On January 12, 2007, a Texas city councilman named Chris Peden
told the Galveston Daily News, "I have an immense amount
of respect for Ron Paul. Politics has a way of forcing people
to go against their core principles for political gain. That
has never been the case for Ron Paul."
In case you don’t know, Chris Peden is now Ron Paul’s
congressional challenger in the Republican primary in Texas’
14th District.
What happened to make Peden go from an admirer to an opponent
– and not just an opponent, but one who is running a vicious
and (as he surely realizes) dishonest smear campaign against
the very man he so recently praised?
I have no idea.
But here’s an indication of just what a classy guy he
is: all throughout Peden’s campaign website, his professional
head shot sits next to a silly photo of Dr. Paul – the
kind of photo every human being on earth has taken a zillion
times, but which in this case is presumably intended as a stark
contrast to the sobriety and deep thinking of Chris Peden.
That’s one of the benefits of running for public office
against a gentleman: you can do childish and dishonorable things
all campaign long in the full knowledge that your opponent is
too decent to reciprocate.
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Thankfully, you don’t even need to visit Peden’s
website. We’ve already heard every thought he’s
ever had every fifteen seconds for years and years.
Thus we read: "I think Islamo-Fascist terrorists were
responsible for the 9/11 attacks; the incumbent thinks America’s
Middle East policies were responsible for the attacks."
(Yes, he really is talking down to his potential constituents
like this.) The terrorists "wish to destroy our way of
life because they abhor freedom, democracy, and liberty."
We should continue to encourage democracy around the world "even
if it takes the remainder of the century."
You know what that means – lots and lots of war. And
you know what it also means: the politician uttering these inanities
has no intention of disclosing the tiniest hint as to where
the money for these fantasies is going to come from, what with
bankruptcy on our very doorstep.
Being a neoconservative means never having to explain, well,
anything.
Assuming Peden has an IQ above 50, he knows he is misrepresenting
Ron Paul’s position. Dr. Paul’s argument, which
is shared by top terrorism experts, is that our government’s
expensive and counterproductive foreign policy has stirred up
more trouble than it has alleviated. He’s saying kind
of what Russell Kirk – the founder of the modern conservative
movement, and no "liberal" – said after the
first Persian Gulf War. Good thing for Peden he’s never
heard of Kirk.
When the Ayatollah Khomeini called for jihad on the United
States in the early 1980s, it went nowhere. When bin Laden called
for the same thing but on the specific grounds that the US refuses
to leave the Muslim world alone, fighters flocked to his banner.
Could it be that our government’s dumb foreign policy,
in addition to wrecking our economy, is actually making us less
secure?
I’ve explained all of this here.
We also learn that Ron Paul, who has been married to the same
woman for 51 years and has five children, 18 grandchildren,
and one great-grandchild, doesn’t believe in "traditional
family values." Peden draws this conclusion on the basis
of Dr. Paul’s votes against unconstitutional legislation
that would decide social policy at the federal level –
you know, the kind of voting record you compile when you favor
the "smaller government" that Peden himself falsely
claims to support.
Ron Paul "weakens our economy," Peden says, because
he doesn’t believe in supranational trade bureaucracies
that can dictate tax and regulatory policy to member states
– the very thing Republicans rightly opposed half a century
ago when it took the form of the International Trade Organization.
In those days, supporters of the free market knew a boondoggle
when they saw one.
Peden says that opposing the World Trade Organization and NAFTA
is "exactly the approach that led us to the Great Depression."
Now much as I’d love to hear Peden’s entire collection
of learned insights into the Great Depression – really,
Peden has done us all a grave disservice over the course of
his career by confining his remarks on the subject to this single
sentence – I’m still inclined to stick with Ron
Paul, who could write a treatise on the causes of the Great
Depression off the top of his head.
Of course, as the Federal Reserve’s policies lead the
country and the world to the brink of another depression, it
is Ron Paul alone who stands tall as the one politician who
told the truth all these years about what the geniuses who run
our monetary policy have been up to. It is Ron Paul who spoke
truth to power, and who understood what Austrian business cycle
theory has to teach us about the inevitable devastation that
results from expanding the money supply through credit markets.
I wonder, on the other hand, whether Chris Peden even knows
what business cycle theory is, but if his bumper-sticker thoughts
on the economy are any indication, I probably already know the
answer.
As with so many other politicians, the message of "change"
turns out to be more of the same. The Federal Reserve has wrecked
the dollar and inflated the housing bubble? Then more of the
same is just what we need. Or at least that’s what I assume
Peden’s position is. Like every other politician in America,
he is completely silent on the issue of money and the Federal
Reserve, standing idly by while ordinary Americans are silently
ripped off year after year. Chances are, he (again like most
politicians) doesn’t know the first thing about it. How
else can we explain his failure, in the midst of a Fed-induced
downturn, to utter a single word about how we got here?
Over $50 trillion in unfunded entitlement liabilities is coming
due in the next few decades. The national debt keeps skyrocketing,
the dollar keeps plummeting, the prices of necessities are rising,
and the housing bubble is bursting. Ron Paul understands these
issues – in fact, he’s the only one in the presidential
race who’s bothered to bring them up.
A Martian glancing at Chris Peden’s political positions,
on the other hand, could be forgiven for assuming that these
problems do not exist. It’s all business as usual, full
steam ahead. A financial catastrophe is coming? Why, let’s
carry on as before! Is this the Peden message that Republican
Party hacks in Texas are so excited about?
The rest of Peden’s propaganda is the same old establishment
boilerplate, along with a complaint that Ron Paul doesn’t
vote for the pork and the corporate welfare that Peden himself
promises to support.
This is the genius who is campaigning against Ron Paul. And
not merely campaigning against him, but misrepresenting and
smearing a man with a voting record unmatched in all of American
history in its commitment to freedom, and whose knowledge of
economics, foreign policy, and the Constitution makes him an
intellectual giant among Washington’s pygmies.
Now instead of being honored and privileged to be represented
by a statesman as accomplished and knowledgeable as Ron Paul,
State Republican Executive Committee Chairwoman Kathy Haigler
supports the city councilman. "For far too long,"
she says, "[Congressional District] 14 Republicans have
been denied the opportunity to be represented by someone who
actually believes in and practices the Republican Party Platform,
and now they have the opportunity to vote for a solid conservative
who will go to Washington D.C. and vote Republican."
Poor Kathy. She’s had to be represented by a constitutionalist
for 12 consecutive years. There’s some serious withdrawal
for you: twelve whole years without a business-as-usual, platitude-uttering
hack as her congressman. She must be getting the shakes.
All that time, her congressman has been the only constitutionalist
in the entire Congress, arguably the greatest congressman in
all of American history, and a man who is loved and admired
all over the world. Only a city councilman mouthing slogans
and propaganda and promising pork and bankruptcy can rescue
longsuffering Kathy Haigler from this unspeakable ordeal.
Now I don’t care how much you loved Mitt Romney, but
no one, not even members of his own family, compared him to
Thomas Jefferson. Yet Ron Paul has been compared to Jefferson
and the Founders more times than anyone can count. Judge Andrew
Napolitano calls him "the Thomas Jefferson of our day."
Running against him – and, it has to be said, running
a vigorous campaign that cannot be taken lightly – is
not another Thomas Jefferson, to put it kindly. It is a forgettable
city councilman who, if his campaign website is any indication,
has never had an interesting thought in his life, and for whom
the history books will not have a single thing to say. Well,
maybe one thing: how did the American people become so debased
that the intellectual and moral mismatch between City Councilman
Chris Peden and Congressman Ron Paul could actually have been
a contest?
Pretty maddening, isn’t it?
Want to let off some steam? Then do the only sensible thing:
donate to Ron Paul’s congressional campaign right now.
I’d say we already have just about enough mouthpieces
of official propaganda serving in the US Congress. Is it so
much to ask for one – just one – congressman who
tells the truth?