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Mona Charen’s Ronulan Review

Posted on : 17-11-2007 | By : Jim Lynch | In : 2008

Tags: , , , ,

9

Former speech writer for Nancy Reagan and nationally syndicated columnist Mona Charen offers a review of the Ronulans — Too Close to Kooky

Memo to: Ron Paul supporters

Subject: Your e-mails

Okay, enough is enough. Like every other journalist in America, and who knows, maybe the world or even the universe, I’ve been deluged with your letters and e-mails. So I’ve done as you asked and taken a closer look at your candidate. Here is what I’ve found:

1. Ron Paul is inconsistent. Though he calls himself a man of principle and is apparently admired as such by his ardent fans, his principles seem somewhat elastic.

She also notes that Paul is “historically challenged” and (my favorite) “too cozy with kooks and conspiracy theorists.”

Go read the whole thing. If you don’t the black helicopters will start hovering over your house and beam it in to your brain.

You’ve been warned.

Linked by Flopping Aces where Curt says, “His candidacy is unserious, his followers are unserious, and his politics are unserious.”

Don Surber has more on RP. Read Ron Paul: I’m sane

Sphere: Related Content

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Comments (9)

links from TechnoratibRight & Early) 1. Ron Paul is inconsistent. Though he calls himself a man of principle and is apparently admired as such by his ardent fans, his principles seem somewhat elastic. He rails against the Bush administration for its supposed assault on civil liberties,

links from Technoratiby these concerns is to display a total ignorance of history. You don’t seem to understand exactly what the Federal Reserve System is. Go to Google Video. Search for and watch “The Creature from Jekyll Island”. You might learn a thing or two.If Paul is really so inconsistent, why not come up with some substance instead of this distortion of what he said? I’m not even gong to read the rest of her column. If this is her leadoff hitter, she’s got no lineup at all. So much for principles and civil liberties. Some people

links from Technoratiby these concerns is to display a total ignorance of history. You don’t seem to understand exactly what the Federal Reserve System is. Go to Google Video. Search for and watch “The Creature from Jekyll Island”. You might learn a thing or two.If Paul is really so inconsistent, why not come up with some substance instead of this distortion of what he said? I’m not even gong to read the rest of her column. If this is her leadoff hitter, she’s got no lineup at all. So much for principles and civil liberties. Some people

Kramer auto Pingback[...] Sooper Sekrit Message to the Ronulans: You’re gonna love this. [...]

So Mona Charen is serious? I clicked on the link to her article. The first point is Paul’s inconsistency on the rule of law. He didn’t say, as Charen implies, that Libby deserved no pardon even though he wasn’t guilty of a crime. The fact that Libby was guilty is a given; Paul stated why he thought there should be no pardon. If Paul is really so inconsistent, why not come up with some substance instead of this distortion of what he said?

I’m not even gong to read the rest of her column. If this is her leadoff hitter, she’s got no lineup at all.

Paul would refuse to pardon Libby because of a policy disagreement not because of the merits of Libby’s case. So much for principles and civil liberties. Some people should learn to read.

uh oh, somebody call the waaambulance… johnny’s not gonna read the whole editorial because he disagrees with the first point!

(In before “RonPaul is the only candidate to support the constitution, why don’t you support the constitution et al, ad nauseam…”)

Well, Johnny, if you don’t want to read the rest let me give you a little bit more of what she had to say in words you might be able to understand.

Ron Paul is historically challenged. Ron Paul is unserious. Ron Paul is too cozy with kooks and conspiracy theorists. And as I wrote several days ago, Ron Paul Raises Gobs of Cash – Still Won’t Be Nominee

She’s the one who’s kooky. Check the Campaign’s response:

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZTJmOWM2ZGQzNzAzOTQwYWJlMDg4YjJiMjE4MWRlZTY

To the Editor

I read Mona Charen’s column on Friday and I had to clear a few things up. Outside of the name-calling (“kook,” as I’m sure you remember, was the attack word of choice used by critics of Barry Goldwater), Charen was way off base.

1. Dr. Paul’s commitment to principle is second to none, so to attack him, Charen twists the understanding of what a presidential pardon really is. A pardon is a constitutional check by the executive branch on the judiciary to protect against cruel or unusual punishment. When considering a pardon, a president examines extenuating circumstances to decide whether a punishment for a conviction under the law was unjust. Scooter Libby was convicted of a crime; that is not the issue here. Dr. Paul is not sympathetic to issuing him a pardon because he finds Libby an unsympathetic character. There is nothing inconsistent here. President Bush, who has issued the fewest pardons of any president since World War II, hasn’t pardoned Libby either, by the way.

2. If Charen paid much attention to the campaign, she would know that Dr. Paul never utters the word “isolationist” except to explain why he is not one. He believes in the foreign policy of the founders: peace, commerce, and open friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none. When he references Nixon and Eisenhower, he is clearly talking about past successful Republican campaign strategies, not what they did in office. Eisenhower campaigned to end the Korean War, Nixon to get us out of Vietnam. Dr. Paul argues that the GOP can only win in 2008 with a candidate who will bring hope troops form Iraq. Last I checked, many National Review readers cared a thing or two about Republicans winning elections.

3. Ron Paul is dead serious and very sober about what it will take to reform things like our oppressive tax system. Clearly, a Paul administration cannot end the IRS on January 29, 2009. Ending the income tax, a goal all real conservatives should share, would take major cooperation with the Congress. But, with honest communication and a lot of hard work, Dr. Paul knows that we can end the end the income tax over the course of just a few years. Over half of federal government revenue presently comes from sources other than the income tax. The United States could end the IRS and still fund the same level of big government we had less than ten years ago. There is nothing “unserious” about that.

4. Dr. Paul is a modest man with a sparkling record and unimpeachable personal integrity. I understand why you need to attack him by linking him to less-than-savory individuals (there is simply nothing else to use), but it is just not going to work. Some of your charges are silly. Dr. Paul’s “Texas Straight Talk Column,” for example, is public record and anyone, from the American Free Press to Cat Fancy, has the right to reprint it.

Yes, Ron appears on the Alex Jones radio program. But you know who else talks to Alex Jones? People like Judge Anthony Napolitano. Guess who hosts Alex Jones? FOX’s John Gibson and National Public Radio. Dr. Paul has said time and again that he does not believe 9/11 was an inside job. He does, however, think we should always question authority. When, by the way, were conservatives supposed to become trusting of big government?

Dr. Paul stands for freedom, peace, prosperity, and the protection of inalienable individual rights. He knows that liberty is the antidote for racism, anti-Semitism, and other small minded ideologies. Dr. Paul has focused all of his energy on winning the presidency so he can cut the size of government and protect the freedom of every American. Neither he nor his staff is going to waste time screening donors. If a handful of individuals with views anathema to Dr. Paul’s send in checks, then they have wasted their money. I cannot profess to understand the motivations of Don Black as neither Dr. Paul nor I know who he is, but a simple Google search shows that his $500 contribution has netted him at least 88 news hits, including Charen’s column. Perhaps a better explanation for his “contribution” is not support for Ron, but the attention he knew he would receive.

Mona, I can not expect everyone to support Dr. Paul, especially those who have sunk so much of their own credibility into supporting the Iraq war. In fact, Dr. Paul welcomes open and spirited discussions, and even legitimate criticism. But, I had to get a few things off my chest.

Jesse Benton
Communications Director
Ron Paul 2008 PCC
Arlington, Va.

Dear Editor,

This is a copy of a letter that I recently wrote to Mona Charen and thought that I would pass it on to you, as well.

Thank You

———

Dear Mona,

I seriously do not think that you will take the time to read this, so I’ll try to get right to the point.

It is not a habit of mine to send personal emails to columnists, but your article “Too Close To Kooky” prompted me to read virtually every article written by you within recent months and to read more about you, in general. Not because my personal beliefs and opinions about Ron Paul are similar to your own, not by a long shot, but because I thought that your incredulous attempt to discredit Dr. Paul was rather …. “kooky”.

I won’t bother addressing your individual claims here (I certainly will, at your request), but suffice it to say that while I do agree with some of your commentaries, and find your witticisms somewhat entertaining, I find that much of your work lacks criteria that would be considered editorialization based on factual truth. Now, I realize that this is a trend very popular in our “infotainment” industry, but it worries me when I see so many columnists basing their opinions on rhetoric and not actual fact. Your tendency to call names and use labels like a schoolyard bully, in my mind, makes you no better than the people that you claim to despise so much. After reading your material it’s easy for me to form the basic opinion that you are just an average person who shares their opinion in the guise of an objective report. Is this true? Care to comment?

“The problems we face do not cry out for a man on a white horse, but for someone who can persuade the nation about what is required to face our problems” ~Mona Charen

Well said. If you think that you can persuade me into believing that there is a person who can better shoulder this monumental task than Dr. Paul, then please, I would like to hear what you have to say.