launchhilt.blogg.se

Paul said he may not have eloquent words
Paul said he may not have eloquent words













paul said he may not have eloquent words
  1. PAUL SAID HE MAY NOT HAVE ELOQUENT WORDS PROFESSIONAL
  2. PAUL SAID HE MAY NOT HAVE ELOQUENT WORDS FREE

support the free market, individual liberty, and the end of welfare and affirmative action. Opinion polls consistently show that only about 5% of blacks have sensible political opinions, i.e. Indeed, it is shocking to consider the uniformity of opinion among blacks in this country. This conclusion may not be entirely fair, but it is, for many, entirely unavoidable. Many more are going to have difficultly avoiding the belief that our country is being destroyed by a group of actual and potential terrorists - and they can be identified by the color of their skin.

PAUL SAID HE MAY NOT HAVE ELOQUENT WORDS PROFESSIONAL

The professional blacks may have cowed the elites, but good sense survives at the grass roots. Regardless of what the media tell us, most white Americans are not going to believe that they are at fault for what blacks have done to cities across America.

paul said he may not have eloquent words paul said he may not have eloquent words

Some relevant passages from the article (emphasis mine): You can read Nizkor's copy of the article here, and see a reposted version on Google Groups here. It is available to us today because it was posted to the newsgroup on Jby Dan Gannon, a notorious white supremacist and Holocaust denier, and archived by the Nizkor Project, an anti-revisionism organization that was active in cataloging hate speech on the early public Internet. The only complete article from the Ron Paul Political Report on the Internet that I am aware of is a 1992 piece titled "LOS ANGELES RACIAL TERRORISM," on the subject of the so-called Rodney King riots in South Central Los Angeles in 1991. These few fragments of a much larger body of work-almost all of which have been preserved by Paul's supporters, not his opponents-give us an illuminating and frightening look into his demented, racist worldview. What remains to us today comes almost entirely from secondary sources, such as quasi-samizdat publications and contemporaneous Usenet postings from sources like Google Groups. Lexis/Nexis is of no help, as the obscure publication largely escaped the notice of major media publications during Paul's hiatus from electoral politics. The Report only had about 7,000 subscribers, and Paul has-unsurprisingly-refused to release copies to the media. It is extremely difficult to track down content from the Ron Political/Survival Report today. The Ron Paul Political Report would come to feature in the stable of "underground" publications and photocopied "zines" that fed the nascent "patriot movement" that arose in the early 1990s, spurred by anger over federal government actions in Waco, Texas and Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and by fear of a supposed "New World Order." Indeed, Paul changed the name of the newsletter to the Ron Paul Survival Report around 1993 in what we may presume to be an effort to tap into the survivalist sentiments then peaking among the radical right wing. Founded in 1985, the eight-page newsletter featured Paul's extreme libertarian perspective on a number of different issues, notably crackpot theories about the Federal Reserve and the money system and a tireless advocacy of a return to the gold standard-a longtime Ron Paul hobby horse.

  • Ron Paul: The Radical Right's Man in WashingtonĪfter his 1979-85 service in Congress as a Republican and his 1988 campaign for the presidency as the nominee of the Libertarian Party, Ron Paul returned home to Surfside, Texas and devoted himself to a variety of pursuits, one of which was his self-published newsletter, The Ron Paul Political Report.














  • Paul said he may not have eloquent words