Although I have defended him on numerous occasions, it may surprise some readers of this column to discover that not unlike his legions of detractors within the Republican Party, I too have some problems with Ron Paul. But for at least two reasons, the impulse to come to his defense I have found difficult to resist.
First, in distinguishing themselves from their opponents, Republicans invoke “the conservative principles” for which they stand. These principles, they assure us, are also America’s “founding principles”: “limited government,” “liberty,” “individualism,” and the like. Thus, in the spirit of these eternal verities, Republicans—during election season, at any rate—incessantly call for reductions in the size and scope of government.
Now, Ron Paul’s vision for America is as close an approximation of that of the Founders as any on the scene today. For all of the criticism to which Paul’s Republican rivals have subjected him, not one of them dares to put into question his commitment to limited—dramatically limited—government.
So, when a Republican politician comes along who is passionately, unequivocally committed to restoring the Constitutional Republic that our Founders crafted for their posterity, a Republican who enthusiastically embraces the very “founding principles” that the GOP claims to affirm, and that Republican isn’t just criticized—this is bad enough—but resoundingly ridiculed as a “crackpot” by his fellow Republicans, it is hard for a Republican voter not to get more than a bit perturbed.
I anger for Paul, it is true, but also for the millions of Americans who regularly vote Republican (including myself), for the readiness with which Paul’s rivals insult him over his positions has, ironically, exposed their own insincerity. You see, when push comes to shove, what we invariably discover after they are elected is that the vast majority of Paul’s embittered brethren are almost as committed to maintaining the Welfare State as their leftist counterparts in the Democratic Party. And they are more resolved to maintain, and grow, the Warfare State—a point that Rick Santorum made all too clear when, during the New Hampshire primary, he declared that far from bringing our soldiers home from the proverbial four corners of the Earth, the dangers posed by Islamic terrorists insured that we would probably have to increase our troop’s global presence.
There is another reason why I defend Ron Paul.
For the activity of bullying, I have zero tolerance. Being weak and cowardly, bullies delude themselves into thinking that they’re strong and brave by fusing their individual identities with that of a collectivity, a gang or a mob. This, regrettably, is what appears to have happened to Paul’s Republican abusers: they have acquired a “mob mentality.”
That a mob mentality has taken over establishment Republican commentators when it comes to Ron Paul can be seen from both the swiftness with which one after the other piles upon him as well as the shoddy quality of their criticisms. Distortions, insults, and outright lies abound.
Take nationally syndicated talk radio show host and film critic Michael Medved for example. If Paul’s Republican critics constitute a mob, then Medved is its ringleader, for no one more savagely and routinely—even obsessively—attacks the Texas congressman.
Medved is not beyond imparting insights; as one who regularly listens to his show, I can attest to this. Yet his criticisms of Paul, almost to an argument, are worthless.
When he isn’t referring to Paul as a “crackpot” and a “disgrace,” Medved is guilty of completely misrepresenting his positions. Because Paul rejects a Constitutional amendment explicitly defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman, and because he thinks that consenting adult citizens shouldn’t be coerced into endorsing another’s understanding of marriage, Medved insists that Paul favors a literally anarchic situation with respect to marriage.
In reality, only one who thought that government itself should be abolished—an anarchist—could adopt the position on the issue of marriage or any other issue that Medved attributes to Paul. Clearly, Paul is no anarchist, for no anarchist would seek to hold an office in the government, let alone the office of the presidency!
Ron Paul is very clear about his position on this issue (as well as every other, for that matter) in his Liberty Defined. “In a free society,” he writes, “all voluntary and consensual agreements would be recognized,” and when “disputes arose, the courts could be involved as in any other dispute” (emphases mine). There are two things here of which we must take note. First, in maintaining that such “voluntary and consensual” arrangements as marriage deserve recognition, Paul maintains that the government must recognize them. Second, the government provides this recognition by way of its judicial branch, by adjudicating disputes, issuing settlements, and the like.
Bullies are unfair. That Medved and the mob that he signifies act like bullies when it comes to Paul becomes obvious once we grasp that Paul’s position isn’t as remotely as extreme as his detractors make it out to be. In fact, it isn’t extreme at all. As Paul observes, common-law marriage requires no license and is “recognized as a legal entity” in twelve states. Does this practice portend the kind of mass chaos that Medved and company charge Paul of championing?
When Paul insists that marriage is a matter regarding which “the government” should refrain from interjecting itself, what he is saying is that the federal government has no role at all to play here. Yet he is also saying that neither should state governments embark upon the enterprise of defining marriage—not that they should literally stay out of the whole business of marriage.
Paul’s positions, whether on marriage or anything else, may or may not be rationally preferable to their competitors. In order to determine this, however, his critics must be willing to first understand what Paul’s views actually are. Through either a lack of ability or a lack of will, so far they haven’t come close to doing this.
Jack Kerwick, Ph.D.
originally published at The New American