Friends of Ron Paul in Japan

Why the Libertarian “remnant” must support Chuck Baldwin at all costs!

The “remnant”

It seems as if everybody is a “libertarian” these days.  Have you ever smoked pot…you’re a libertarian.   Do you want to pay less taxes?  You’re a libertarian.  Do you think that after bailing out the financial class to the tune of 700 billion (which they maintain is necessary to avoid a crash) some inquiries should be made as to the propriety of golden parachutes?  Congratulations, you’re a libertarian!

Libertarinanism is mainstream today.  Ask Bob Barr…who thinks the US military should get out of Iraq…but not necessarily Pakistan or Colombia.  Ask Tyler Cowen who thinks government should be allowed to expand at or less than the rate of growth of GNP.  (With negative growth, that may be a proposal for drastic reduction in the near future!)  Ask Joe the Plumber!  And these are the good guys!

In contrast, a bad guy would, I suppose, be Alan Greenspan who masqueraded as both an economist and a libertarian on the strength of his personal relationship (not as tight as Nathaniel Brandon’s, but good enough) with Ayn Rand.  Thank you Mr. Greenspan for almost single handedly destroying the American economy!  No, we don’t expect you to know anything about the Austrian bussiness cycle theory…because you never studied Austrian economics.  But you are a self described classical liberal aka “libertarian”…can you define that?

The oracle replies, “Yes, a classical liberal is someone who, at least at heart, thinks  that it is best for the banks to maintain low interest rates.”

Thank you, we are astounded and illuminated, to the extent that we have no reply….except….

True Libertainism

(Or classical liberalism, if you will) is the belief that there is a natural law which superceeds any law promulgated by a parliament, congress, or diet.  If a legislative body passes a law which, say, permits anyone to murder someone with red hair, then, according to a libertarian, that  law is immediately void.  It is not voided by judicial review.  The extra-natural law edict is a dead letter and of no force.

The principle of obedience to natural law is, I humbly submit, of more fundamental importance than low interest rates, or even the principle on loans!

The mainstream libertarians are for the most part utilitarians, tinkering with the notion of limiting a government which has long since gone beyond any sane limit in terms of expenditure, infringement of civil rights, or executive centralization.  Only a small “remnant”, to use the phrase of Albert J. Nock, has the historical perspective to realized that the natural law justification of the state has long since been violated.

The Man and the Party

The closest thing to a libertarian party in existence today is the Constitution Party, which is fielding the Baldwin/Castle ticket in this season’s presidential contest.  There is a certain amount of odium attached to this party from the perspective of libertarians.  It is rumored that it is a stalking horse for theocrats.  But hold your Savanarolas a minute and take a look at the facts.

Yes, at one time there was a “theocrat problem” in the Constitution party.  There was a point at which an extremist wing was trying to purge the party of all but Protestant fundamenalists.  These people lost and they lost big.  Today the Baldwin/Castle ticket is canvasing the support of all people of good will…Protestant, Catholic, Mormon, Jew….Righteous Atheist….anybody!

Like Thomas Aquinas seven hundred years earlier, Chuck Baldwin recognizes the existence of two layers of truth, natural and revealed.   Whether god is a unity or a trinity, what direction to pray in, and the number of divine commandments, if any, are theological questions which can only be answered within the context of particular faith communities.  However the existence of natural law, the inviolability of the person and property of one’s neighbor, is a manifest truth which doesn’t require faith in a theological sense.  It is this principle of natural law, not any sectarian confession, which the Baldwin campaign stands for.

All the other parties are pushing utilitarian theories in accordance with the class interests which they represent.  So what do you want…low interest rates, high interest rates….or are you acutally interested in in truth and justice?  If the latter you are one of the “remnant” who will be voting for Chuck Baldwin this season.

You may not be voting for a winner, but to borrow another phrase from Albert J. Nock, you’ll be “Doing the right thing!”


“I Believe Every Crisis Creates Opportunity!”:Sarkozy aka Napoleon IV rears his ugly head!

Can Europeans be better NeoConservatives than Americans?  Yep, they’re gonna Party like its 1787!

The European council has just finished its deliberations “with complete success.”  What a contrast between the long faces of Bush, Paulson, Bernake and Co.. and the smiling faces of the representatives of Europe’s technorati.    Since the gloom and doom has pretty much spread itself around the world in equal measure, what strange variable has caused this burst of euphoria among Europe’s unelected leaders?

In the US of A, the economic contraction only facilitates the further entrenchment of the federal government as the arbiter of human destiny, through the Economic Stabilization and Recovery act of 2008.  But in Europe where a federal system is still nothing more than a gleam in its wannabe founder’s eyes, the economic crisis is creating the kind of precedent that Shay’s rebellion offered for the US federalists in 1787.  The gloating techno-elite is talking in only slightly veiled terms of a reinstatement of the Lisbon treaty, Europe’s equivalent of the document which, produced by the constitutional convention, became the constitution of the United States.

Someone lightheartedly suggests, “I am sure that President Sarkozy would like to become the first leader of Europe.”  Sarkozy makes no objection.

Somewhere in the North Atlantic an entire country is sinking.  Nobody pays any attention to the distress signals.  Sarkovsky continues with his Cartesian sang-froid.  ”We should be thinking about many things…how many currencies we should have in the world….”  Everything is up for grabs, the time of the great promulgations is at hand, a time to utter edicts which will decide the course of future generations.  The European Commission acting as a Committee of Public Safety…who’s head will stay on who’s head, and prevail to think the thoughts of the future human race…if we decide, indeed, to call it “the human race”?  

And, (this being in the thoughts, not the spoken councels, of the Eurocrats) as for that small country sinking in the North Atlantic.  That too can be made use of!  Even the American federal government could not come about without making examples of certain recalcitrants.  These Icelanders…how much they resemble South Carolina in the time of DeToqueville!  Let them become an Autonomous Republic of the Russian Federation!  That will teach anyone who refuses the terms of our Union!   And while the American incident was post facto to union, ours will be ex ante!  You see, we will outdo the Americans in the end!


Corageous Christian Pacifist Lawrence M. Vance Endorses (almost) Chuck Baldwin

“The Lesser of Two Goods”

Author and writer on moral theology Lawrence Vance has penned an incisive analysis of presidential candidate Chuck Baldwin’s politics on the Lew Rockwell site:

http://www.lewrockwell.com/vance/vance151.html

I would like to say that this is an endorsement by Vance of Baldwin, but for technical reasons only fully comprehensible to theologians in Pensacola FL, Vance eschews the formal term “endorsement.”

Let’s face it, for us ordinary sinners (libertarians and whatnot) Pensacola FL is a pretty scary place, stuck as it is out on the Gulf Coast between the hard place of military discipline and hard rock of its flourishing and fundamental churches. So Mr. (I think he is a lay-theologian not a Rev.) Vance has come to the aid of us backsliders and philistines, with the assurance that his fellow Pensacolan not only has no intentions of establishing the Kingdom of God by edict…but that his version of liberty under the constitution is actually more reasonable and practical than anything that the Libertarian Party has managed to come up with in recent history.

Let’s face it, a lot of hand holding and reassurance is in order. If you have ever been to Pensacola you’ll realize that it is nothing so much as a miniaturized and modernized version of ancient Constantinople. It was said that in Constantinople of the fifth century that if you went to a baker, in stead of the price of bread you would have to defend your understanding of the Trinity, if you went to a barber the small talk was all about the economy of the Incarnation, and if you had your shoes repaired you were liable to stumble on the cobbler’s opinion on valid apostolic succession. Likewise a rigorous Pensacola lay-theologian like Lawrence Vance does not allow loose language like “endorsement” to pass his lips, for it might put the rest of us under obligation to vote for Chuck Baldwin at penalty of near-mortal sin.

Endorsement or none, one gets a very edifying view of Baldwin from Vance’s article. Interestingly enough the two Pensacolans are not close friends, which eliminates the “favor” factor. And Vance being Vance: he rails against military service in wartime as intrinsically evil and sinful…that in a town crawling with naval service men, we can eliminate the “fear” factor as well! So Vance’s quasi-endorsement (remember the Ron Paul’s was really only “qausi” as well) is not only made without fear or favor…but is an attempt to overcome fear itself. The fear, by libertarians, of Pensacola Baptists.

Given that our choice in the major parties is between a stealth Socialist and an aging bipolar militarist, it is time to confront our fears. So listen all you lifestyle libertarians out there, take a swig of Jack Daniels or a puff of marijuana, screw up your courage and vote for the preacher man!

The republic you save may be your own.


Ron Paul Endorses Chuck Baldwin

Oct 03
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From Snubgate to Substance…Free at Last!

After a long hiatus Friends of Ron Paul in Japan is bloging again.

A major reason for the hiatus was that Ron Paul slowly withdrew from the race, sending mixed signals to his supporters as to what he was recommending as the next move for friends of liberty and peace.  Although there were plenty of Ron Paul sponsored or approved events and activities, non of these really made up for the lack of a clear endorsement.  That has all changed now:  Ron Paul has endorsed Chuck Baldwin’s candidacy for president, albeit in his usual understated and gentle way.

The endorsement actually came about as the result of a two step process.  Indeed, in lieu of a specific chain of events the endorsement, such as it is, might never have come about at all.  From the beginning, Dr. Paul was bound by his own high sense of honor and understanding of friendship to be noncommittal, since, on the one hand, he has been a past Libertarian party candidate and still remains friendly with elements of the party which nominated Bob Barr, and on the other hand has a high regard for many of the principles espoused by Chuck Baldwin, the nominee of the Constitution party. 

To solve this moral dilemma (note:the very notion of a moral dilemma is a rare thing among anyone involved in the political process these days!)  Dr. Paul decided he would give a generic endorsement to any and all third party movements.  To this end he gathered all the remotely viable candidates, left and right, for an interview, establishing a kind of concordat of solidarity against the monopoly of the two major parties.   The Constitution, Green, and Naderite candidates were all present…and of course Bob Barr had been invited as well.

What ensued has now been called “snubgate” by critics of Bob Barr.   On the very day of the meeting Barr went back on his previous commitment to attend.  In Bob Barr’s view, all minor candidates might be equal, but some were more equal than others…the “some” in this case being those fielded by the Libertarian party.  True, there is evidence that the LP is the biggest frog in the rather small pool of minor party competition, but there are at least two mitigating factors.  First, the LP itself was, in the eyes of many of its founders, never intended to “sieze the power of government” but only permitted to exist (in the eyes of its anarchist wing at least) to further the political education of the electorate.  Second, Bob Barr himself seems to be a libertarian (small initial) more out of opportunity than conviction.

If so, he lost a golden opportunity when he refused to show up at Ron Paul’s press conference for minor party candidates.  If my reading of Ron Paul’s motivations is correct,  the good doctor was trying to be more than fair to a man who, from the begining, was only his second choice for an endorsement.   But snubgate freed the Republican representative from Lake Jackson to go beyond rejecting Sen. McCain, and beyond even a vague expression of solidarity with minor partys.   He had done his best to conciliate the Libertarian candidate, and the conciliation had been rejected in as rude a fashion as could be imagined.

He was free to say…”I will be voting for Chuck Baldwin.”

I suspect that Ron Paul was intending to vote for the Constitution party candidate in any event, but that had planned to keep his preference moot…knowing that revealing his vote would have the force of an endorsement.  Of course, knowing that telling your vote has the force of an endorsement, and then telling your vote anyway constitutes an endorsement.

Partly, although not entirely, on the strength of Dr. Paul’s endorsement, I have decided for Baldwin/Castle in 2008.  Further blogs in this space during the coming month will be dedicated to explaining why, among the remaining choices left on the ballot, the Baldwin/Castle ticket offers the best option for advocates of peace and freedom.


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Sympathetic and Informative Article on Ron Paul in the Christian Science Monitor

Just the truth ma’am, just the truth…

…brought to you by the leading international English language newspaper

 A friend of mine, and hopefully a soon-to-be “Friend of Ron Paul in Japan” alerted me to the editorial at the following address:

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0102/p01s08-uspo.html

what is good is that it constitutes an exposition rather than an editorial in the strict sense.  No, the Christian Science Monitor has not come out and endorsed Dr. Paul, they just stick to the facts about his family life, intellectual history, and political policies.  That’s enough, since Congressman Paul’s background speaks for itself…and all it needs is an objective presentation.  Good work CSM….you’re way ahead of the rest of the MSM, but hopefully not for long!


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An Open Letter to Iowa Republicans

Ron Paul the Internationalist:An Open Letter to Iowa Republicans by Mark Sunwall

Dear Iowans,

As an American living abroad, I am acutely aware of global interdependence, something of which I hardly need to remind Iowans. This January, the eyes of the whole world will be on Iowa, to see if America chooses internationalism, or if it continues to dig itself into an isolationist pit. Perhaps you will be surprised if I told you there was only one truly internationalist candidate running for president, and that his name was Dr. Ron Paul.

This may seem like a paradox to those of you who have been told that Dr. Paul is the isolationist, and the other candidates are upholders of internationalism. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say this was a disagreement over methods, and that while Ron Paul thinks that peace and free trade promote internationalism, his opponents think the same end can be attained by saber-rattling and coercion. Viewed this way, perhaps it would take a degree in diplomacy or a crystal ball to tell which of the two positions was the more expedient.

Not being prescient, I am forced to rely on my moral intuitions and what I know about human nature. I know that people react negatively to foreign domination, even when that domination is arguably in their own best interests. If left to their own devices, the people of any given country are likely to experiment with error before they make their own way to a free and just society, but such a process of trial and error cannot be short-circuited by imposition from the outside, for the painful process by which freedom is attained is the prerequisite for building up a culture of moral and political responsibility.

In the view of Dr. Ron Paul we have squandered our own moral capital in fruitless attempts to build up bogus democracies (and even bare-faced dictatorships) abroad. This is a great tragedy, for while the maintenance of our own free institutions requires a constant replenishing of our national and spiritual resources, we have been bled dry, morally, fiscally, and in the literal toll of American men and women who have perished in dubious conflicts abroad.

Throughout our national history Iowa has contributed more than its share to America’s campaigns overseas. My own grandfather was a lifelong Republican who always voted the straight party ticket. He also was a commander of the Iowa National Guard and saw service in both world wars. In these he was unflinchingly loyal, and proud to lead the first Expeditionary Force to the relief of the British Isles upon America’s entry into that second world-wide conflict.

Yet he was never a boastful soldier, and preferred not to speak about what he had been through. However he did keep, in a place where he thought nobody would discover it, a scrapbook of pictures from the trenches of France. He, or somebody he knew, had gone to the trouble of documenting the terrible effects of poison gas on the human body. These were the images which my grandfather sought to preserve, as testimony to the terrors of total war. Since they were from the first war I can only imagine what was going through his mind as he marched into the second!

Yet he went, for though he despised the man in the White House, he respected the democratic process by which Congress had declared war against Germany. Hitler was conquering Europe and dropping bombs on London, and it was no time to be arguing the finer points of pacifism or just war theory. Yet he was never happier than when he returned to his home in Waterloo Iowa at the end of the conflict.

Almost everyone is familiar with the parable of beating swords into pruning hooks. At the end of World War II this meant that the veterans of Iowa could put down their arms, return to their families, and start manufacturing agricultural implements and other useful tools of peace. However dreams of a demobilized world were soon squashed by a new globalist doctrine of national security, and a continuing Democratic administration, which now claimed the right of the executive power to commit troops abroad unilaterally, even in the absence of a declaration of war.

Against this new doctrine of false, unilateralist “internationalism” stood the policies advocated by the Republican leader, Senator Robert Taft. It was a philosophy which Iowa Republicans could understand and support, and it had nothing to do with isolationism or pacifism. How could it have been? After all, Midwesterners had just welcomed soldiers from a global conflict back to what was from that time called “the breadbasket of the world.” Taft’s voluntarist internationalism insisted only that American policy abroad should be constitutional and conducted with the consent of, and in the general interests of, the American people. It was a policy formulated in the same spirit that animates what people are calling “the Ron Paul Revolution” today. In truth, this “revolution” consists in nothing more than calling the Republican party back to its roots.

Unfortunately, after Taft the party gradually adopted the Democrats’ doctrine of unilateral interventionism. A policy of “bipartisanship” evolved which said that trivial issues such as budgetary details were proper items of debate, but major issues such as war and peace were too delicate to be trusted to democratic process. This would have greatly surprised the founders of the Anglo-American tradition of free government. 19th century Iowans, with the words of the Lincoln-Douglass debates still ringing in their ears could never have imagined such a tame and, as it were, “unpolitical” future. Moreover, in the course of events Congress has even surrendered its authority over the minutiae of policy and expenditure, viewing with contempt the “green eye-shade” preoccupation with details. Again, Congressman Ron Paul (affectionately known as “Dr. No” for his persistent governmental skepticism) is the exception who proves the rule.

Surely there is a time for peace and a time for war, a time to say “no” to tyrants like Hitler when they actually threaten the security of the United States, but also a time to say “no” to those who create bogeymen, attempting to suborn the generous internationalist instincts of Americans by pressing the buttons of past traumas. Yes, the world is full of criminals, troglodytes, and wild-eyed fanatics, but surely these are better dealt with by the attention of a few well placed Sherlock Holmes than by the maintenance of a ruinously expensive military-industrial establishment.

Internationalism, peace, and prosperity: these three goals stand in no logical contradiction, although they have suffered a great deal of political obfuscation. America needs all three, but before it gets them there must be a return to genuine debate over fundamental principles. The Republican party must, to borrow a famous slogan, offer “a choice not an echo.” Between the social collectivism of the Democratic Party and the traditional civil society of the Republican Party there may some day be the possibility of rational choice. Today there is no choice whatsoever.

All the other Republican candidates are running for office, Ron Paul is running with an idea. Its the idea without which there can be no internationalism, no peace, and no prosperity. It’s called freedom. Please consider that when you caucus this January and give Ron Paul your hearty support.


A Tea Party for Ron

Everybody over here knows that there is nothing more serious than tea! Today is the day to put your most sincere support of Ron Paul’s campagne into practice. Tea anyone?
Ron Paul

Congressman Ron Paul, running for the 2008 Republican Presidential nomination.

Libery is his cup of tea, isn’t it everyone’s?


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