Taken together, Ron Paul’s notion of economic liberty is an only slightly disguised version of the hyper-neoliberal ideas that have been circulating since the 1980s.
by Billy Wharton
You’ve seen them skulking around a variety of left-wing protests. First it was the anti-war movement. Then came Occupy. They usually have a funny look in their eye, their clothes are a bit sharper than the average protest garb and they usually hit the road once a confrontation with the police is about to ensue. Yes, I’m talking about a Ron Paul supporter – an ideal type of that supporter for sure, but take a look next time and see if they fit the description. Just keep an eye out for an “End the Fed” sign.
Inevitably, after peeling past the pre-programmed slogans Ron Paulistas bring with them, you will discover a person – generally white and overwhelmingly male – looking for some alternative to mainstream politics. Ever susceptible to slick marketing campaigns thanks to a solid diet of American television, these zealots have bought it hook line and sinker in a typical conspiratorial fashion. The lynchpin is the Federal Reserve, a seemingly mysterious institution, which in the world of Ron Paul politics stands in as a more acceptable substitute for the variety of other conspiracy theories floating through far-right America including the Bilderbergs, the rich as secret lizard people and the Masons.
Yet, the idea that Ron Paul offers a kind of alternative to mainstream politics falls apart quite easily upon inspection. There are three primary reasons for this – two relate to Paul himself and the other is a function of mainstream politics more generally. In the end, it is more accurate to say that Ron Paul is mainstream politics unmasked, a raw version of what both Democrats and Republicans desire to become if left to their own devices.
Key to this is seeing Ron Paul economics for what they are. Forget the Fed. Leave aside all the slogans about “living within our means” and “punishing generations with debt” for a moment. Ron Paul is the most pro-corporate politician in the Presidential race. His economic policies would further unleash multinational corporations and the 1% who own them onto American society – with absolutely no restraints. Paul is virulently anti-union in part because unions give workers a collective identity in order to regulate worksites. He opposes government regulation on employers since he connects their activity to his notion of “liberty.” And he has repeatedly associated taxation, even taxation of the corporate world, as an affront to freedom.
Taken together, Ron Paul’s notion of economic liberty is an only slightly disguised version of the hyper-neoliberal ideas that have been circulating since the 1980s. What is different now is that the circulation is taking place in the aftermath of an economic crisis that has unmasked the bankruptcy of the very idea Paul is promoting - capitalist economics. Although Paul presents his economic proposals as alternative non-mainstream notions, they fit perfectly inside the rise of the multinational corporations and the deep enrichment of the 1%. Albert Einstein offered the best bit of advice on how to deal with folks like Ron Paul when he said “We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." Giving corporate America a free hand to rampage through our economy, our communities and our environment is more of the same.
Ron Paul supporters mix this pro-corporate economic package with a fairly typical set of reactionary social policies. He has opposed any legislation in support of gay marriage on the Federal level and was neutral on the “don’t ask don’t tell” seeing the problem as less one of discrimination and more of “seeing people as part of groups.” Paul’s positions on race are even murkier due to his frequent open associations with white supremacists and the general acceptance of his ideas amongst this repugnant community. But his most explicit reactionary position is reserved for gender, more specifically the issue of sexual harassment. Here, Paul claims that anything less than penetration does not qualify as sexual harassment – words don’t matter. Females who file sexual harassment suits are, according to Paul, oppressing others. They should, instead, just exercise their right to choose a different job. Misogynist victim blaming at its worst.
The final reason that Ron Paul is not an alternative is the very reason that links him to mainstream politics. Just like Obama, Romney and Gingrich, he offers no concrete plans to address the problems that most affect people’s everyday lives. He doesn’t have a serious plan for housing. He would, just as his counterparts, continue the failed capitalist housing policies, probably adding some rhetorical flair about the liberty and freedom built into the feelings of anxiety most Americans feel when it comes to housing. His education policy is similarly irresponsible. Paul chooses to devolve education decisions onto state and local government while giving private enterprises a strong hand in further commodifying education in America. And on healthcare, his policies are merely a pumped up version of the pro-market policies of his Democratic and Republican counterparts.
Although Paul’s foreign policy position is trumpeted as being far off from his Republican counterparts, it contains many mainstream elements. Paul himself is always quick to indicate that his “non-interventionist” position does not mean that he wishes to radically transform the US military. He constantly issues the call for a “strong national defense” which translates into a well-funded military. As he stated directly in a recent interview, “My Plan to Restore America does not cut one penny of defense.”
Unfortunately, Liberals and even some Greens have taken the anti-war bait and Ron Paul has been able to make coalitions with otherwise ideological opponents such as Dennis Kucinich and Ralph Nader. This has given Paul some cred among anti-war types while creating confusion between having a position against military intervention and being anti-militarist.
While the “Ron Paul as alternative” charade rolls along, candidates carrying ideas clearly outside of the mainstream struggle to carve out some media attention. One is from my own organization, the Socialist Party USA – Stewart Alexander. Alexander is running campaign for President on a platform filled with radical ideas that would address many of the problems raised by the 2008 economic crisis. He has some new medicine for an old illness.
On economics, the Alexander/Mendoza campaign recognizes the destructive role of the 1%. Creating a progressive tax structure that captures the wealth at the top of society, designing a banking system that works like a highly regulated public utility and addressing the unemployment crisis by viewing a job as a human right means transforming an economic system that has failed the 99%. Similar proposals to open the education to all, to preserve our precious natural resources and to fund a worker owned and managed cooperative sector are clearly different than the re-hashed blather being served up by mainstream politicians.
Economic democracy is also connected to personal freedom. The Alexander/Mendoza campaign is one of the few that recognizes just how corporate power prevents Americans from fully exercising their civil rights. Corporations are not people and people need a voice - a voice that will be unchained as a result of electoral reform, the breaking up of media monopolies and the campaign’s support of people’s right to self-determination whether it be through marriage, adoption or alternative family structures.
Finally, Stewart Alexander is offering a radically different approach to the military. He is a passionate anti-militarist. Both he and his running mate, the ex-Marine, Alex Mendoza know the wasteful destruction that the US military has created. The pair call for a closing of all foreign bases, an end to security state measures and, unlike Ron Paul, an immediate 50% reduction in the military budget. They understand that anti-militarism is about more than opposing intervention – it is about re-thinking how our country relates to the rest of the world.
So, as the Presidential campaign heats up, it is important to see past the media spin – especially when the spinning is done in order to create false alternatives. The Obama campaign will certainly begin its own campaign to present their candidate as offering solutions beyond the mainstream. Such claims will be every bit as shallow as the notion that Ron Paul offers some new set of ideas worthy of the mantle of being alternative. There are some alternatives out there and their voices need to be heard. One of them will be running red, on the ticket of the Socialist Party USA and carrying with him the hope of moving past the miserable future created for us by capitalism.
***
Billy Wharton is a writer, activist and co-chair of the Socialist Party USA. His articles have appeared in the Washington Post, the NYC Indypendent, Spectrezine and the Monthly Review Zine. He can be reached at whartonbilly [at] gmail [dot] com.
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8 comments
Wow. While I too have some serious issues with Ron Paul, and consider myself some manner of socialist (the libertarian variety, to be somewhat more specific), I gotta say: this article is another one of the poorly written hit pieces I have gotten so sick of about the guy.
The fact that so few people are able to both fairly characterize AND refute his positions makes it start to seem like such a thing is impossible. Never mind that there are valid points to be made about the misgivings any anti-capitalist would have about supporting his candidacy. Never mind that some of them actually are made reasonably well in this article. When the desire to villify overwhelms the facts available with which to do so honestly, the effort is apparent.
So, yes. He's a bastard when it comes to unions, harassment, gay rights (although correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't he support getting the government out of marriages altogether, which, come to think of it so do I?), and abortion. He has yet to articulate an actual positive plan for education, or a social safety net, or environmental protection, beyond getting the federal government out of it. ...
Posted on January 23, 2012 11:50 PM
It doesn't follow, as his lazier detractors like to pretend, that there IS no libertarian approach to those issues (see for instance: http://www.thefreemanonline.org/book-reviews/libertarianism-from-a-to-z/). But since Dr. Paul is not a libertarian per se so much as a strict constitutionalist, it bears wondering which if any of the strategies that WOULD be consistent with the constitution he would employ.
The ad hominem attacks on Paul's supporters were pretty juvenile. The convenient omissions necessary to make the case that he's a run of the mill candidate are legion. There's the well-known fact that Paul opposes corporate personhood. There's his being alone among major party candidates in his support for ending all foreign wars and the war on drugs. And yes, there's his eccentric views on the Fed, monetary policy, and the IRS. Not socialist, I'll grant. But hardly run of the mill. There's the interesting tactic of calling socialism "new medicine", as though Marx and Engels were still spring chickens. A curious assertion, but ultimately pretty harmless.
But where this article really 'falls apart quite easily upon inspection' is in its plainly willful ignorance about Dr. Paul's foreign policy. Yes, slashing 50% of the military budget right away would be far more awesome than what Paul is proposing. That should be able to stand on its own, but the author felt the need to amplify it with some good old fashioned strawman action. For an article that spends so much time insulting the intelligence of people who are familiar with the guy's platform and like it, it's interesting that it would require that a reader NOT be familiar with the platform to not feel that the article was insulting their intelligence, on this point in particular.
So never mind that when Dr. Paul talks about a strong national defense, it's always in the context of how ending all the current foreign wars will go a long way toward shutting down the assembly line of new enemies. Never mind that the "strong national defense" line is always his way of re-assuring his hawkish Republican audiences that bringing the troops home will make us more safe, not less. Never mind that he makes a very clear and consistent distinction between "military" and "defense" spending, as is entirely valid.
So if you've listened to the guy talk for more than 10 minutes at a stretch, ever, you're perfectly aware that he wants to cut quite a lot of money from the military - just not the part that actually has to do with national defense. But that doesn't help you turbocharge your demonization of the guy. You're only concerned with taking that pledge not to cut defense spending out of context, knowingly and willfully, for the express purpose of mischaracterizing it. Which you don't need to do at all for your platform to go his one better.
So on the issues, it's entirely possible that your guy is more in line with me -- or at least that I'd have to do a careful analysis (as a free-market anti-capitalist I really do resonate with the majority of the small government rhetoric, just not the Randian, Austrian elements) to see who comes out ahead. But if the party you represent is as fast and loose with facts as you are, then I scarcely see how they can call themselves an alternative to politics as usual either. Guess it's Vermin Supreme Or Bust after all. A pox on all a y'all's houses.
Posted on January 23, 2012 11:51 PM
As a free-market anti-capitalist, you're a total moron. Where do you think capitalism arose? In the market. Duh.
Posted on January 24, 2012 8:48 AM
SPIN CITY!!! Inaccurate depiction of the "true constitutional" policies of Dr. Paul! But then, what else would you expect from a socialist!?!?
Posted on January 24, 2012 9:17 AM
I think this article accurately portrays Libertarians in general and Paul in particular, and certainly contrasts the differences between their ideology with that of parties fighting for social and economic justice for all. As a Green, I would like to point out, because it is not made clear, that at no time have either Kucinich or Nader been Greens. Kucinich, in fact, has said in the past that if Greens were serious, they should become the left wing of the Democratic Party, not that he would consider leaving the Dems to join us. Even Nader, who undoubtedly brought the Green Party to the attention of the public as our Presidential candidate first in 1996 and then with his more controversial run in 2000, never registered in the party and was never involved in the internal workings of the party. While it's true that some Greens continue to entertain the notion of running Nader, and (to a much lesser extent)Kucinich,and that a small number agree with certain of Paul's positions (not for the same reasons),and that some would even like to nominate Socialist Party candidate Stewart Alexander, the majority of Greens are supporting two home grown Green Presidential candidates, Dr. Jill Stein and Dr. Kent Mesplay. Our nominating convention will be held in July.
Posted on January 24, 2012 9:52 AM
This perceptive article on Ron Paul appeared this morning on Al Jazzera. http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/01/201211810446786665.html. It complements very well Wharton's analysis.
Posted on January 24, 2012 1:58 PM
Ron Paul and his supporters are truly the scariest people in America. He beat you guys by miles.
Posted on January 24, 2012 6:36 PM
Ron Paul's policies are not 'true constitution', they are based on the original Articles of Confederation (decentralized government, states held powers). It failed so badly that by 1787 we had the Constitution.
That and his staunch favoritism of Lazzifare Capitalism will turn us into third world nation faster then we are already headed.
Take this from someone who has known him and his politics since the 1970's. Not someone relying on internet bias to decide for me if he is good candidate or not.
Posted on January 24, 2012 11:57 PM
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