? We need more businesses and jobs, not fewer.

This much is clear: the federal government has overreached in its power grabs. Just look at the national healthcare schemes, which my opponent supports. Look at the out of control EPA, trying to make law by overreaching regulations that will harm Kentucky Coal.

Our country faces a difficult financial future. I see issues not in terms of party but in terms of principles and I will do my very best to deserve the honor that has been bestowed upon me to run for office.

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COMMENTS

  • romeg

    “Journalist” on the payroll of MSNBC would lie about a conservative, a Republican or a Libertarian?

    They are the chief practitioners of “Gotcha” journalism wherein they bait an interviewee into a hypothetical and then edit the piece down to a sound bite taken completely out of context in order to advance their personal agenda.

    They, Conway and Olbermann chief among them, are a disgrace.

  • Right_Again

    You’ve learned the hard way that many in the media are dogs lying in wait. Throwing them the bone of a well-reasoned answer can lead to them attacking your throat.

    The original “journalist” wasn’t interested in your responses, he was setting you up for a “gotcha” moment. Similarly, the other members of the media were not interested in the truth. They know they are powerful and pervasive enough that piling on and mistating your intent leads to their separate reality.

    Good luck through the rest of your campaign.

    • http://www.FranBaker.com frankieb

      Don’t allow them to set you up again. And they’ll try … you can bet on it.

    • E Pluribus Unum

      I disagree here. This was not a ‘gotcha’ moment. He answered truthfully and thoughtfully. THEY LIED about what he said.

      What exactly should he have said or done differently? Shut up about the abuses of the ADA? I have to say I totally agree there, and it’s about damned time Republicans started talking about stuff like this.

      Our response should be to make it impossible for fecal-heads like Jack Conway to make a living doing what they do.

      • Right_Again

        What he should have done differently is given the simple answer that would have prevented them from distorting his views. He should have just expressed support for the Civil Rights Act, said revisiting it is irrelevant to his campaign, and moved on.

        They don’t want a truthful or thoughtful answer. They want something they can distort and sabotage him with. Which is what they think they got.

  • oltex2

    The Influence of Socialist Writers
    How did politicians ever come to believe this weird idea
    that the law could be made to produce what it does not contain

    • Warrior

      and that’s because liberals believe themselves to be God.

      I’ve been on the wrong end of this “You are a racist because you disagree with me” meme before. It’s not pretty.

      And all those leftists falsely shouting “J’accuse” are indeed living a “seprate reality.”

    • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

      views. I want your voice in the Congress. I have written two columns defending you in two cities’ papers. Your honesty will carry the day.

  • trutexan

    Much to the liberal media’s chagrin, we are smarter than they think. We do not need to be told what to think, and we are able to come to our own conclusions. Your statements were perfectly clear in the interview and I for one didn’t give them a second thought. While I can certainly understand your need for clarification (and vindication), not as many people listen to those idiots as you might fear. Press on.

    • E Pluribus Unum

      It’s worth the time and trouble to come here and make sure everybody knows what was said and done.

      This is OUR house, and we don’t have to view anything through the filter of clap-trap operations like MSLSD.

  • liberty131911

    Ayn Rand thought that slavery might very well be the fatal flaw in the Constitution.
    I

    • Warrior

      But must alter #3 to say that not only will “Latter day libertarians… have to keep speaking the truth regardless of the personal political price”, but ALL of us who know the truth will have to keep speaking truth to power no matter the personal price.

      And believe me, the first time you mention something like: “… people have a right to join the Klan,” for instance, you will be called a racist. Now, let me have my Rand Paul moment and say I find the Klan noxious, I wholeheartedly agree that any violence they perpetrate should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and I believe they should be made pariahs in a civil society. Having said that, they still have a right to believe as they do and the gubmint does not (or should not) have anything to say about it.

      Now the more common area of race baiting these days is the area of unlawful immigration across the souther border. And again, I have no problem with Mexicans, I’ve been to Mexico twice (and El Salvadore once) to help build much needed housing for poor folks and we need LEGAL Mexican immigrants as much as any other kind of LEGAL immigrant. However, we DO NOT need an army of undocumented migrants in the country unlawfully. They have not been screened for criminality or disease, they are huge burdens on public assistance programs and it’s patently unfair to the millions of others throughout the world who are waiting patiently to get into this country legally. And finally, only half the undocumented aliens in the country are Mexicans. The other half are from other places – like the Middle East, where most terrorists originate. And so we have created a culture in which breaking the law is O.K. in some instances. Such a society cannot long stand.

      But, of course, as soon as you mention any of the above out loud in public, you are instantly labled an exotic “Xenophobe” or just a garden variety “racist.” However, if the truth is to be known, we must ALL suffer the indignity of being slandered by a bunch of self-righteous, politically interested, mostly godless and mentally backward cretins.

      In other words, if you ain’t been called a “racist” yet, you ain’t in the fight yet…

    • ZootSuit

      can I add Jake Knotts to the list of race-baiters?

  • doncorleone

    With the thousands of willing and slavering volunteers to be indoctrinated into the americore journalism corp, the slop these “journalists” will fling at conservatives/libertarians will be flying at historically profuse levels. Dr. Paul and conservative politicians will have to both “leather up,” and resist the temptation of endeavoring to have these people like you. We know that they at best will distort what we say, obfuscation and prevarication are their standard operating procedures. So, work hostile rooms, don’t cancel interviews with “meet the press”, you’ll make these hosts look like the simpletons that they are. In Dr. Paul’s defense, I don’t ever remember reading in history books (revised, unfortunately), that J.F.K. was against the civil rights act in it’s entirety, due to it’s conflicts with the Constitution.

  • http://impudent.blognation.us/blog kyle8

    You should have known better. And you should have realized that a people like Maddow and the rest of MSNBC would only be interested in trying to destroy you.

    Your views are anathema to everything they stand for, So she played gotcha, and the rest of the media piled on.

    If you want to be in Republican politics you can go the rout of John McCain and try to be a media darling by sticking knives in the back of your fellow Republicans. Or, you have to be very careful and stick only to your campaign issues.

    • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
    • http://andrightlyso.com/ civil_truth

      I know you meant to write “route” but “rout” is far more descriptive of the McCain campaign.

  • NeoKong

    If there has been a single MSM political theme this year it is that Republicans, the GOP, Tea partiers ,conservatives etc. are all racists.

    It is such an obvious political smear that even when they can’t find any racism they just make it up and run with it like the n-word/spitting hoax at the Capitol for the health care vote or the new law in Arizona regarding i

    The media is in a panic to prop up the Democrats who are poised to lose the House very soon and nothing will be out of bounds. If you think it is bad now just wait until September and October roll around and the polls begin to solidify and reveal the true extent of the losses to come.
    MSNBC is going to implode.

    • NeoKong

      I meant to type illegal aliens about the Arizona law.
      The phone rang.
      Sorry.

    • http://impudent.blognation.us/blog kyle8

      They are rapidly causing the charge of racism to be meaningless.

      Once you cry wolf too often, then to the public is is like water off of a duck’s back. They no longer even notice it.

      • NeoKong

        When someone in the media calls Rand Paul a racist they are calling all his supporters racists too.
        For the last year and a half all the liberal elites in the House and from the media have done nothing but snear at millions of Americans on a daily basis.
        A lot of those people may have even voted for Obama and they don’t appreciate being called a racist by some boob on T.V. working for the DNC.
        They cannot call everybody a racist and still expect to receive their vote.
        They are shooting themselves in the foot.

  • streiff

    the question is whether or not we should have them.

    You were played for a chump with a question that was a set-up. Fine. But you can’t be set up unless you help them out. There was a very easy answer to the question. You, for reasons that are more than a little unclear to me, chose to take a very simple answer and convert it into some kind of an abstract seminar on the role of the federal government in a question that was decided by law and federal troops 50 years ago.

    You shot yourself in the foot and are now complaining because it hurts… while it looks like you’re busily reloading your weapon. I’d suggest you take a deep breath and observe the First Rule of Holes.

    • Aaron Gardner

      I’ll agree that MSNBC probably isn’t the best place to have an abstract philosophical debate.

      That said, this situation is all too familiar. Take the example of Reagan and his 1980 campaign kick off.

      Reagan spoke of states rights and the necessity of Federalism. For this he was accused of being a racist.

      At that point he could have just shut up about states rights, but then Reagan wouldn’t have been Reagan.

      Now, that’s not to say that Rand = Reagan. I don’t think that.

      I just believe that we have become scared to faithfully state our message due to the repercussions inflicted by a media woefully lacking in historical knowledge and truth.

      • streiff

        that what Mr Paul said doesn’t faithfully state the GOP message and apparently didn’t really even state Mr. Paul’s message, if the succeeding string of mea culpas and clarifying statements are any indication.

        While the issue of federalism is in flux the issue Mr Paul was asked about has been settled by law. It would have been simple enough to acknowledge that without trying to pander to people who don’t like those laws.

        • Aaron Gardner

          I do. I just disagree a bit.

          You can agree that even though the 64 CRA is settled law that it also probably went further than it should have and in so doing negatively affected the balance between the States and the Federal Government.

          I also believe that these sort of arguments are needed and timely considering the consolidation of power in the Federal Government that the Obama Administration would like to achieve.

          Granted, if times were different this may never need to be brought up. Unfortunately, today I believe they need to be brought up more often.

          YMMV

          • streiff

            all the CRA did was give force of law to the post Civil War constitutional amendments which had been essentially nullified by Plessy.

            I think to take Paul’s position in its best light is troubling even as an academic exercise. As a political position it is lunacy.

    • red_oakster

      The very existence of this missive suggests that Paul continues to be clueless in the rhetorical arts. Paul needs to win a general election, not a debate at the Oxford Union. If Paul keeps this up, he is going to lose a Senate election in a red state in a very red year.

      • streiff

        with a group of friends over a nice single malt we can, and as a free society should, argue a lot of things. We can even play Devil’s Advocate to examine the nest Great Idea. But a candidate in the spotlight should have the maturity to understand that debating the finer points of the Federalist Papers is counterproductive on just about every level.

        • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

          You want to teach? Become a professor.

          Don’t become a politician unless you’re willing to focus on winning when you’re campaigning.

          • Michael Dugas

            If we keep going around being afraid to speak about the truth because of the way the media will spin it then nothing will ever get said that NEEDS to be said.

          • Aaron Gardner

            One was done via legislation and the other by judicial fiat.

          • aesthete

            (This is more a response to streiff and the pragmatists, whose side I’m on more often than not.)

            Would abortion have been any more right or sound, if it had been enacted by legislative, rather than judicial, fiat? I think not. Conservatives are currently fighting to curb or repeal the entitlement state: a set of programs passed from the New Deal to the Great Society that have proven to be enormously popular. I would be ashamed if we as conservatives chose to ignore the obvious truth of their ineffectiveness and status as an albatross on our government and society on the basis of political expediency, however. Not everything can be about preserving political points: otherwise, what’s the point?

            Mind you, I think that Paul could have explained his position better (it’s a position that I share, to some extent, and he explained it badly on Maddow), if not outright obviated the issue altogether by stating that it is irrelevant to the campaign. That said, he did answer the question, and I think that he has a valid, debatable (even if it is ultimately wrong) point: one that is being fraudulently twisted into malign racism by the media. Even if one doesn’t agree with Paul, I think that one should defend him from such scurrilous attacks based on the merits of the media’s misrepresentation alone. You can’t decry the soundbyte culture if you’re going to stand on the sidelines and criticize those who deviate from it, and you can’t claim to be for the Tea Party and the ideal of the citizen legislator if you’re not willing to tolerate Mr. Smith’s occasional foot-in-mouth moment.

          • Aaron Gardner

            You are making a moral argument (one I happen to agree with), I was making a legal distinction.

            What the SCOTUS did was wrong, and yes, I would much rather it had been passed via legislation if it were to be the law of the land.

            I think it would be easier to repeal then to get a SCOTUS decision reversed.

          • aesthete

            I doubt that we would have had such legislation passed, though: even liberal Europe has many restrictions in place for abortion, more than what we have post-Roe vs. Wade.

  • SIConservative

    The Fair Housing Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Americans with Disabilities Act were all examples of unconstitutional overreach by the federal government. That’s not to say that all parts of each of them were unconstitutional, only that many parts of each of them, and arguably all of the Americans with Disabilities Act, were. I’ll be so bold as to say that you know as much.

    Our country is in constitutional and economic crisis. We face problems that have been created by mealy mouthed politicians who are afraid to tell the truth about our Constitution, about our monetary policy, about our debt, and about our courts. Throughout your campaign, you had given me reason to believe that you were different, and that you would not bow down to the pressures of the media or public misconceptions of those pressing issues. Over the past week, though, my confidence in you has been severely shaken not because of anything the media has said, but because now that you are for the first time, under a national spotlight, asked to defend an unpopular position, i.e. that parts of the Civil Rights Act were indeed unconstitutional, you’re folding like a tent. Your efforts to please the media and the Republican establishment may well get you elected, but if your behavior over the past week is a preview of what your behavior in Washington would be, that election will mean little.

  • texasgalt

    and do not give Mitch and friends further opportunity to say “told you so.”

    Good luck.

    • nessa

      Every Republican congress critter and every conservative candidate should refuse to speak with anyone from the leftist media. Fox or nothing. Make it plain when you are asked, especially if they ask for a comment on camera, “I will not answer questions for your well-proven left leaning organization. Your definition of journalism is not shared by the citizens of this Nation. Stop slanting your stories, stop being sycophants for this socialist administration, stop being the American Pravda; then come back and ask me a question.”

      • texasgalt

        You might as well ask a crackhead to go straight. . . or ask Brian Williams to skip makeup before going on camera. The LSM is nothing more than an extension of the statist Democrat party.

  • Common_Cents

    Would be the only republican I’d allow on pmsnbc. Christie should do a seminar on how to handle hostile lame stream media.

  • Achance

    There is not ONE legal vote available to Rand Paul outside Kentucky. Only his ego put him on PMSNBC and he deserves what happened to him. As I’ve been saying here for years, Republicans need to stop trying to make news in the NY-DC-LA, and I’d add ATL, axis of evil. If any Republican other than National leadership wants to do a presser, s/he should do it back in the district/state or in a regional center where the reason for the presser is an issue, e.g., the Gulf spill in a Gulf state, gasahol in a midwest farm state, land issues in the intermountain West or Alaska. There is no friendly press in the big eastern cities and there are no votes there for Republicans in the foreseeable future, so why make news there. If the MSM wants to cover Republicans, they need to learn to think of Holiday Inn Express as a luxury hotel.

    • blooch

      Yeah, have to add ATL to the axis. It’s Krazy Town down here now.

      http://dailycaller.com/2010/06/02/white-congressional-candidate-wants-to-participate-in-forum-but-is-told-she-can%e2%80%99t-because-she%e2%80%99s-not-black/

      • Achance

        for a long time. When I was there in the early ’70s, Downtown was unfit for habitation after sundown and very unsafe if you were white. It was quite common to see white females walking from their car to their office with a weapon brandished. I would rather have made the two block walk from my shop in Underground to the bank without my pants than without my pistol.

        I pretty much have to fly in there to see my relatives in South Georgia, but I get my bags, get my car, and get on 75 South just as fast as I can. If I’m on the East Coast, it is practical to just fly into Savannah, so I always do and avoid ATL altogether.

        • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

          would be safe with this gamecock of pallor in this part of jawja…smile (I go downtown all the time and the scars are on other chickens)

          • ZootSuit

            what’s up with you guys?

            :-)

          • mbecker908

            but I’m pretty sure that I’d feel safe with Art’s shotgun.

          • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
        • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
          • Common_Cents

            I was at Tech 85-89 and once escorted a female classmate to techwood homes. She was a big sister to a little girl there. We pulled up in my car, as a gang was standing around. They looked at us amused that we would even dare walk by them. Walking up the stairwell noticing gun casings and spent needles. That was my first and last escorting after I told the big sister she had a bigger set than I. Doing a good thing is great but getting yourself killed wasn’t my cup o sweet tea.

            During college I worked at a bar in the new atlanta underground briefly until two open area gun shootings between gangs sent people diving for cover.

          • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
          • blooch

            It was in the no-man’s land between Techwood and Home Park. Do you remember a bar called Bash Rip Rock’s? It was right next to our house.

            How about the “par le Bri Wa”? When it used to have all its letters, it was the Sparkle Brite Wash Laundromat, just down 10th St. towards I-85.

        • blooch

          printing the Fulton County Daily Report. I worked the late shift printing that day’s edition, then rode my bicycle to the Garnett St. MARTA station, where I caught the train. I remember the disembodied voice telling the turnstile jumpers to, “Please exit the station sir…” about once every thirty seconds while I waited for the train. None of them ever left, but as soon as I got on the train (back of the last car only for bicyclists and also a favorite thug car) a MARTA cop would appear to make sure that I and my bicycle were standing in the correct place, then turn and make a beeline for the front of the train. None of the thugs ever bothered me, though. Maybe it was that long leather case that I carried slung over my shoulder.

          Eventually, I started using the Five Points station because the lighting was better and there were more people around. Finally, I just up and quit the job and joined a reggae band. That led to a whole different kind of police weirdness, but that’s another story, mon.

          I don’t do Downtown or Buckhead or L5P much any more…best left to the young’uns.

    • aesthete

      Come to think of it, I’ve rarely seen Alaskan politicians on the MSM (until Sarah was tapped as VP nominee). Have they adopted that maxim, or have they just not given the MSM any reason to pay attention until now?

      • Achance

        Stevens, Young, and both Murkowskis had a keen sense of where their bread was buttered. They’d take money elsewhere, but they paid the homefolks a lot of attention and other people very little. You might have noticed they did very well by doing that. At least until Frank decided to buy a jet and the Justice Department decided to run against Ted.

  • johnt

    of America, liberal [?] journalism, where lying is an obligation.
    Be prepared for more, & have a few taped generalized responses set to go for the next barrage of filth.
    It is because of trash like this that we need people like you.
    Good luck.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    Appeal to your voters.

    You can use the Internet to appeal to the libertarian-leaning supporters who backed your father.

    For television and radio, stay in state.

    We need to hold that seat.

    • aesthete
  • bostinks2

    I will vote in accordance to my constituents majority vote if ever the issue or changes to the law is required comes to the floor for a vote.

  • deano64

    How many of your likely voters do you think actually watch MSNBC? I don’t know the answer but my guess is very few if any. And if you think you are going to actually persuade any MSNBC viewers in Kentucky I would bet that you couldn’t get any of the 3 to vote for you anyway. You have no friends in any of the MSM. You scare the hell out of them and they must do everything in their power to destroy you. I like you and believe in individual rights as you do. As someone posted before their is no need for you to come here and defend yourself. The folks here at RS have been defending you from the day these lies broke out. Good luck the rest of the way.

  • ZootSuit

    I will also add that Dr. Rand illustrates and embodies some of the contradictions on the Right. Contradictions that ultimately I think we are going to need to face and reconcile but which definitely do not need to be made or highlighted in the midst of a political campaign.

    For example, most conservatives (not all but definitely most) are quick to claim adherence to Martin Luther King.Jr. and fealty to his rhetoric. Yet almost in the same breadth, many of these same conservatives reminisce for the “states’ rights.” Well, quite frankly and for good reasons, King was an opponent of and wholeheartedly fought against the “states’ rights” of the past.

    And while I definitely do not think that the overwhelmingly vast majority of White conservatives want a return to “Jim Crow” and the like, I wonder about the cognitive dissonance (and historical ignorance) of those who make the claim.

    Another example, which I have seen even here on RedState, is how many conservatives claim that “Abraham Lincoln was a tyrant” and that “the defeat of the [Southern] Confederacy ended our liberties” (as a sidenote, I find this last claim especially amusing) and yet many of these same conservatives will argue, “Blacks should vote for Republicans because, after all, it is the party of Lincoln.”

    Aside from the merits or demerits of such statements about Lincoln and the Confederacy, it is almost the definition of self-contradiction to argue on the one hand that someone was a tyrant and unAmerican and then literally argue in the next breadth that a group of people should vote like you because that someone you personally despise as a tyrant and unAmerican was of the same political party as you.

    Ultimately, I think conservatives (and libertarians) must address such issues. It is the basic question of we want small government but how small of a government do we really want. Because, even as I think of myself as strongly libertarian, even I must confess that too small of a government has proved to be problematic, too. Consider, for example, the original Articles of Confederation of 1781.

    I should make it perfectly clear, however, that Rand Paul is a fool for bringing such matters up and keeping them in the spotlight. And, unfortunately, Rand Paul does seem to be the one intent on keeping this issue in the spotlight. (Note to Dr. Paul: Shut up!) To paraphrase streiff, such matters have their place when talking over a cold brew or even (especially) on the pages of RedState but they have no business in the midst of a political campaign.

    • aesthete

      That said, it’s irritating to see those who call for “citizen legislators” or “grassroots candidates” who don’t do things that are “business as usual” complain when they, well, don’t go by convention! It is irritating that Paul can’t just let the issue go, and start talking about other things, but not surprising, considering that both he and his dad have gotten their bones speaking extemporaneously on various esoteric issues. I’m more in favor of strong, conservative party leadership and weak party members, myself (I guess that makes me something of a parliamentarian), but those who aren’t need to reconcile their desire for independent, outside-the-box politicians with the natural outcomes of such wishes.

      “States’ rights” really is a misnomer that should never be used for what should be rightly called “federalism”. States don’t have rights, any more than legislators, executives, or judges do: rights only apply to individuals, and can only be recognized or taken away, not granted. States play a role in a federalist system, just as the President, Congress, and the Supreme Court do. We should really be emphasizing the roles of all of these parts, and how they work in conjunction, instead of focusing exclusively on and fetishizing the role of the States in the equation.

  • The_Gadfly

    Not because your position is wrong, but because you got snookered, and should have known better. I expect Newt’s mother to fall for these tricks, I don’t expect somebody who is going to swim with the sharks in the DC pool to do so.

    You have no friends in the press. You may have some friends in talk radio, you certainly have some on the internet, but I repeat, you have NO friends in the press.

    Now, don’t whine or complain, just go get even. We need you in the Senate, and I report that from deep inside enemy territory. We need you sharp and able to fight.

  • cromwell_rump

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100521/pl_ynews/ynews_pl2190

    “But Paul’s “understanding” about the ADA is wrong. The legislation specifically exempts the vast majority of buildings three stories and under from any requirement to install elevators. In other words, if you own a small business and you have a two-story office and one of your workers is handicapped, no one can force you to build an elevator……….”

    ——-

    as to the Civil Rights Act, you are as stupid politically as your father is. You are now claiming you SUPPORT the 1964 Civil Rights Act and at the same time(wrongly) claiming it is UNCONSTITUTIONAL. So are we to take it you support Ripping to shreds the Constitution(your version of it?).

    Now the Libs(often times your allies, likely why you ran to MSNBC in the first place, or Russian Progaganda sites like Russia Today next)……have the narrative, and you on tape cementing it of:

    “Rand Paul thinks it is Okay for a Private Business to Deny service to Blacks(basis of Skin Color)”….claiming you now support the Act which you also claim is ‘unconstitutional’ isn’t going to overcome that politically.

    • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

      Score one for Aaron. He called you from the beginning, jpniner.

  • crassus

    There is no reason to do so. Very few in Kentucky watch MSNBC, CBS, CNN except leftists who you can not win over anyway.

  • constitutionalconservative

    I greatly respect your defense of Americans from an out-of-control government, and I was disgusted by how you were slandered by the media.

    I would love to see you turn the question around though and start putting your interlocutors on the defensive about some of the ridiculous consequences of today’s civil rights laws (affirmative action, disparate impact, quotas, etc.) The liberals will howl, but this is a winning issue for conservatives. We believe that government should be out of the racial discrimination business. The Democrats still think we should government should discriminate by race, just as they believed it when they were upholding Jim Crow.

    That’s a conversation I really hope we can have.

  • lineholder

    from an everyday citizen…

    1) Always be wary of those who might try to be manipulative and deceitful. Never give them the benefit of the doubt.

    2) Now more than ever, character matters, sir. Actions speak louder than words. Make sure your actions say that you are someone who genuinely loves this nation and who will have the strength to do what it takes to protect and preserve the sovereignty of our country.

    3) Provide us with a leader we can genuinely respect first and foremost.

  • aesthete

    I’m not the first to say it (even in this post!) and I won’t be the last: while I defend and agree with your position, and find it abhorrent that the media has twisted it into support for racism, having to clarify one’s position and even being in the position to have to defend against such a scurrilous charge is the mark of bad messaging. Good messaging is never on the defensive, even if the enemy is on one’s turf. Find a way to turn it around or otherwise make it a non-issue, then hammer away on the issues where your campaign finds resonance and their campaign finds discord and disagreement.

  • charliebravoNH

    Dr Paul

    Barack Obama has 35% approval in your State. Get off this subject and start showing the people of Kentucky how much of a “Obama Stooge” Jack Conway is. No apologies, especially to Jack Conway.

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