Duane Patterson (Hugh Hewitt's Producer) pointed another nugget about this video on the Ed Morrissey Show today....Pay close attention to what Paul says when Borger says to him, "you must admit that the content is pretty incendiary" Paul answers "incendiary to you." It sounds as if he is saying they weren't incendiary to him.
Back in 2005 Cspan did a series of interviews with former Congressmen, one of them was Ron Paul (who was out of office between 1985 and 1997) During the interview Paul did gave a great explanation of his newsletters, if he hadn't denied it in 2008 you would think that he actually read them.
So, I was always very active in both politics and my profession. When I came back, I resumed my medical practice, and I’ve been doing that ever since, but I’ve also stayed active in education. Long term, I don’t think political action is worth very much if you don’t have education, and so I’ve continued with my economic education foundation, Free Foundation, which I started in 1976. So that’s been very active. Actually, in the last several years, we’ve been doing some video work, in an educational manner. We did 14 different 30-minute programs on video.
But along with that, I also put out a political type of business investment newsletter that sort of covered all these areas. And it covered a lot about what was going on in Washington, and financial events, and especially some of the monetary events. Since I had been especially interested in monetary policy, had been on the banking committee, and still very interested in, in that subject, that this newsletter dealt with it. This had to do with the value of the dollar, the pros and cons of the gold standard, and of course the disadvantages of all the high taxes and spending that our government seems to continue to do. (H/T Breitbart TV)
Now combine that with the evidence that came out during his 1996 Campaign to reenter congress (still with in that 10 year I didn't read it period). Back then he defended the racist statement as being taken out of contexts.
On May 22, 1996 Dallas Morning News reported "Dr. Ron Paul, a Republican congressional candidate from Texas, wrote in his political newsletter in 1992 that 95 percent of the black men in Washington, D.C., are "semi-criminal or entirely criminal." He also wrote that black teenagers can be "unbelievably fleet of foot." [...]
Dr. Paul, who is running in Texas' 14th Congressional District, today defended his writings in an interview Tuesday. He said they were being taken out of context."It's typical political demagoguery" [...] Dr. Paul denied suggestions that he was a racist and said he was not evoking stereotypes when he wrote the columns. He said they should be read and quoted in their entirety to avoid misrepresentation. [...]
- May 23, 1996, Houston Chronicle:Paul, a Republican obstetrician from Surfside, said Wednesday he opposes racism and that his written commentaries about blacks came in the context of "current events and statistical reports of the time." [...] Paul also wrote that although "we are constantly told that it is evil to be afraid of black men, it is hardly irrational. Black men commit murders, rapes, robberies, muggings and burglaries all out of proportion to their numbers." A campaign spokesman for Paul said statements about the fear of black males mirror pronouncements by black leaders such as the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who has decried the spread of urban crime.
- May 23, 1996, Austin American-Statesman: "Dr. Paul is being quoted out of context," [Paul spokesman Michael] Sullivan said. "It's like picking up War and Peace and reading the fourth paragraph on Page 481 and thinking you can understand what's going on." [...]
- May 26, 1996 Washington Post: Paul, an obstetrician from Surfside, Tex., denied he is a racist and charged Austin lawyer Charles "Lefty" Morris, his Democratic opponent, with taking his 1992 writings out of context. "Instead of talking about the issues, our opponent has chosen to lie and try to deceive the people of the 14th District," said Paul spokesman Michael Sullivan, who added that the excerpts were written during the Los Angeles riots when "Jesse Jackson was making the same comments."
Here's the challenge to the Ronulins, instead of leaving comments calling me a progressive, or part of the Jewish control of government (which I have been getting), and don't explain away the comments like a government employee who goes by DCThrowback did, saying the bigotry in Pauls newsletters were "simply hatefacts: stuff that's true that you can't say in polite company anymore."
Lets go Paul fans! Time To Put Up or Shut Up--Tell me how do you explain away your leader's words on video, or his interviews with newspapers 15 years ago, or those horrible bigoted newsletters. Put them together and try to explain them away---if you can't-- admit the man is unqualified to be POTUS or simply shut the hell up.
6 comments:
Yawn.
The reposting of the 'Ron Paul is racist because of old newsletters' thing is getting tiresome. Meanwhile, the two others at the top (Romney in Gingrich) have far worse things hidden in their past than a stretch of a tie to a few "racist" sentences in a newsletter.
I swear you conservative types are becoming less politically aware or truly want the GOP to lose the election in 2012 and hand Obama a second term.
You know, I read all of these references to the newsletters, yet no one actually references to which newsletters these statements can be found or where we can find a collection of the newsletters. Are you afraid that if people actually read the full newsletter, they won't be as hated as you hope? Are you afraid to present all of the facts? Until that happens, your arguments are rather benign.
I'm totally against Ron Paul for president. That however doesn't mean that the statements he wrote in those pamphlets years ago are incorrect. Maybe they're politically incorrect, but they're far from factually incorrect.
For me they're absolutely irrelevant. I look at Ron Paul's head in the sand foreign policy ideas and that's all I need to see to understand that he's a disaster waiting to happen. The race card bit might even help him. He was never going to get the monolithic black vote anyway, and this might influence a few deep-south red-necks to go register. Who knows?
Aaaaaannnnnd... *crickets*
Thanks for putting this together.
You sir, and most everyone viewing these newsletters as a race issue and not a cultural issue, fail horribly in the subject of sociology. Congratulations for being unable to distinguish them.
Or you can and are just a disingenuous person.
Okay, So Dr. Paul printed 'Words, ideas, thoughts and opinions', that are politically incorrect. Do we not live in a society that promotes free thought and expression?
Nah, not anymore.
You reap what you sow, fools all of you.
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