Pubdate: Fri, 09 Feb 2007 Source: Daily Texan (U of TX at Austin, Edu) Copyright: 2007 Daily Texan Contact: http://www.dailytexanonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/115 Author: Patrick Brendel MEET A PRESIDENTIAL LONG-SHOT On one hand we have Ron Paul: A little-known, unorthodox, irreverent proponent of peace, individual freedoms and federal frugality. On the other we have every other White House wannabe. Dr. Ron Paul's druthers lie on sheets of cellulose amid an atmosphere of argon and helium, inside seven separate metal-and-glass encasements at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. These so-called charters of freedom - the Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights - have guided the U.S. representative throughout his 31-year political career and now into a second bid for the presidency. Paul served as a U.S. representative briefly in 1976, and again from 1978 to 1984. In 1984, Paul lost a primary bid for the U.S. Senate to Phil Gramm of College Station. In 1988, Paul ran as a libertarian for the U.S. presidency, finishing third in the popular vote (0.5 percent) behind George Bush and Michael Dukakis. In 1996, Paul beat incumbent democrat Greg Laughlin for U.S. representative, the office he currently holds. In January, Paul formed an exploratory committee to look into running for president in 2008. He garnered about 430,000 votes as a Libertarian in 1988, but probably won't get that many in the Republican primary. But let's pretend Paul shocks the free world, wins the nomination in September and beats the Democrats in November (which wouldn't be impossible given a Clinton/Obama ticket). Bam! Paul is president. He has his druthers, and he would follow them: President Paul would end the War in Iraq, stop the War on Drugs and save us taxpayers money. As commander in chief, he would bring the troops home, rather than sending them out all over the world. "Since World War II, we haven't declared war," Paul said in an October interview, conducted by phone while he waited at a dentist's office in Lake Jackson, Texas. "And since then, we haven't won a war." Paul said many people have exaggerated the threat posed by a nuclear North Korea or Iran, just as people formerly hyperbolized the threat posed by a nuclear Pakistan. Using executive orders and the power to appoint judges and agency heads, Paul would end the federal War on Drugs. "Government should be out of it. That's it," he said. "Prohibition doesn't work. It makes no sense at all. It's the states' obligation to enforce laws." As the person responsible for preparing the federal budget, Paul would reduce taxes by reducing the size and scope of the federal government. "The main function of federal government should be national defense, and we don't do a very good job at that. We spend all our money on the military-industrial complex," he said. "We overtax. That's why we lost nearly 2 million man-jobs in the last six years. They're not coming back, because of the type of economy that we're running here. And that's the government's fault." "The government should be very small: Reduce spending. Reduce taxes." And Paul really is serious about reducing government spending. He voted against giving a Congressional Medal of Freedom to Rosa Parks. He similarly voted against honoring Charles Schulz, Pope John Paul II and Mother Theresa. Paul has, though, volunteered repeatedly to contribute $100 of his own money in order to finance these kinds of medals - offers that other congressmen neglected to match. "It's easier to be generous with other people's money," he said in the October 2001 issue of Texas Monthly. Paul is by no means a perfect candidate: He wants to end the taxation of gold as a first step toward transitioning the U.S. economy back to the gold standard. He feels more comfortable speaking with eclectic pundits such as Alex Jones rather than with members of the more conventional media. Paul also wants to change the 14th Amendment to his beloved Constitution and end birthright citizenship. Strange. Stranger. Unconscio-nable. However, on one hand we have Ron Paul: A little-known, unorthodox, irreverent proponent of peace, individual freedoms and federal frugality. On the other we have basically every other White House wannabe: neo-cons, chicken hawks and kowtowing, bleeding-heart liberals. Most all are flip-flopping opportunists. Not Paul. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman