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VDARE.com note: But see also "Worse than A Crime—A Blunder": Ron Paul's Tragic Turnaround On Immigration, by Washington Watcher
After I wrote my last column, several Tea Party
activists contacted me to let me know that they had not
been "neoconned."
They made it plain in no uncertain terms that they would
never support establishment neocon Republicans such as
Newt Gingrich
for the office of President of the United States. Most
assuredly, I was glad to hear from these folks; I only
wish my mail box had been swamped with such
correspondence–it wasn't!
See my column here:
Have The Tea Parties Been Neoconned?
At this point, it may be helpful if I give a little
history lesson. The Tea Party movement began in 2007 as
a grassroots effort to support the 2008 Presidential
candidacy of Congressman
Ron Paul of Texas.
I am proud to say that I was part of that effort. In
fact, I actively campaigned for Dr. Paul in at least
four states during that election cycle: Alabama,
Florida, Iowa, and South Carolina. I was even honored to
represent Dr. Paul in a major South Carolina GOP
banquet, in which sitting US congressmen and senators
were selected from around the country to represent most
of the other Republican Presidential candidates. (I wish
readers could have been a fly on the wall to witness the
goings on at the speaker's table during the banquet as
these GOP congressmen and senators tried to figure out
who I was, and what the heck I was doing there. It was
quite a sight!) I well remember that, as I came down
from the speaker's platform, one US Senator told me that
my promotion of Dr. Paul's candidacy that night was the
best presentation on behalf of the Texas congressman
that he had ever heard. Since then, I have spoken at
numerous Tea Party events and appeared on both local and
national media outlets (and numerous private videos and
recordings) discussing the merits of the Tea Party
movement and promoting the candidacy of Dr. Paul.
We need to get this straight: the
Tea Party movement
was never about electing Republicans–especially neocon
Republicans! The Tea Party movement began as a
grassroots effort to reduce the size and scope of the
federal government; to rid America of the oppressive tax
burden under which it currently groans; to eliminate the
Federal Reserve; to return America to sound money; to
stop the federal government's obsession with foreign
entanglements and wars; and to return America to
constitutional governance. And there was only one man
within the two major parties that was going to bring
about those changes in 2008: Congressman Ron Paul, which
is why
the Tea Party was birthed
as a grassroots extension of his campaign.
Since then, however, many
GOP shills and toadies
have jumped on the Tea Party bandwagon and have
attempted to redefine its goals and objectives,
including many of the talking heads on FOX News. In
truth, many Tea Party activists regularly look to Sean
Hannity,
Glenn Beck,
Sarah Palin,
and other "conservative" celebrities to champion their cause.
Need I remind everyone that Hannity has hardly ever met
a Republican that he didn't gush over. And I couldn't
count how many times we've seen Mr. Neocon himself, Newt
Gingrich, on Hannity's show. And as much as many people
will cringe to hear this (and as much as I appreciate
many things that Beck has to say), it was Glenn Beck who
literally
sabotaged
a legitimate Tea Party candidate,
Debra Medina,
on his show. I would even dare say that Medina might
have been elected Texas governor had it not been for the
hatchet job Beck did on her.
And as much as I like Sarah Palin for her fervent
pro-life and pro-Second Amendment convictions, when it
comes to foreign affairs, she is just another shill for
the pro-war, military-industrial complex that has
dominated US foreign policy since the days of Lyndon
Johnson.
In 2008, the Tea Party movement supported one candidate:
Ron Paul. He was the only Presidential candidate who had
the guts to say the Federal Reserve was corrupt and
needed to be eliminated; he was the only candidate (with
the exception of Dennis Kucinich) who said the war in
Iraq was unnecessary and unconstitutional; he was the
only candidate who sponsored the Sanctity of Life Act,
which would recognize the right of the states to nullify
Roe vs. Wade; he was the only Republican candidate to
speak out against the USA Patriot Act, the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), and other draconian
police-state-type legislation and departments; and he
was the only man from either party who had the guts to
say the US should stop sending foreign aid to all
countries–even Israel.
Now, here we are four years later. And, once again, the
man who was responsible for the Tea Party movement
coming into existence has entered the 2012 race for
President. See the story, as it is reported in the
National Journal:
Ron Paul Steps Toward Third Presidential Race,
By Cameron Joseph, April 25, 2011
Coinciding with his announcement that he was
establishing an "Exploratory Committee" for his Presidential bid, Dr. Paul also
launched his campaign web site, which is located
here.
So, once again, the Tea Parties have their man. Will they support him in 2011 and 2012, as they did in 2007 and 2008? If they have not been "neoconned," they will.
Dr. Chuck Baldwin recently left the Crossroad Baptist Church in Pensacola, Florida to move to Montana. He hosts a weekly radio show. His website is here.