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JackRiddler wrote:.
The illusion of choice and the ritual of elections are very important in maintaining the present system and its powerful. They are attached to it in no small part because it gives them their own sense of legitimacy. Doing away with it would be the beginning of the end.
I'm also not sure what to make of someone who blithely appends Castro (or even Ho Chi Minh) to that long list of genocidaires, other than to say he's got some ideological barriers of his own to overcome. Surprising he didn't throw in Chavez.
Or who, in the midst of describing the crimes of class and money and state, provides a definition of the state's "minions" that reads as follows: "the recipients of welfare, social security, free health care, government jobs and the like, who are dependent upon the state and likely to be compliant."
I'd like to see a case that government employees and recipients of guaranteed free health care are more compliant than employees of the chattel sector, erm, I mean, "private business."
Blue wrote:Thanks for posting that AD. Funny how the males who support Paul think his pro-life views are just wedge issue fluff. Guess what? Half the population doesn't consider autonomy over their own bodies to be a wedge issue. It's a pretty significant viewpoint which relegates women as broodmares at worst and second class citizens at best.
American Dream wrote:Sweejak wroteif Paul were to become president what makes you think that he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full?
I don't actually think "he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full". That is why I believe we need critical thinking, and a coherent analysis- including especially, a class analysis, in order to analyze what a Ron Paul presidency would really mean.
It seems to me that the billionaires would rule as much or more then they do now- to the detriment of the rest of us, no matter how much legalized dope Americans had access to...
elfismiles wrote:I may not agree with everything about Dr. Paul's philosophy but I think he's been the most hard-core anti-empire anti-war politician around of late.
JackRiddler wrote:.Or who, in the midst of describing the crimes of class and money and state, provides a definition of the state's "minions" that reads as follows: "the recipients of welfare, social security, free health care, government jobs and the like, who are dependent upon the state and likely to be compliant."
elfismiles wrote:American Dream wrote:Sweejak wroteif Paul were to become president what makes you think that he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full?
I don't actually think "he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full". That is why I believe we need critical thinking, and a coherent analysis- including especially, a class analysis, in order to analyze what a Ron Paul presidency would really mean.
It seems to me that the billionaires would rule as much or more then they do now- to the detriment of the rest of us, no matter how much legalized dope Americans had access to...
I'm not really sure of Ron Paul's estimated financial worth but I don't think he is anywhere above upper-middle-class. I don't see him as someone who actually favors the elites. Yes, you all are arguing that his economic philosophy inherently supports and props up those classes of people but I'm not convinced that, with a balance of powers keeping him from getting everything he might espouse, we'd see anything approaching the level of corporate corruption we've seen under the past regimes.
23 wrote:JackRiddler wrote:.Or who, in the midst of describing the crimes of class and money and state, provides a definition of the state's "minions" that reads as follows: "the recipients of welfare, social security, free health care, government jobs and the like, who are dependent upon the state and likely to be compliant."
I can't find the source for the words that you quoted. Care to share?
barracuda wrote:[ageism] The good doctor will be nearly seventy-eight by the next election. Please let's not push for another candidacy. I personally don't want an eighty year old president, I don't care how many babies he's delivered. [/ageism]
compared2what? wrote:elfismiles wrote:I'm not really sure of Ron Paul's estimated financial worth but I don't think he is anywhere above upper-middle-class. I don't see him as someone who actually favors the elites. Yes, you all are arguing that his economic philosophy inherently supports and props up those classes of people but I'm not convinced that, with a balance of powers keeping him from getting everything he might espouse, we'd see anything approaching the level of corporate corruption we've seen under the past regimes.
As of his last financial disclosure, per his own estimate:
Also...
...I don't know what qualifies as upper middle class nowadays. But whatever the net-worth figure is, I kind of doubt that your average citizen-of-whatever-class with $1 million-and-change in long term investments puts close to all of it in only two industries. Especially those two. And especially mining. That's pretty much only safe for players. But at a glance, it looks like BP is one of his major donors for the 2010 cycle. So I'm not too worried for him.
It looks like he might have some other interesting donors tucked away in there, too. But I really only just glanced, it might not amount to anything.
FWIW, though, those images are from here. Where they also have the PDF link to the form itself, which I haven't looked at yet. Plus some other info, too. Although not all of it, annoyingly enough. But since I don't know what else the other databases got for him, I guess I'll return with more details if they develop.
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