Sunday, August 24, 2008
Poly-Tics
Ron
Paul’s Racist Past, Called MLK A “Gay Pedophile”
Ron
Paul published a news letter for 20 years, and often had racist
comments including calling Reverend Martin Luther King ‘a
gay pedophile”. Ron Paul called blacks “animals”,
and urged whites to move out of the country because “the
animals are coming.”
This
story is appalling. Angry
White Man
The New Republic
Angry White Man
by James Kirchick
The bigoted past of Ron Paul.
Post Date Tuesday, January 08, 2008
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If you are a critic of the Bush administration, chances are
that, at some point over the past six months, Ron Paul has
said something that appealed to you. Paul describes himself
as a libertarian, but, since his presidential campaign took
off earlier this year, the Republican congressman has attracted
donations and plaudits from across the ideological spectrum.
Antiwar conservatives, disaffected centrists, even young liberal
activists have all flocked to Paul, hailing him as a throwback
to an earlier age, when politicians were less mealy-mouthed
and American government was more modest in its ambitions,
both at home and abroad. In The New York Times Magazine, conservative
writer Christopher Caldwell gushed that Paul is a "formidable
stander on constitutional principle," while The Nation
wrote of "his full-throated rejection of the imperial
project in Iraq." Former TNR editor Andrew Sullivan endorsed
Paul for the GOP nomination, and ABC's Jake Tapper described
the candidate as "the one true straight-talker in this
race." Even The Wall Street Journal, the newspaper of
the elite bankers whom Paul detests, recently advised other
Republican presidential contenders not to "dismiss the
passion he's tapped."
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Congressman Ron Paul
RELATED CONTENT
Read selections from Ron Paul's newsletters
Most voters had never heard of Paul before he launched his
quixotic bid for the Republican nomination. But the Texan
has been active in politics for decades. And, long before
he was the darling of antiwar activists on the left and right,
Paul was in the newsletter business. In the age before blogs,
newsletters occupied a prominent place in right-wing political
discourse. With the pages of mainstream political magazines
typically off-limits to their views (National Review editor
William F. Buckley having famously denounced the John Birch
Society), hardline conservatives resorted to putting out their
own, less glossy publications. These were often paranoid and
rambling--dominated by talk of international banking conspiracies,
the Trilateral Commission's plans for world government, and
warnings about coming Armageddon--but some of them had wide
and devoted audiences. And a few of the most prominent bore
the name of Ron Paul.
Paul's newsletters have carried
different titles over the years--Ron Paul's Freedom Report,
Ron Paul Political Report, The Ron Paul Survival Report--but
they generally seem to have been published on a monthly basis
since at least 1978. (Paul, an OB-GYN and former U.S. Air
Force surgeon, was first elected to Congress in 1976.) During
some periods, the newsletters were published by the Foundation
for Rational Economics and Education, a nonprofit Paul founded
in 1976; at other times, they were published by Ron Paul &
Associates, a now-defunct entity in which Paul owned a minority
stake, according to his campaign spokesman. The Freedom Report
claimed to have over 100,000 readers in 1984. At one point,
Ron Paul & Associates also put out a monthly publication
called The Ron Paul Investment Letter.
The Freedom Report's online
archives only go back to 1999, but I was curious to see older
editions of Paul's newsletters, in part because of a controversy
dating to 1996, when Charles "Lefty" Morris, a Democrat
running against Paul for a House seat, released excerpts stating
that "opinion polls consistently show only about 5% of
blacks have sensible political opinions," that "if
you have ever been robbed by a black teen-aged male, you know
how unbelievably fleet-footed they can be," and that
black representative Barbara Jordan is "the archetypical
half-educated victimologist" whose "race and sex
protect her from criticism." At the time, Paul's campaign
said that Morris had quoted the newsletter out of context.
Later, in 2001, Paul would claim that someone else had written
the controversial passages. (Few of the newsletters contain
actual bylines.) Caldwell, writing in the Times Magazine last
year, said he found Paul's explanation believable, "since
the style diverges widely from his own."
Finding the pre-1999 newsletters
was no easy task, but I was able to track many of them down
at the libraries of the University of Kansas and the Wisconsin
Historical Society. Of course, with few bylines, it is difficult
to know whether any particular article was written by Paul
himself. Some of the earlier newsletters are signed by him,
though the vast majority of the editions I saw contain no
bylines at all. Complicating matters, many of the unbylined
newsletters were written in the first person, implying that
Paul was the author.
But, whoever actually wrote
them, the newsletters I saw all had one thing in common: They
were published under a banner containing Paul's name, and
the articles (except for one special edition of a newsletter
that contained the byline of another writer) seem designed
to create the impression that they were written by him--and
reflected his views. What they reveal are decades worth of
obsession with conspiracies, sympathy for the right-wing militia
movement, and deeply held bigotry against blacks, Jews, and
gays. In short, they suggest that Ron Paul is not the plain-speaking
antiwar activist his supporters believe they are backing--but
rather a member in good standing of some of the oldest and
ugliest traditions in American politics.
To understand Paul's philosophy, the best place to start is
probably the Ludwig von Mises Institute, a libertarian think
tank based in Auburn, Alabama. The institute is named for
a libertarian Austrian economist, but it was founded by a
man named Lew Rockwell, who also served as Paul's congressional
chief of staff from 1978 to 1982. Paul has had a long and
prominent association with the institute, teaching at its
seminars and serving as a "distinguished counselor."
The institute has also published his books.
The politics of the organization
are complicated--its philosophy derives largely from the work
of the late Murray Rothbard, a Bronx-born son of Jewish immigrants
from Poland and a self-described "anarcho-capitalist"
who viewed the state as nothing more than "a criminal
gang"--but one aspect of the institute's worldview stands
out as particularly disturbing: its attachment to the Confederacy.
Thomas E. Woods Jr., a member of the institute's senior faculty,
is a founder of the League of the South, a secessionist group,
and the author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to American
History, a pro-Confederate, revisionist tract published in
2004. Paul enthusiastically blurbed Woods's book, saying that
it "heroically rescues real history from the politically
correct memory hole." Thomas DiLorenzo, another senior
faculty member and author of The Real Lincoln: A New Look
at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War, refers
to the Civil War as the "War for Southern Independence"
and attacks "Lincoln cultists"; Paul endorsed the
book on MSNBC last month in a debate over whether the Civil
War was necessary (Paul thinks it was not). In April 1995,
the institute hosted a conference on secession at which Paul
spoke; previewing the event, Rockwell wrote to supporters,
"We'll explore what causes [secession] and how to promote
it." Paul's newsletters have themselves repeatedly expressed
sympathy for the general concept of secession. In 1992, for
instance, the Survival Report argued that "the right
of secession should be ingrained in a free society" and
that "there is nothing wrong with loosely banding together
small units of government. With the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, we too should consider it."
The people surrounding the von
Mises Institute--including Paul--may describe themselves as
libertarians, but they are nothing like the urbane libertarians
who staff the Cato Institute or the libertines at Reason magazine.
Instead, they represent a strain of right-wing libertarianism
that views the Civil War as a catastrophic turning point in
American history--the moment when a tyrannical federal government
established its supremacy over the states. As one prominent
Washington libertarian told me, "There are too many libertarians
in this country ... who, because they are attracted to the
great books of Mises, ... find their way to the Mises Institute
and then are told that a defense of the Confederacy is part
of libertarian thought."
Paul's alliance with neo-Confederates
helps explain the views his newsletters have long espoused
on race. Take, for instance, a special issue of the Ron Paul
Political Report, published in June 1992, dedicated to explaining
the Los Angeles riots of that year. "Order was only restored
in L.A. when it came time for the blacks to pick up their
welfare checks three days after rioting began," read
one typical passage. According to the newsletter, the looting
was a natural byproduct of government indulging the black
community with "'civil rights,' quotas, mandated hiring
preferences, set-asides for government contracts, gerrymandered
voting districts, black bureaucracies, black mayors, black
curricula in schools, black tv shows, black tv anchors, hate
crime laws, and public humiliation for anyone who dares question
the black agenda." It also denounced "the media"
for believing that "America's number one need is an unlimited
white checking account for underclass blacks." To be
fair, the newsletter did praise Asian merchants in Los Angeles,
but only because they had the gumption to resist political
correctness and fight back. Koreans were "the only people
to act like real Americans," it explained, "mainly
because they have not yet been assimilated into our rotten
liberal culture, which admonishes whites faced by raging blacks
to lie back and think of England."
This "Special Issue on
Racial Terrorism" was hardly the first time one of Paul's
publications had raised these topics. As early as December
1989, a section of his Investment Letter, titled "What
To Expect for the 1990s," predicted that "Racial
Violence Will Fill Our Cities" because "mostly black
welfare recipients will feel justified in stealing from mostly
white 'haves.'" Two months later, a newsletter warned
of "The Coming Race War," and, in November 1990,
an item advised readers, "If you live in a major city,
and can leave, do so. If not, but you can have a rural retreat,
for investment and refuge, buy it." In June 1991, an
entry on racial disturbances in Washington, DC's Adams Morgan
neighborhood was titled, "Animals Take Over the D.C.
Zoo." "This is only the first skirmish in the race
war of the 1990s," the newsletter predicted. In an October
1992 item about urban crime, the newsletter's author--presumably
Paul--wrote, "I've urged everyone in my family to know
how to use a gun in self defense. For the animals are coming."
That same year, a newsletter described the aftermath of a
basketball game in which "blacks poured into the streets
of Chicago in celebration. How to celebrate? How else? They
broke the windows of stores to loot." The newsletter
inveighed against liberals who "want to keep white America
from taking action against black crime and welfare,"
adding, "Jury verdicts, basketball games, and even music
are enough to set off black rage, it seems."
Such views on race also inflected
the newsletters' commentary on foreign affairs. South Africa's
transition to multiracial democracy was portrayed as a "destruction
of civilization" that was "the most tragic [to]
ever occur on that continent, at least below the Sahara";
and, in March 1994, a month before Nelson Mandela was elected
president, one item warned of an impending "South African
Holocaust."
Martin Luther King Jr. earned
special ire from Paul's newsletters, which attacked the civil
rights leader frequently, often to justify opposition to the
federal holiday named after him. ("What an infamy Ronald
Reagan approved it!" one newsletter complained in 1990.
"We can thank him for our annual Hate Whitey Day.")
In the early 1990s, newsletters attacked the "X-Rated
Martin Luther King" as a "world-class philanderer
who beat up his paramours," "seduced underage girls
and boys," and "made a pass at" fellow civil
rights leader Ralph Abernathy. One newsletter ridiculed black
activists who wanted to rename New York City after King, suggesting
that "Welfaria," "Zooville," "Rapetown,"
"Dirtburg," and "Lazyopolis" were better
alternatives. The same year, King was described as "a
comsymp, if not an actual party member, and the man who replaced
the evil of forced segregation with the evil of forced integration."
While bashing King, the newsletters
had kind words for the former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux
Klan, David Duke. In a passage titled "The Duke's Victory,"
a newsletter celebrated Duke's 44 percent showing in the 1990
Louisiana Senate primary. "Duke lost the election,"
it said, "but he scared the blazes out of the Establishment."
In 1991, a newsletter asked, "Is David Duke's new prominence,
despite his losing the gubernatorial election, good for anti-big
government forces?" The conclusion was that "our
priority should be to take the anti-government, anti-tax,
anti-crime, anti-welfare loafers, anti-race privilege, anti-foreign
meddling message of Duke, and enclose it in a more consistent
package of freedom." Duke is now returning the favor,
telling me that, while he will not formally endorse any candidate,
he has made information about Ron Paul available on his website.
Like blacks, gays earn plenty of animus in Paul's newsletters.
They frequently quoted Paul's "old colleague," Representative
William Dannemeyer--who advocated quarantining people with
AIDS--praising him for "speak[ing] out fearlessly despite
the organized power of the gay lobby." In 1990, one newsletter
mentioned a reporter from a gay magazine "who certainly
had an axe to grind, and that's not easy with a limp wrist."
In an item titled, "The Pink House?" the author
of a newsletter--again, presumably Paul--complained about
President George H.W. Bush's decision to sign a hate crimes
bill and invite "the heads of homosexual lobbying groups
to the White House for the ceremony," adding, "I
miss the closet." "Homosexuals," it said, "not
to speak of the rest of society, were far better off when
social pressure forced them to hide their activities."
When Marvin Liebman, a founder of the conservative Young Americans
for Freedom and a longtime political activist, announced that
he was gay in the pages of National Review, a Paul newsletter
implored, "Bring Back the Closet!" Surprisingly,
one item expressed ambivalence about the contentious issue
of gays in the military, but ultimately concluded, "Homosexuals,
if admitted, should be put in a special category and not allowed
in close physical contact with heterosexuals."
The newsletters were particularly
obsessed with AIDS, "a politically protected disease
thanks to payola and the influence of the homosexual lobby,"
and used it as a rhetorical club to beat gay people in general.
In 1990, one newsletter approvingly quoted "a well-known
Libertarian editor" as saying, "The ACT-UP slogan,
on stickers plastered all over Manhattan, is 'Silence = Death.'
But shouldn't it be 'Sodomy = Death'?" Readers were warned
to avoid blood transfusions because gays were trying to "poison
the blood supply." "Am I the only one sick of hearing
about the 'rights' of AIDS carriers?" a newsletter asked
in 1990. That same year, citing a Christian-right fringe publication,
an item suggested that "the AIDS patient" should
not be allowed to eat in restaurants and that "AIDS can
be transmitted by saliva," which is false. Paul's newsletters
advertised a book, Surviving the AIDS Plague--also based upon
the casual-transmission thesis--and defended "parents
who worry about sending their healthy kids to school with
AIDS victims." Commenting on a rise in AIDS infections,
one newsletter said that "gays in San Francisco do not
obey the dictates of good sense," adding: "[T]hese
men don't really see a reason to live past their fifties.
They are not married, they have no children, and their lives
are centered on new sexual partners." Also, "they
enjoy the attention and pity that comes with being sick."
The rhetoric when it came to
Jews was little better. The newsletters display an obsession
with Israel; no other country is mentioned more often in the
editions I saw, or with more vitriol. A 1987 issue of Paul's
Investment Letter called Israel "an aggressive, national
socialist state," and a 1990 newsletter discussed the
"tens of thousands of well-placed friends of Israel in
all countries who are willing to wok [sic] for the Mossad
in their area of expertise." Of the 1993 World Trade
Center bombing, a newsletter said, "Whether it was a
setup by the Israeli Mossad, as a Jewish friend of mine suspects,
or was truly a retaliation by the Islamic fundamentalists,
matters little."
Paul's newsletters didn't just
contain bigotry. They also contained paranoia--specifically,
the brand of anti-government paranoia that festered among
right-wing militia groups during the 1980s and '90s. Indeed,
the newsletters seemed to hint that armed revolution against
the federal government would be justified. In January 1995,
three months before right-wing militants bombed the Murrah
Federal Building in Oklahoma City, a newsletter listed "Ten
Militia Commandments," describing "the 1,500 local
militias now training to defend liberty" as "one
of the most encouraging developments in America." It
warned militia members that they were "possibly under
BATF [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms] or other totalitarian
federal surveillance" and printed bits of advice from
the Sons of Liberty, an anti-government militia based in Alabama--among
them, "You can't kill a Hydra by cutting off its head,"
"Keep the group size down," "Keep quiet and
you're harder to find," "Leave no clues," "Avoid
the phone as much as possible," and "Don't fire
unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it
begin here."
The newsletters are chock-full
of shopworn conspiracies, reflecting Paul's obsession with
the "industrial-banking-political elite" and promoting
his distrust of a federally regulated monetary system utilizing
paper bills. They contain frequent and bristling references
to the Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission, and the
Council on Foreign Relations--organizations that conspiracy
theorists have long accused of seeking world domination. In
1978, a newsletter blamed David Rockefeller, the Trilateral
Commission, and "fascist-oriented, international banking
and business interests" for the Panama Canal Treaty,
which it called "one of the saddest events in the history
of the United States." A 1988 newsletter cited a doctor
who believed that AIDS was created in a World Health Organization
laboratory in Fort Detrick, Maryland. In addition, Ron Paul
& Associates sold a video about Waco produced by "patriotic
Indiana lawyer Linda Thompson"--as one of the newsletters
called her--who maintained that Waco was a conspiracy to kill
ATF agents who had previously worked for President Clinton
as bodyguards. As with many of the more outlandish theories
the newsletters cited over the years, the video received a
qualified endorsement: "I can't vouch for every single
judgment by the narrator, but the film does show the depths
of government perfidy, and the national police's tricks and
crimes," the newsletter said, adding, "Send your
check for $24.95 to our Houston office, or charge the tape
to your credit card at 1-800-RON-PAUL ."
When I asked Jesse Benton, Paul's campaign spokesman, about
the newsletters, he said that, over the years, Paul had granted
"various levels of approval" to what appeared in
his publications--ranging from "no approval" to
instances where he "actually wrote it himself."
After I read Benton some of the more offensive passages, he
said, "A lot of [the newsletters] he did not see. Most
of the incendiary stuff, no." He added that he was surprised
to hear about the insults hurled at Martin Luther King, because
"Ron thinks Martin Luther King is a hero."
In other words, Paul's campaign
wants to depict its candidate as a naïve, absentee overseer,
with minimal knowledge of what his underlings were doing on
his behalf. This portrayal might be more believable if extremist
views had cropped up in the newsletters only sporadically--or
if the newsletters had just been published for a short time.
But it is difficult to imagine how Paul could allow material
consistently saturated in racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism,
and conspiracy-mongering to be printed under his name for
so long if he did not share these views. In that respect,
whether or not Paul personally wrote the most offensive passages
is almost beside the point. If he disagreed with what was
being written under his name, you would think that at some
point--over the course of decades--he would have done something
about it.
What's more, Paul's connections
to extremism go beyond the newsletters. He has given extensive
interviews to the magazine of the John Birch Society, and
has frequently been a guest of Alex Jones, a radio host and
perhaps the most famous conspiracy theorist in America. Jones--whose
recent documentary, Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement,
details the plans of George Pataki, David Rockefeller, and
Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, among others, to exterminate
most of humanity and develop themselves into "superhuman"
computer hybrids able to "travel throughout the cosmos"--estimates
that Paul has appeared on his radio program about 40 times
over the past twelve years.
Then there is Gary North, who
has worked on Paul's congressional staff. North is a central
figure in Christian Reconstructionism, which advocates the
implementation of Biblical law in modern society. Christian
Reconstructionists share common ground with libertarians,
since both groups dislike the central government. North has
advocated the execution of women who have abortions and people
who curse their parents. In a 1986 book, North argued for
stoning as a form of capital punishment--because "the
implements of execution are available to everyone at virtually
no cost." North is perhaps best known for Gary North's
Remnant Review, a "Christian and pro free-market"
newsletter. In a 1983 letter Paul wrote on behalf of an organization
called the Committee to Stop the Bail-Out of Multinational
Banks (known by the acronym CSBOMB), he bragged, "Perhaps
you already read in Gary North's Remnant Review about my exposes
of government abuse."
Ron Paul is not going to be president. But, as his campaign
has gathered steam, he has found himself increasingly permitted
inside the boundaries of respectable debate. He sat for an
extensive interview with Tim Russert recently. He has raised
almost $20 million in just three months, much of it online.
And he received nearly three times as many votes as erstwhile
front-runner Rudy Giuliani in last week's Iowa caucus. All
the while he has generally been portrayed by the media as
principled and serious, while garnering praise for being a
"straight-talker."
From his newsletters, however,
a different picture of Paul emerges--that of someone who is
either himself deeply embittered or, for a long time, allowed
others to write bitterly on his behalf. His adversaries are
often described in harsh terms: Barbara Jordan is called "Barbara
Morondon," Eleanor Holmes Norton is a "black pinko,"
Donna Shalala is a "short lesbian," Ron Brown is
a "racial victimologist," and Roberta Achtenberg,
the first openly gay public official confirmed by the United
States Senate, is a "far-left, normal-hating lesbian
activist." Maybe such outbursts mean Ron Paul really
is a straight-talker. Or maybe they just mean he is a man
filled with hate.
Corrections: This article originally
stated that The Nation praised Ron Paul's "full-throated
rejection of the imperial project in Iraq." The magazine
did not praise Paul's position, but merely described it. The
piece also originally misidentified ABC's Jake Tapper as Jack.
In addition, Paul was a surgeon in the Air Force, not the
Army, as the piece originally stated. It also stated that
David Duke competed in the 1990 Louisiana Republican Senate
primary. In fact, he was a Republican candidate in an open
primary. The article has been corrected.
James Kirchick is an assistant
editor at The New Republic.
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