Libertarian obstetrician
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
I bet you didn't know that one of the Republican 2008 candidates is a libertarian obstetrician from Texas! Ron Paul has been climbing in the polls, and has shown to be somewhat of an Internet sensation, raising over $10 million practically overnight. He has some unusual plans for spending it (flying a blimp all over the US), so think before you give.
His viability as a winner in Jan 8's New Hampshire primaries looks very slim, but you never know with these things.
Here's the intro to his Wikipedia page:
Ronald Ernest "Ron" Paul (b. August 20, 1935) is a Republican United States Congressman from Lake Jackson, Texas, a physician, and a 2008 U.S. presidential candidate. Originally from Green Tree, Pennsylvania, he has represented Texas districts in the U.S. House of Representatives (1976–1977, 1979–1985, and 1997–present). Paul placed a distant third in the 1988 presidential election, running as the Libertarian nominee while remaining a registered Republican. After his 1961 graduation from Duke University School of Medicine and a residency in obstetrics and gynecology, he became a U.S. Air Force flight surgeon, serving outside the Vietnam War zone.
Paul has been described as conservative, Constitutionalist, and libertarian. He advocates non-interventionist foreign policy, having voted against actions such as the Iraq War Resolution, but in favor of force against terrorists in Afghanistan. He favors withdrawal from NATO and the United Nations. Having pledged never to raise taxes, he has long advocated ending the federal income tax and reducing government spending by abolishing most federal agencies; he favors hard money and opposes the Federal Reserve. He also opposes the Patriot Act, the federal War on Drugs, and gun control. Paul is strongly pro-life, advocates overturning Roe v. Wade, and affirms states' rights to determine the legality of abortion.
During his 2008 presidential campaign, Paul has placed competitively in Republican straw polls, though he has substantially lower numbers in landline opinion polls. He has strong Internet support, leading in web searches and YouTube subscriptions, and had the largest one-day online fundraiser in U.S. political history. (more)
His all-over-the-map views might congeal support from some strange places other candidates can't reach (although Mike Hukabee has secured the Chuck Norris vote (what a weird video -- watch how uncomfortable Huckabee looks, like Chuck's about to roundhouse him)). Should be interesting to watch him as compared to the 2004 Howard Dean sensation. Byeah!
-dr-
Labels: midwifery





Why in the world would you think I don't know that?
Ron Paul hos some really good stances. I saw him interviewed by larry king or wolf blitzer, can't remember. There have been dozens of times he was the only congressman to vote against something, it's usually something the congress isn't supposed to do, like build a statue with taxpayer money. I like him, but he's too good to win. I still got Giuliani's back.