barracuda wrote:while evidencing absolutely no ability to create change or momentum by his pronouncements with regard to the Fed, or the CIA. He is a useful tool.
I disagree with that, although I reckon he made a big mistake running for the GOP nomination. I tend to think that was a tactical mistake rather than a deliberate neutering of his influence, though - he's had experience running as Libertarian candidate and knew that that wouldn't get him very far, and knew how Nader had gotten ignored. As for 'momentum', I think that thanks to him a lot more people are informing themselves about these things. Which is good.
MacCruiskeen wrote:Ron P said some things there that were both brave and true
Yes yes.
American Dream wrote:"Free market" economics= increased corporate dominance. This is not rocket science.
I absolutely disagree. It's not rocket science, you're right, it's economic science, and a bit of background in the subject is useful. The 'free market' model requires a certain number of conditions to work in theory, and it is the role of government to try to move real-world conditions in the direction of these theoretical ones. The most important conditions are unrestricted flows of information and skills, and no barriers to competition. In the current system of corporate-government collusion, most conspiracies try work
against these goals. That's the problem at the moment, that government does the opposite of what it's supposed to under a free-market system because it is corrupt. These bail-outs, for instance, would never have happened in a true free-market economy. Nor would the subversion of the EPA and FDA in the US. And the big free-market thinkers have all said that a prosperous society has a duty to look after its less fortunate citizens, not that you'd know that by listening to the right-wing whores who quote them selectively and have never read their books.
I'm a socialist in my voting, but a sort of mutualist in my philosophy, and the Paul-style libertarians are closer to mutualism than any other political movement in the West today.