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Ron Paul is turning 90 this month....Ron Paul is turning 90 this month. One of the most influential political figures of his time, Paul has meant many things to many people. Here’s at least a part of what he’s meant to me. When I was 20 years old, I supported Pat Buchanan for president. Ron Paul Was My Pat Buchanan BY Jack Hunter
A southerner living in Boston, I was there for his 1996 Lexington battlefield campaign rally where Buchanan jeered at student protesters. “Come on, children, stop it or I’ll take away your Pell grants.” It was also exciting to see Buchanan on the covers of TIME and Newsweek, and to be living next door to New Hampshire on the night he won that state’s Republican primary. Around this time, I was just discovering Russell Kirk, Richard Weaver, the Old Right, Chronicles, and other paleo-flavored things that piqued my baby brain. I was part of an antiwar conservative populist movement that captured America’s attention in a big way. Buchanan’s heterodox ideas, at least to the young me, were different and inspiring. Even though he never got the nomination, I reckoned that the Buchanan Brigades were about to change the Republican Party and American politics forever. Instead we eventually got George W. Bush and the War on Terror: the exact opposite of the Buchananite conservative populism that had once animated me so. It was a bummer. So much so, that working in my hometown of Charleston, South Carolina as a radio pundit from about 1999 onward, I eventually quit calling myself a “conservative” on the air and in my columns, lest anyone confuse my politics with Dick Cheney’s. After Buchanan’s lesser 2000 Reform Party presidential bid, I resigned myself to expecting nothing that good—that revolutionary—happening again. Until it did. On May 15, 2007, Ron Paul stood on a presidential debate stage and told a Republican audience that did not want to hear it that the reason the U.S. was attacked on 9/11 was because of our constant foreign intervention. Rudy Giuliani was pissed. The former New York City mayor demanded a retraction from Paul to thunderous applause. Instead, Paul doubled down and proceeded to explain the CIA-created concept “blowback” to shed light on Osama bin Laden’s motives. The then-firmly ensconced neoconservative Republican establishment agreed that Paul torpedoed his campaign that night. Instead, it skyrocketed. This magazine dubbed the exchange with Giuliani “The Ron Paul Moment.” The libertarian Republican congressman began drawing thousands to his rallies, with lots of young people. He also jumped significantly in most polls and drew record-breaking donations. In his 2012 campaign, Paul even placed a strong second in the New Hampshire Republican primary, a contest some observers thought he could have won if not for the home-region advantage of the winner, the former governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney, getting in the way. Paul’s unwavering antiwar stance was more stark than Buchanan’s due to the environment. Buchanan’s critics focused on his religious right appeal as much or more as any of the other ideas that captured supporters like me. But, while the GOP of the ’90s was certainly still largely pro-war, by 2008, eight years of Bush-Cheney had cemented a thoroughly neoconservative GOP—with so many rank and file not even understanding what that meant, which was part of its effectiveness—that didn’t want to hear some congressman tell them that the Iraq war was wrong, that torture was wrong, that wasting so much money abroad was wrong, and that the U.S. should never do any of that ever again. For me, this was “Go, Pat, Go” part two, and it was called the “Ron Paul Revolution.” I recognized the excitement in so many of the young people who flocked to Paul, whose ideas they had never expected to come from a conservative Republican, if they had even heard them before. I was happy for them. I was them! I was not the only person of a certain age and background to feel this way about both phenomenons. I was in my 30s when Paul’s movement exploded and old enough to understand the differences on issues between Buchanan the nationalist and Paul the libertarian constitutionalist. I knew what libertarianism was. I read Tom Woods in The American Conservative all the time. I also became more libertarian during this time. Despite the differences between Buchanan and Paul, it was their populism—idea-driven, rebellious, organic, and genuine—that made them both appealing to many Americans who wanted to challenge the same old Washington. After Buchanan’s and Paul’s moments, I was not surprised by the rise of the populist Tea Party movement in 2009 and ’10. I was not surprised by the socialist Bernie Sanders populist presidential campaign in 2016. Relatedly, I was not surprised to learn that Buchanan had endorsed Paul when the latter returned to Congress in the ’90s, nor was I shocked to eventually learn that one of the first political rallies attended by my former boss, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), and his wife Kelley was for Buchanan. It all made sense. During the 2008 election, Buchanan would declare on MSNBC that Ron Paul won debates. Buchanan wrote in 2012, “Most important to Paul are the issues he has campaigned on: a new transparency and accountability for the Federal Reserve, a downsizing of the American empire, and an end to U.S. interventions in foreign quarrels and wars that are none of our business.” Buchanan added that Paul could be a “prophet in his own time.” Both Buchanan and Paul were populist precedents to Donald Trump, who also promised radical reform and actually did become president. Trump, like Buchanan and Paul, was definitely on the right, but drew from a cross-section of voters from across the political spectrum. In 1996, I was 20 years old and supported Pat Buchanan for president. In 2008, I was 34 and supported Ron Paul. In 2024, I was 50 and voted for Donald Trump for president for the first time and for many of the same reasons, particularly when Elon Musk, RFK Jr., and Tulsi Gabbard joined his campaign. These men are not the same, and their ideas are certainly not either. But it was the populist waves of the last three decades that each harnessed in different eras and that finally delivered one of them to the White House. Buchanan and Paul helped build that. Trump broke the dam. Whether Trump can actually live up to, deliver, and leave behind a meaningful populist legacy is now on him. Pat Buchanan and Ron Paul already did their parts. https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ron-paul-was-my-pat-buchanan/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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by William J. Astore | Aug 7, 2025 | 4 Comments
Originally appeared at TomDispatch.
As a retired U.S. Air Force officer, I firmly believe in civilian control of our military. This country should be a nation of laws — not of special interests, oligarchs, or kings. Before committing our forces to battle, Congress should always declare war in the name of the people. Our military should indeed be a citizen-soldier force, not an isolated caste driven by a warrior ethos. And above all, the United States should be a republic ruled by law and shaped by sound moral values, not a greed-driven empire fueled by militarism.
Yet when I express such views, I feel like I’m clinging to a belief in the tooth fairy, the Easter Bunny, and Santa Claus. It feels idealistic, naïve, even painful to think that way. Yes, I served this country in uniform for 20 years, and now, in the age of Donald Trump, it has, as far as I can tell, thoroughly lost its way. The unraveling began so long ago — most obviously with the disastrous Vietnam War of the 1960s and 1970s, though in truth this country’s imperial desires predated even the Spanish-American War of 1898, stretching back to the wanton suppression of indigenous peoples as part of its founding and expansion.
A glance at U.S. history reveals major atrocities: the displacement and murder of Native Americans, slavery, and all too many imperial misadventures abroad. I knew of such realities when I joined the military in 1985, near the end of the Cold War. Despite its flaws, I believed then that this country was more committed to freedom than the Soviet Union. We could still claim some moral authority as the leader of what we then referred to as “the free world,” however compromised or imperfect our actions were.
That moral authority, however, is now gone. U.S. leaders fully support and unapologetically serve an ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza. They sell weapons to nearly every regime imaginable, irrespective of human rights violations. They wage war without Congressional approval — the recent 12-day assault on Iran being just the latest example. (The second Trump administration has, in fact, launched almost as many air strikes, especially in Yemen and Somalia, in its first five months as the Biden administration did in four years.) Those same leaders have been doing a bang-up job dismantling the America I thought I was serving when I took that oath and put on second lieutenant’s bars four decades ago. That America — assuming it ever existed — may now be gone forever.
FUBAR: A Republic in Ruins
My fellow citizens, America is FUBAR (a term that dates from World War II). We are not faintly who we claim to be. Rather than a functioning republic, we are an ailing, flailing, perhaps even failing empire. We embrace war, glorify warriors, and profit mightily from the global arms trade, no matter the civilian toll, including tens of thousands of dead and wounded children in Gaza, among the latest victims of U.S.-made bombs, bullets, and missiles.
Signs of moral rot are everywhere. Our president, who would like to be known for his budget cuts, nonetheless giddily celebrates a record trillion-dollar war budget. Our secretary of defense gleefully promotes a warrior ethos. Congress almost unanimously supports or acquiesces in the destruction of Gaza. Images from the region resemble bombed-out Stalingrad in 1942 or Berlin in 1945. Meanwhile, for more than two decades now, America’s leaders have claimed to be waging a successful global “war on terror” even as they fuel terror across the globe. What do they think all those U.S. weapons are for — spreading peace?
My wife and I cope through dark humor. We see news on cuts to Medicaid, the mentally ill in the streets, and crumbling infrastructure, and quip: “But Bibi [Netanyahu] needs bombs. Or Ukraine does. Or the Pentagon needs more nukes.” That’s why Americans can’t have nice things like health care. That’s why all too many of us are unhoused, in debt, out of work, and desperate. In 1967 — yes, that’s almost 60 years ago! — Martin Luther King warned of exactly this: America’s approaching spiritual death through militarism (aggravated by extreme materialism and racism). That death is visibly here, now.
https://original.antiwar.com/William_Astore/2025/08/06/an-ailing-flailing-failing-empire-lashes-out/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.