Just days after scaling back his bid for the Republican presidential
nomination, Congressman Ron Paul (R-Tex.) railed against the
mainstream political establishment in Gaston Hall last night,
advocating his libertarian philosophy of limited government
and personal freedom.
“People don’t have rights to jobs and they don’t
have rights to medical care or rights to education,” Paul
said. “What you have is a right to your life. That’s
what you have.”
“We’re told that’s not compassionate,”
he added. “But if you look at all of history you’ll
find out that the most uncompassionate system of all is socialism
and welfarism.”
The event, sponsored by the Lecture Fund, College Republicans
and GU Vote ’08, attracted a sizable crowd that filled
Gaston’s first floor and part of its balcony. When Paul
entered the room to an announcer who would have sounded more
at home at a boxing match, he received a standing ovation.
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Paul began his speech by addressing his campaign’s failure
to translate his support to the voting booth, despite his sizable
online following and the fundraising record he set with a one-day
haul of nearly $6 million.
“Why aren’t we getting more votes?” Paul
asked. “It is a problem. I don’t have it fully explained,
but there’s only one law I’m proposing … From
now on we’re going to have our elections on the internet.”
Paul called the nature of his support “a two-edged sword
for us. It was an independent campaign but it was laissez-faire,”
he said.
William Galston, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution,
said that Paul lacked relevance to the 2008 election because
of his failure to expand his base or effectively use the money
he raised.
“This guy has been flying solo all his life and the idea
of building an organization and actually making strategic investments
in a campaign is just not the way he’s ever thought,”
he said.
Paul dedicated the majority of his speech to criticism of “big
government,” including the war on drugs, the U.S. government’s
response to Hurricane Katrina, the Federal Reserve and America’s
interventionalist foreign policy. He often contrasted his views
with what “they,” the mainstream establishment,
believed.
“If we don’t support the war, they’ll say
we don’t support the troops,” he said. “What
about supporting the troops by keeping them out of these no-win
wars?”
The one contentious moment of the evening came when Nick Sementelli
(SFS ’09) questioned Paul about a newsletter published
in the nineties under Paul’s name, which contained seemingly
racist statements.
“It was neglect,” Paul said. “Some people
are imperfect.”
“A true libertarian is incapable of being a racist,”
Paul added.