Friends of Ron Paul in Japan

A Semi-Retraction on the Power of Third Parties

The Friends of Ron Paul is about to go into dormition

Yes, the election is over and neither the Good Doctor nor any of his prefered candidates (Chuck Baldwin, his first choice, or the others) are posed to occupy the White House. Surprise, surprise! However minor party candidates did make some good points whenever the media deigned to listen to them.

Sorry about Montana
And yes, I was wrong about the ability of the minor parties to play the role of spoiler in the national presidential election, and even non-swing states. Hanna Montana has undoubtedly had more influence on the trajectory of American culture and politics than the Libertarian Party of Montana. And that goes double for my “Pensacola Pivot” which was supposed to throw Mississippi and Georgia to Obama. Even without the extra electoral votes the GOP got a good drubbing…now whether it will get the message is the question.

But wait, there’s a silver lining in…guess where?

In Alaska the Alaska Independence Party seems to have made the difference unseating incumbent (and felon) Stevens. And you thought the AIP was only good for Palin-bashing! Well yes, for that too…because now it looks like she will have to spend her time up in the Frozen north actually governing rather than basing herself from a hoped for senate seat in Washington.

Perhaps, after all, there is justice in this world. And, even more miraculously, perhaps the efforts of minor parties can play a (need I say minor?) role in bringing this about.


A great place for Ron Paul fans to hang out

Courtesy of Jeffrey A. Tucker Of course, the ezine which was started as a blog by

the man who used to be Ron Paul’s chief of staff

Or as the Gadsen Flag would put it…join or die!


I confess! I’m glad that Obama won!

Confessions of a Ron Paul supporter and Chuck Baldwin voter

Yes there are several good reasons to celebrate an Obama win…if not quite an Obama presidency:

1. Skin deep but not entirely superficial, he will be America’s first black president.  True, as a libertarian I think it would be better not to have a presidency…or at least a very weak one such as under the Articles of Confederation.  But if we have one, it should be open to people of all colors.  Congratulations Mr. Obama!

2. The intelligent and diligent Obama campaign has rid America (at least temporarily) of two of the most obnoxious icons of the political class: Hilary Clinton and Mad Jack McCain.  Unfortunately this election cycle has also raised up the rather idiotic Ms. Palin.  Oh well, two steps forward one step back.  Congratulations anyway Mr. Obama and staff!

3. To the extent that this election was a referendum on the Bush presidency, providence and the American people evidently used the Obama campaign as an instrument to shame the man who used emergencies and executive powers to shread the Constitution and erect a right-wing socialist state.  True, Obama’s presidency may turn out to be a left-wing version thereof but the precedent was initially set by Bush.

4. Obama is an ideologue.  What, you say, this is supposed to be a good thing!?  Well of course, not if he leads us into far left kookoo land.  But what if he changes his ideology, as idealists are know to do.  (As indeed, this writer been know to do in the past.)  Keep in mind that members of the political class in general and presidents in particular are notorious for doing exactly the opposite of what their voters gave them a mandate to do.  Socialism will only be continued and deepened if reality cooperates…which Austrian economics predicts it won’t.  Historical note:  Half of Eugen Bohm-Bawerk’s students followed him into free market economics, the others became what was known as the “Austro-marxist” school.  Idealists cross the line all the time and I suspect that Mr. Obama has an old textbook packed away somewhere with the title “Karl Marx and the Close of His System” by Eugen Bohm-Bawerk.  Marxist professors in Eastern and upper Midwestern universities often assign it to their students to refute its refutation of socialism.

Mr. Obama, can you refute the refutation of the refutation?  I know that sounds rather heroic, but after all they’re calling you a hero these days.  And if that is a little too abstract consider this: Jimmy Carter, that most “leftist” of presidents, actually reduced government more than any president since WWII, including Regan.


How I’m calling it: Obama wins it plus the “third party pivot.”

How I’m calling it:

As the “virtual incumbent” malaise sets in, I don’t expect an Obama landslide in the national tally.  He will probably break the 50% barrier but not by much.  Where I expect the landslide will be in the electoral vote, with Obama winning at least half a dozen more states than Kerry did in 2004.  If Obama wins less than 50% in the popular vote the only difference is that you won’t hear any more demands from the left to abolish the electoral college…a good thing in itself!

So how do I expect this to work?  Well lets look at the states that I expect to go for Obama:

Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Ohio in the Northwest.  Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, and Iowa in the Midwest.   California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii in the Pacific.  Colorado and New Mexico in the Rockies.

What about McCain?  West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana and Missouri in the Ohio/Mississippi region.  Alabama and South Carolina in the deep south.  Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, Wyoming, Idaho, and Utah the West and Plains.

So far a very ho hum prediction…here’s where it gets interesting.  I think Virginia will go for Obama while North Carolina will go for McCain, which again, isn’t all that surprising.  McCain should also hold on to his own state of Arizona, and Palin’s Alaska.  But I am calling Florida for Obama, and get this: Georgia, Mississippi (!), and Montana I am putting in the Obama column.

How on earth could this be?  I’m calling it the “third party pivot” but its more simple to say that Bob Barr will deliver Georgia to Obama, Chuck Baldwin will be the spoiler in Mississippi, and Ron Paul (!) will do the same in Montana.

And you didn’t even think Ron Paul was running did you!?  Well, actually he didn’t want to, at least in Montana…but in accordance with an archaic election law he is running there on the ticket of the Constitution Party…an organization he doesn’t even belong to!  I would like him to win the electoral votes as well…but I’m afraid that there will be just enough votes to make the difference between Obama and McCain.  North Dakota, with very similar demographics to Montana, will probably go for McCain…simply because Ron Paul is not on the ballot there.

So what’s the point.  After all, Obama has a win even without Georgia, Mississipii, and Montana.  The point is that when Republicans start to figure out what hit them, they’re going to need some signposts along the way back to sanity and putting a winning coalition back together.  Those three blue states surrounded by red, surrounded in turn by blue will be the pointers saying: Let the Ron Paul freedom coalition back into the game…or the GOP is RIP!

A few more nuances.  Why do I predict no comparable effect by Nader on Obama’s electoral take?  Because the Nader vote is too thin and geographically uniform.  In contrast there are regional clusters of Barr, Baldwin, and Paul  supporters, i.e. ex-Barr constituents disenfranchised by redistricting in Georgia, the “Bible Belt” running through Mississippi and the Florida panhandle for Baldwin, and the “libertarian belt” (gee, what else could you call it) running along the 49th parallel.  Also, I see ethnic and cultural differences among the white population of the southeast with people in the highlands (“hillbillies”) somewhat more likely to vote for McCain, and people in the lowlands (“rednecks” et al) somewhat more likely (!) to vote for Obama.  So Virginia goes for Obama because there is a West Virginia, but the Carolinas go for McCain because there is no east and west Carolina, only a North and a South.  Or something like that.  I suppose one could dispute these ethnological niceties endlessly.  However I am more interested in seeing the results develop through tonight and tomorrow…and see if my hypothesis holds up.


Surprise Sweep by Chuck Baldwin Very Unlikely! (You heard it first here)

The Superiority of Voting For Principle Over Not Voting at All

As I have said in comments on several other blogs, I felt the that the most principled vote for libertarians and paleoconservatives in 2008 was for Chuck Baldwin.  Many in these philosophical camps have advocating not exercising the franchise, faced with the choice of a left-socialist and a right-socialist.  However not voting, which leaves no trace, doesn’t suffice to register a protest.  It will be interesting to see what the total votes of third parties will come out to in the next couple of days.  A high vote would express a dissastisfaction with the present two party system.  On the other hand a non-vote could be interpreted as either apathy or protest, an ambiguity which of course the supporters of the system would interpret to their advantage.

As much as I respect the persons and positions of the non-vote strategists, this is likely to be a bad year for them.  This campaign has generated tremendous energy, particularly among the Obama side, but also among the Republican base after the nomination of Sarah  Palin as McCain’s running mate.  Hopes that a mounting historical trend of nonparticipation in the electoral process would delegitimate the political system are likely to be dashed in the immediate future.

About Baldwin I have no regrets.  The Constitution party is a half-baked idea who’s time has yet to come, and probably never will as long at it is run by factuous amatures.  But Baldwin addressed issues with dignity and using the rhetorical conventions which were once the halmark of the American republic.  Even on those issues where I disagree with him he has argued with logical coherence…never pandering to his audience, but rather trying to evoke in them a renewed committment to higher principles.   In short, a political strategy which is guaranteed to result in defeat, since it over-, rather than underestimates the intelligence and morality of the electorate.  John McCain has persued the opposite strategy…and he is going down in defeat anyway…taking his honor with him.

For that reason I don’t consider my vote for the Baldwin/Castle ticket wasted…quite the opposite!