Who's Afraid of Rand Paul?

by: Robert Scheer, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Tuesday's election results were pretty good for progressives. The retirement of that windbag chameleon Sen. Arlen Specter is long overdue, and pro-labor forces were able to push Sen. Blanche Lincoln into a runoff in Arkansas. Even the big tea party win in Kentucky has its bright side.

Count me as one lefty liberal who is not the least bit unhappy with the victory by Rand Paul in Kentucky's Republican primary for the U.S. Senate. Not because it might make it easier for some Democratic Party hack to win in the general, but rather because he seems to be a principled libertarian in the mold of his father, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, and we need more of that impulse in the Congress.

What's wrong with cutting back big government that mostly exists to serve the interests of big corporations? Surely it would be better if that challenge came from populist progressives of the left, in the Bernie Sanders mold, but this is Kentucky we're talking about.

Rand Paul, like his dad, is worthy of praise for standing in opposition to the Wall Street bailout, which will come to be marked as the greatest swindle in U.S. history and which was, as he noted on his Website, an unconstitutional redistribution of income in favor of the undeserving rich.

"Federal bailouts reward inefficient and corrupt management, rob taxpayers, hurt smaller and more responsible private firms, exacerbate our budget problems, explode national debt and destroy our U.S. dollar. Even more importantly, any bailout of private industry is in direct violation of the Constitution. It is a transfer of wealth from those who have earned to those who have squandered."

Of course the joker in the deck is the word principled before libertarian,  and, as many online commentators have noted, Rand Paul is a bit more inclined to waffle on an interventionist foreign policy than is his father. While he would have insisted on a declaration of war before the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan or Iraq, he argues that Afghanistan, where the Sept. 11 attack was planned, was a legitimate target but that Iraq was not. In either case, as he insists correctly, a congressional declaration of war was constitutionally required:

"If I had been in the U.S. Senate, I would have stopped them and said no more, we will have a vote. We will declare war with Afghanistan. We will declare war with Iraq. I would have voted for a declaration of war with Afghanistan, but I would have voted against a declaration of war with Iraq. But I would have made them vote. And that's the problem. They no longer pay attention to the rules."

In any case, his Republican establishment opponent, Trey Grayson, attacked Paul for his opposition to an interventionist foreign policy as well as for favoring the legalization of marijuana, and on both counts it is a good sign that Kentucky voters rejected those lines of attack.

True, to wax warmly about a potential Republican libertarian senator is an act of desperation for a liberal who still hopes that the federal government might be moved by the embattled band of progressive Democrats in Congress to put the power of the federal government at the service of the needy. But when has that happened recently? With a commanding Democratic majority in Congress and a former community organizer as president, the focus of economic policy in this time of enormous economic pain has been on saving the bankers who created this mess.

With the Democrats trusting our well-being to the likes of Lawrence Summers and Timothy Geithner, who under President Bill Clinton did so much to enable Wall Street greed, would it not be good to have at least one Republican senator questioning the Washington spending spree?

Yes, Rand Paul is bad on a lot of social issues I care about, and no, I don't embrace his faith in the social compassion of unfettered free markets. But the alternative we have experienced is not one of a progressive government properly restraining free-market greed but rather, as was amply demonstrated in the pretend regulation of the oil industry, of government as a partner in corporate crime.

It is the power of the corporate lobbyists that is at issue, and it is refreshing that candidate Paul has labeled Washington lobbyists a "distinctly criminal class" and favors a ban on lobbying and campaign contributions by those who hold more than a million dollars in federal contracts.

Heresy, I know, but it is only thanks to Ron Paul, the father and hopefully the mentor of the potential Kentucky senator, that we got a congressional mandate to audit the Fed's role in the banking bailout. How bad could it be to have another irascible Paul in the Congress?

Robert Scheer is editor of truthdig.com, where this column originally appeared. E-mail Robert Scheer at rscheer@truthdig.com.

Copyright 2010 Creators.com 

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.





     

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Audit the Fed died in

Audit the Fed died in Senate, last I heard. We need a safe house for whistleblowers, probably offshore, maybe in Venezuela or Cuba. Is anywhere safe against School of the Americas and all that?



Not bad at all.

Not bad at all. Unfortunately, we've let 'disagreement' paralyze our ability to find 'common ground' on too many important issues. I may disagree w/a Republican, but, it doesn't mean I can't hold some of her/his ideas in a positive light. Working toward a common good health of our society is the only way we'll get through the crisis we face now. Getting off the crisis mgmt. bandwagon demands that we actually listen to each other and 'hear' ideas. ..hash out a plan.



The author has it wrong.

The author has it wrong. 9/11 as everyone now knows was planned in Germany and either France or Spain. None of it was conceived in Afghanistan. So to give a gold star to Rand Paul for his backing the war against Afghans is just plain wrong.



Yes, we are all for auditing

Yes, we are all for auditing the FED, but what ever happened to the audit of the US gold ? Is there any left?



"With the Democrats trusting

"With the Democrats trusting our well-being to the likes of Lawrence Summers and Timothy Geithner, who under President Bill Clinton did so much to enable Wall Street greed, would it not be good to have at least one Republican senator questioning the Washington spending spree?"

You are very naive to believe that Rand represents a positive voice for progressives. This is a regressive politician, fully racist, ready to implement more conservative Republican policies from a different angle -- like his father, Rand is a gun loving, pro-private property Friedmantie. You obviously have not researched this evil family from Texas, a family that associates with the likenesses of David Duke and the John Rushdoony family of Racist Christian Crackpots. Finally, I must say that your position makes me ashamed to be a left wing progressive. You shame me and others who despise any sort of racism with every fiber of our being. In essence, your praise of Paul shows that you are ruled by your anger and rage against Wall Street, not by your intellect and inherent moral values that cherishes notions of equality and justice.



Sorry, Rand Paul wants it to

Sorry, Rand Paul wants it to be legal for white businessmen to exclude people of color from their services (bathrooms in service stations anyone?), as well as discrimination against LGBT folk, etc., etc. This is a dangerous direction, especially with the resurgence of open racism.

Get a clue!



Welll, perhaps you could

Welll, perhaps you could hope that Rand Paul would make noises that would cause some constraint in the right places in Govt., but that doesn't negate the potential for all of the back-room deals that he could facilitate with his wheeling/dealing somewhat questionable intentions.
Better for some progressive to grab the bullhorn and push for some of the proper constraints and be elected, than to "allow" Rand Paul to run a dangerous experiment in our Govt. just 'cause he is another Dr. Paul.



Hey! A left liberal I can

Hey! A left liberal I can agree with! Corporations are taking over our government. And while he and I would disagree about what this government should be doing and its size, it gives me hope that there is some common ground. Small(er), responsible government can accomplish a lot. Why not give it a try?



I am in shock. Rand Paul is

I am in shock. Rand Paul is a raving lunatic who wants to do away with the public school system for openers. His statement that the WH has a boot heel on the neck of BP was the clincher for me. We do not need another pro-corporate monster in our government.



All I can say is that the

All I can say is that the Democrats deserve Rand Paul. I'm not the least bit afraid of him. I'm afraid of the Democrats and the willingness of the public to dumbly be led on with their never-ending donkey and carrot show.

We shouldn't be in Iraq.
We shouldn't be in afghanistan.
They should have opened up Medicare to all Americans.
They should tax them out their intestines insofar as social security is concerned.

I have no more support to give to the Democrats. Obama was their last chance.



David Ploffe's (or however

David Ploffe's (or however his name is spelled) mastermind plan for reelection is the youth vote -- with all the newcomers entering. Brought to you with a smile.

They've lost my vote.



Would all you people out

Would all you people out there who keep lambasting Obama for not changing the country overnight to make it the way you dream PLEASE get real? Obama is right in the middle of the road and can not in anyone's realistic view be anything but a centrist. #1, he could not have been elected otherwise, not in this conservative country. Try to imagine enough people voting for a radical left-wing black man. #2, even if he wished to make radical changes, even moderate inadequate improvements are opposed by the united front of troglodyte Republicans. Yes, I voted for him. Did I have a choice, given the GOP candidates? I would have preferred to vote Kuchinich, and hope some day to be able to do so without moving to Ohio.



@ All I can say is that

@ All I can say is that the

writer of the previous comment is a fool if he's not afraid of the thinking of Rand Paul and others like him. Disappointment is a lousy reason to betray your fellow citizens by suppporting those avowed to destroy the government.



Who are you and what did you

Who are you and what did you do with the Real Robert Scheer?



Two thumbs up for you! I'm

Two thumbs up for you! I'm 100% libertarian and fully for removing government coercion and interference in personal lives and probably more than Rand. If people like you keep talking this way, we might actually find a middle ground in this country again!