Conservative Republicans Have Only One Choice In 2008

2007-08-31
By

Let’s cut to the chase: conservative Republicans have only one choice for President in 2008: Congressman Ron Paul of Texas. Unlike the GOP frontrunners, Paul is the real deal.

No real conservative could support Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, John McCain, Fred Thompson, or Newt Gingrich. When it comes to historic conservative principles, each of these men is as phony as a three dollar bill. That they are now attempting to cast themselves as conservatives is more than laughable: it is downright hilarious.

For an ongoing review of the major presidential aspirants, I invite readers to visit this web page often: http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/election2008.php

The more that conservatives (and the rest of America) learn about the GOP’s “top tier” candidates, the more they will dislike them. This fact does not bode well for the GOP in the 2008 general election should one of these five men obtain the nomination. Plus, G.W. Bush has forever wasted the antiquated “lesser of two evils” philosophy. As they say here in the south, “That dog won’t hunt.” Not anymore.

On the whole, Duncan Hunter and Tom Tancredo are head and shoulders above the aforementioned “top tier” candidates, especially on the very important illegal immigration issue. They are also opposed to so-called “free trade” agreements, and they are both pro-Second Amendment. This is a plus. Hunter supports preemptive war, however, and he voted for both the Patriot Act and the Military Commissions Act, which disqualifies him for President, in my judgment. I confess to liking Tom Tancredo. He strikes me as an honest man and was a bulldog in fighting Bush’s amnesty for illegal aliens proposal. However, he also voted for the Patriot Act and Military Commissions Act. Mike Huckabee and Sam Brownback are strong on the life issue, but they are dismal on immigration and Big Brother issues. All that said, it is Ron Paul alone who contains the “whole package.”

He has a twenty-year record as a conservative congressman that is virtually unblemished. Unlike the vast majority of congressmen and senators in Washington, D.C., Paul consistently honors his oath of office to support, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States. That, all by itself, should be worth a conservative’s support.

In fact, Ron Paul has voted against so many unconstitutional bills offered by both Democrats and Republicans that he is known on Capitol Hill as “Dr. No.” This moniker comes from both his “no” votes and the fact that Paul is a former medical doctor, an OB/GYN physician who has delivered more than four thousand babies.

If one wants a true photograph of how a congressman or senator votes on conservative, constitutional issues, the best place to look is the Freedom Index in the New American Magazine. Ron Paul almost always ranks as the most conservative congressman from either chamber or either party. His current ranking is 100%, which is a score that few congressmen or senators, except Ron Paul, ever achieve. And Paul does it routinely.

See the Freedom Index here: http://www.jbs.org/files/fi-110-1.pdf

Ron Paul’s commitment to the sanctity of human life goes beyond rhetoric. He is the man who sponsored H.R. 776, entitled the “Sanctity of Life Act of 2005.” Had it passed, H.R. 776 would have recognized the personhood of all unborn babies by declaring that “human life shall be deemed to exist from conception.” The bill also recognized the authority of each State to protect the lives of unborn children. In addition, H.R. 776 would have removed abortion from the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, thereby nullifying the Roe v. Wade decision, and would have denied funding for abortion providers. In plain language, H.R. 776 would have ended abortion on demand. (It is more than interesting to me that none of the Religious Right’s pet politicians, including George W. Bush, even bothered to support Paul’s pro-life bill.)

In addition to being willing to stop the illegal alien invasion, Ron Paul is one of only a handful of congressmen that dares speak out against the emerging North American Union, NAFTA superhighway, and the Security and Prosperity Partnership agreement, all of which are being promoted by the White House in concert with the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).

Another critical issue in next year’s election is the gun issue (it is always a critical issue where freedom is concerned). On this issue, Ron Paul stands atop the field. Because Paul truly supports the Constitution, he truly supports “the right of the people to keep and bear arms.” Period. Should Ron Paul become President, gun owners would have the best friend they ever had.

For a comprehensive review of the presidential contenders’ records on the Second Amendment, go here: http://www.gunowners.org/pres08/

Regarding the war in Iraq and other foreign policy issues, Paul is a traditional conservative of the order of George Washington and Robert Taft. Not ignorant of military matters (he is an Air Force veteran), Paul subscribes to a historical American approach of no entanglements with foreign nations. In fact, in the area of foreign policy, Ron Paul stands alone as a traditional, constitutional, American statesman.

Unlike his neocon counterparts, Ron Paul believes in an independent America. He believes that it is not America’s responsibility to police the world. He believes America’s political leaders are duty-bound to protect the interests of the United States, not the interests of internationalists. Accordingly, he opposed the unprovoked and preemptive invasion of Iraq. Time has certainly vindicated Dr. Paul’s principled position.

In fact, those conservatives who have followed President Bush’s preemptive war doctrine are the ones who have abandoned historical conservative principles. Before G.W. Bush changed the landscape, conservatives, especially Christian conservatives, mostly subscribed to Augustine’s “just war” theory regarding accepted protocols for the conduct of war. Today, however, many professing conservatives have foolishly followed Bush’s “preemptive war” theory, which, before now, was practiced mostly by pagan emperors. Not so with Ron Paul. As a Christian, he still subscribes to “just war.”

Of course, Ron Paul believes in protecting America from terrorists. He authored H.R. 3076, the September 11 Marque and Reprisal Act of 2001. According to Paul, “A letter of marque and reprisal is a constitutional tool specifically designed to give the president the authority to respond with appropriate force to those non-state actors who wage war against the United States while limiting his authority to only those responsible for the atrocities of that day. Such a limited authorization is consistent with the doctrine of just war and the practical aim of keeping Americans safe while minimizing the costs in blood and treasure of waging such an operation.”

If the United States government had listened to Ron Paul, we would not have lost nearly 3,500 American soldiers and Marines, spent over $1 trillion, and gotten bogged down in an endless civil war from which there is no equitable extraction. Furthermore, had we listened to Dr. Paul, Osama bin Laden would no doubt be dead, as would most of his al-Qaeda operatives, and we would be less vulnerable to future terrorist attacks, instead of being more vulnerable, which is the case today.

And speaking of Christianity, Ron Paul’s testimony is clear. He has publicly acknowledged Jesus Christ as his personal Savior. And for Paul, this is not political posturing, it is a genuine personal commitment. This is easily demonstrated by the fact that he does not wear his Christianity on his sleeve, as do so many politicians (of both parties).

Just recently, Ron Paul said these words, “I have never been one who is comfortable talking about my faith in the political arena. In fact, the pandering that typically occurs in the election season I find to be distasteful. But for those who have asked, I freely confess that Jesus Christ is my personal Savior, and that I seek His guidance in all that I do. I know, as you do, that our freedoms come not from man, but from God. My record of public service reflects my reverence for the Natural Rights with which we have been endowed by a loving Creator.”

Could conservative Christians ask for a testimony that is any clearer?

Should Ron Paul win the Republican nomination, he would almost certainly win the general election. His constitutional, common-sense ideals would be attractive to such a broad range of voters, I dare say that he would win a landslide victory, no matter who the Democrats nominated. Conservatives, independents, libertarians, union members, and even some liberals (mostly those who oppose the war in Iraq and Bush’s Big Brother schemes) would support Ron Paul. The challenge is winning the Republican nomination.

Face it: the big money interests, the Chamber of Commerce crowd, the international bankers and GOP hierarchy will never support Dr. Paul. He is too honest, too ethical, too constitutional, and too independent for their liking. Therefore, the only chance Ron Paul has of winning the Republican nomination is for every Christian, every conservative, and every constitutionalist within the GOP to get behind him.

Conservative Republicans have only one choice for President in 2008: Ron Paul.

© Chuck Baldwin

14 views

  • tonysprout

    My vote is for RP, even if he has to run as an Independent. Top tier republicans should be aware of that. However, if RP is not pres, it won’t matter. Politicians are molded from the same cloth these days, and the powers that be will still have their bidding done by those of GW, “w is for women” Bush’a ilk.

    America’s only hope to avoid new world order slavery is RP

  • cybro

    The republicans don’t get it. They have no base anymore and the liberals hate them no matter how liberal they try to be. They got thier butts kicked in 06 and will get it kicked again in 08. That vote for us because we are the lesser of two evils does not cut it anymore.

    The republicans are not going to change. It’s real conservatives who will have to find another home.

  • Squiggy

    Wow. First you tell me how I should believe (as a Christian), now you tell me why I can’t be a true conservative and vote for Fred. You’ve either got a lot of nerve, or you’re just a nut.

    As you push for Ron Paul, I’ve got to lean toward the latter. Or maybe just a Hillary plant (since she would kick Ron’s butt very badly).

  • Thom

    It really doesn’t matter who the Republican is. It’s a more a vote for Hillary or against her.

  • CaptDMO

    Gee thom, perhaps you, and those that hold that position, would feel better joining the ranks of folk who just don’t vote because they know it doesn’t make any difference?

    Right now I have my eye on Ron Paul. The RP sticker fits in nicely next to the
    Ross Perot sticker still on my American Made, computer-less dump truck.
    I have no reason to consider Fred whatshismame as he’s not in the running for
    the office of POTUS.

    I could care less what anyone has to say in a sham “debate” on national TV, or in
    a wealthy liberals living room, or on a season premier of flaky lesbian daytime TV.
    I have YET to hear a Democratic candidate (or current office holder for that matter) speak or act in a well reasoned manner. RINO “progressive” liars haven’t earned my continued support either, and frankly, it’s the State and local elections that hold sway in my book. We’ve all seen how the Senate, and The House, can squeeze the gonads of a President. We’ve all seen how “Popular” State Legislators and local reps can short sightedly FUBAR years of work toward resolve in short order.

    I’ll start paying attention in Sept-Oct. ’08′, after the flip flops, mud slinging, lies, catering, boot licking, and peeks into the (smoke free) back rooms has transpired.

    MY vote will be for MY choice of candidate, NOT wasted on AGAINST another.
    Perhaps I should explain that I’m registered as independent, (or undeclared, depending on where one lives)
    The agenda of others may vary.

  • Halo

    The RP sticker fits in nicely next to the
    Ross Perot sticker still on my American Made, computer-less dump truck.

    Oh, Ross Perot. The last “independent candidate” who tipped the election over to a Clinton. A loser who helped a scumbag to win.

    Quite a club you want to help Ron to join (because if you think he has a chance in hell to win, you need to sober up).

  • BIGbrotherbites

    It IS TIME for a Third Party to control all tiers of our gov. I for one (like a multitude of others) am sick to death of RINO’s (which is nearly all Republicans now) and me thinks its time to “clean house”. But that will only happen when the people get their heads out of their arses and stop believing all the “crap” that all (except a few) of the worthless candidates say just to get elected.
    Everyone is so apathetic in this country that its pathetic. And I fear things are going to get a lot worse here before it can get any better. IMO

    Who gives a crap???? I do………………………………..anyone else??

    Halo its that kind of thinking why things will never change. And D’s and R’s will continue their perverted agendas’ and getting rich while the people are taxed to death.
    I pray for the day when “the people” will reclaim the government and start hanging elected officials and Judges for treason when they do as they have been doing for decades. Again IMO

  • tonysprout

    You people don’t get it. You keep looking for winners, yet AmeriKa keeps losing. The Constitution keeps losing. The Dems had their chance over a fifty year period. Their conclusion: the FAMILY must die. We’ve given the Republicans a chance in congress and as Pres for over 12 years now, and all we’ve seen is more of what the dems gave us. Keep looking for your winners! LOSERS!

  • tonysprout

    PS: What good has having winners like a Repub congress anf GW done for the American Citizen? We still have destruction of the family going on; abortion is still legal, and gov’t continues to grow and gain more control of our lives. WINNERS ALL!

  • Squiggy

    Yes, GWB appears to have sold out conservatism. That doesn’t mean all conservatives have sold out. No more than all ronpaul zombies are insane.

    Get this straight – Ron Paul cannot win. And get this straight – Hillary Clinton as president would destroy America. And get this straight too – a vote for Ron Paul is a vote for Hillary.

    You people just go pretend you have scruples, and pave the way for Hillary. No matter what you claim (six of one, half dozen of the other), the dems actually want to destroy America. The republicans (most of them) don’t.

  • Jim Peterson

    The problem with Ron Paul, and too many of his supporters, is that they NEVER mention feminism as an issue. They could easily do this. Ron Paul and 3 other Congressmen (Tancredo and 2 Dems) were the only ones to raise tepid objections to the VAWA and IMBRA…although Paul and Tancredo were AWOL on the final vote on December 17th, 2005 that put the feminists in power.

    Earth to Chuck Baldwin: You posted this on MND when it is quite obvious that you do not consider yourself in the forefront of the Men’s Rights Movement.

    While Mike LaSalle would agree with you on the Iraq War, I can assure you that most vets and servicemen feel that Operation Iraqi Freedom was necessary. MND is not the place to argue the Iraq War anyway.

    I repeat, this is not the forum for men to argue with each other about the Iraq War.

    If Ron Paul is too chicken to take on feminism in ANY of his speeches, he will do us no favors by running as an independent.

    Any male politician who is too afraid to openly obstruct the feminists…is not the kind of guy I want to see in power.

    Now, if Ron Paul started to do press releases against VAWA and IMBRA and took the next debate in order to show how Brownback supported the funding of feminist NGOs in Washington, etc, then he could possibly even win a 3 way race between himself, Hillary and Rudy.

    He could point out how Rudy wants to “protect women and children” from “sex offenders” and ask the hard questions about whether Giuliani is really anti-male or not.

    Ron Paul has an interesting opportunity. But the first thing he needs to do to turn his failing candidacy around is to go silent on the Middle East and turn up the heat on the “occupation” of the United States by feminist groups (NOW and Tahirih Justice Center).

  • Jim Peterson

    And to the person who said “A vote for Ron Paul is a vote for Hillary”…if Ron Paul were to run a loud anti-feminist campaign while Rudy Giuliani mocked him and the men who supported him…I would love to see Clinton crush Giuliani.

    There would be a good chance, however, that if Ron Paul was polling at 15% of the vote as a 3rd party candidate primarily because of his anti-feminism…the Republican Party would reevaluate their “Soccer-Terror Mom Strategy” and Giuliani would start making comments like “Yes, I agree that there are parts of VAWA that need to be changed”.

    Ron Paul has the power to take an anti-feminist theme and force the Republican Party to adopt it.

    Where Ron Pail has no power is to try to take left wing votes away from the anti-war Democrats regardless of the conservative traditions of non-interventionism. Ron Paul will not win on a “abolish the IRS and Federal Reserve” theme either, even though I might agree with that.

    He has to seriously look at demographics. He has to see that 49% of the population (MALES) are not being represented by either party right now…and then act on this.

  • http://www.antipeonage.0catch.com Roger Knight

    Now imagine if Ron Paul were to use his bully pulpit and scream for the enforcement of the Peonage Law!

    Mike Badnarik of the Libertarian Party did exactly that in 2004.

    It bothers me that Tancredo and Paul were absent when the VAWA renewal vote came down and they did not FORCEFULLY oppose the muzzling of the anti-VAWA speakers in Congress at the time.

    What is it about the votes of millions of angry divorced fathers that causes even these allegedly conservative and pro-Constitution congressmen to treat our votes the way Dracula treats sunlight?

  • Jim Peterson

    “did not FORCEFULLY oppose the muzzling of the anti-VAWA speakers in Congress at the time. ”

    What was really going on there? I assume that the Reps made a deal with the Dems whereby Cantwell voted to stop the filibuster on Alito if there was no debate on VAWA and IMBRA.

    We were sold out to get Alito on the bench…now how will Alito treat us when one of us finally does a PRO SE challenge to VAWA and IMBRA?

  • Denis

    If the GOP can’t get behind someone who can win then HRC is the next President. The 30 and under female demographic rarely votes. Not this time. This group is solidly behind HRC and their numbers are huge. In many cases they out earn the men in the same demographic. They will make history by voting in large numbers. Everyone, including themselves, will see their untapped political clout. The women in this demographic will be energized come election day. The 30 and under male vote likely will not. Afterall NOBODY is speaking to their issues. With the GOP in disarray the Democrats will more than squeak by. It won’t be a mandate by historical standards: but a win is a win. The women will walk all over the men over the next 8 years. THIS is what may in fact motivate lazy-ass men to FINALLY (after 40+ years) give a fig about their Constitutional rights.






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