Why  shouldn’t he? Frauds win, whether they are in finance or politics.  Bernie Madoff proved that, and so did Ronald Reagan. The success of the  Ron Paul campaign with young voters, which David Sirota pointed out in Salon Monday,  is but the latest example of how Americans can be persuaded to support  the most reactionary politicians in America when they’re suitably  manipulated, even if they aren’t reactionary and, sometimes, even when  they identify themselves as progressive.
There’s little doubt that  aspects of his message are both appealing and sincere. There is a  definite “yay factor” in some of his oratory, and his denunciations of Dick Cheney are the kind of thing that gets yays on “The Daily Show With Jon Stewart.”
Paul  has been consistent in opposing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and  in opposing American military adventures in general. He has staked out a  lonely position as the only presidential candidate to oppose aid to  Israel (until Rick Perry more or less aped him on that), and his distinctly non-aggressive posture on Iran is indistinguishable from that of dovish Democrats like Dennis Kucinich.
So  there’s no question that there’s a lot to like in Paul’s foreign policy  positions, if you’re leaning to the left. The problem is that Paul is  less of a 21st century dove than he is a throwback to the isolationism  of the early to mid-20th century, in which fear of foreign entanglements  was embraced by the hard right — with all that came with it. Paul  emerges from that mold as about as far right as they come, further right  than Ronald Reagan ever was, more of an enemy of the poor and middle  class, and an even warmer friend of the ultra-wealthy. A Ron Paul  America would make the Reagan Revolution look like the New Deal.
Paul’s  own oratory tends to deemphasize his reactionary stance on social  issues, or to sugarcoat it. But his program is now laid out in  black-and-white. Last month, the Paul campaign set forth the details of  what it grandiloquently called a “Plan to Restore America.”  It has received surprisingly little attention, given Paul’s surging popularity.
This  is not a plan for the 99 percent. It is about as much of a 1  percent-oriented ideological meat cleaver as you can find anywhere in  the annals of politics. Paul would take an ax to the federal budget,  hacking off $1 trillion in the first year alone, ripping and cutting and  deenacting and deregulating so as to ostensibly return America to “its  former constitutionally limited, smaller-government and less-burdensome  place.”
“Return” implies that America would be taken back to a  starting place, though it’s not clear where that would be. What I do  know is that there is definitely an undercurrent to his slash-and-burn  philosophy, a strong whiff of Ayn Rand — the Russian-born  philosopher-novelist, atheist and advocate of individuality, rational  self-interest and selfishness. Paul is, in fact, the closest of all the  GOP candidates to carrying out the anti-government policies Rand  advocated.
To be sure, there are aspects of this budget plan that  hardcore Randers would not like. It leaves in far too many nonessential  government functions, such as allowing the continued existence of the  Department of Health and Human Services. But, from the Randian  perspective, Paul is definitely moving in the right direction. His  “restore” plan embraces the kind of deprivation that Rand’s Objectivist  philosophy would impose on America, and would enact a fundamental change  in the role of government that the radical right cherishes.
After  spelling out the good stuff from the leftist perspective — a 15 percent  Defense Department spending cut ending all funding for the wars in Iraq  and Afghanistan — the hard charge backward commences:
- No more aid to education. Goodbye, Department of Education.
 
- No more government-subsidized housing. Goodbye, Department of Housing and Urban Development.
 
- No more energy programs. Goodbye, Department of Energy.
 
- No more programs to promote commerce and technology. Goodbye, Department of Commerce.
 
- *No more national parks. Goodbye, Department of the Interior.
 
His opposition to the very existence of the Federal Reserve — he  wrote a book titled “End the Fed” — is straight out of Rand, as is his promotion of the gold standard.
Paul  would not reform the abysmally flawed and underfunded Securities and  Exchange Commission, he would eliminate it. The only agency of the  federal government that stands between the public and greedy bankers and  crooked corporations would be gone. He is philosophically opposed to  it, as he is to Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank, the reform measures  enacted after Enron and the 2008 financial crisis, respectively. His  Reformed America would no longer discomfit Wall Street with the latter’s  restrictions on banks or annoy corporate executives with Sarb-Ox’s  ethics and fair-disclosure rules.
And this is but the beginning of the shower of blessings that would rain down upon the very richest Americans. He would end the income tax,  thereby making the United States the ultimate onshore tax haven. The  message to both the Street and corporate America would be a kind of  hyper-Reaganesque “Go to town, guys.” With income, estate and gift taxes  eliminated and the top corporate tax rate lowered to 15 percent (and  not a word about cutting corporate tax loopholes), a kind of perma-plutonomy would come to exist in the land — to the extent that there isn’t one already.
The  guts of Paul’s grand scheme, where its rubber hits the road, is in the  all-important theme of cutting programs that benefit the poor and middle  class. Despite all its window-dressing and spin, the heart of every  libertarian plan for this country is a kind of mammoth subtraction:  making deep cuts in programs benefiting millions of Americans, out of a  belief that such programs are morally wrong. Restoring America is a  moral statement, an enshrinement of the Randian belief that aid to one  facet of the population (the poor) is really “looting” of resources from  other facets of the population (the wealthy).
So when you see in  this plan a $645 billion cut in Medicaid over four years, what you are  seeing is an expression of the philosophy that Medicaid itself is wrong,  that it should not exist because it is not the function of society to  provide healthcare for the poor. If they get sick, tough. While Paul  does not go the full Randian route by entirely eliminating this program,  he goes a long way to establish the principle that as a general  proposition, as a moral question, we simply should not have this program.
Ayn  Rand believed that there is no such thing as a “public,” and that the  public was a collection of individuals, each having no obligation to the  other.  So when you read through this budget, and see the deep cuts in  food stamps and child nutrition, what you are seeing is an expression of  a philosophy that is at odds with the Judeo-Christian system of  morality embraced by most Americans.
That, fundamentally, is what  the deficit debate is all about, from the perspective of Ron Paul and  the radical right. It’s not about getting the red ink out of the  government but using the government’s fiscal travails as a pretext to  change the very purpose of government. So yes, he opposed the Wall  Street bailouts, as Rand no doubt would have, and that also is  “yay”-worthy to many people. But if you buy that, if you buy Ron Paul,  you have to buy the rest of his belief system: his opposition to  securities regulation, his opposition to consumer protection, his belief  that the markets can defend Americans from the depredations of big  business.
What I’ve just described is many things, but it is the  very antithesis of the values of Occupy Wall Street, which is based on  opposition to the prerogatives of the top 1 percent at the expense of  the 99 percent. Yet rather than forthrightly oppose OWS, which would at  least be intellectually honest, Paul has sought instead to co-opt it,  con it, calling it a “healthy movement” at one appearance, and seeking to link it with his “end the Fed” agenda. In Keene he went one step further by declaring himself as being in league with the 99 percent and against the 1 percent.
That’s  about as far from the truth as it possibly could be. The only question  is, how long is Paul going to be allowed to get away with his  faux-populist con job? I agree with his backers in this sense: He is  less of a fringe candidate than he is sometimes portrayed in the media.  His positions are increasingly infecting mainstream Republican politics,  and it’s scary.
No, strike that. His positions are scary only if you know what they actually are, and not how he spins them.
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