Ron Paul: The Untold Story of the Man Who Helped Inspire a New Generation of Liberty Lovers

Ron Paul: The Untold Story of the Man Who Helped Inspire a New Generation of Liberty Lovers

If you’re under the age of 40 and you’re reading this, chances are very good that your interest in the liberty movement was sparked by three-time presidential candidate and veteran Texas Congressman Ron Paul. Paul inspired an entire generation of Libertarians, Constitutionalists and limited-government Conservatives with his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns.

It might surprise you to learn that Paul is not originally from Texas, but Pittsburgh, where he was born to a dairy farmer and his wife. He graduated from Gettysburg State College in 1957, with a degree in biology. He earned his medical degree from Duke’s School of Medicine in 1961. From 1963 to 1965, he was a flight surgeon in the United States Air Force, before moving over to the Air National Guard from 1965 to 1968. Upon discharge, he relocated to Texas to start a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology.

While he had been reading Austrian economics and Libertarian political philosophy for years beforehand, he finally decided to run for Congress when President Richard Nixon took the nation off of the gold standard in 1971. He lost his first attempt at public office in 1974, but won a special election in 1976, losing the regular election later that year by a mere 300 votes. He defeated his opponent in 1978, serving until 1985, then again from 1997 to 2013.

The Beginning of Ron Paul’s Political Career

While in Congress, Paul spoke in favor of a return to the gold standard with Senator Jesse Helms, as well as against a reinstatement of the draft favored by President Jimmy Carter and the majority of Republicans in Congress.

He retired from Congress in 1984 to run for Senate, losing the Republican primary to Phil Gramm.

After his time in Congress, he focused on the private promotion of liberty, publishing the Ron Paul Survival Newsletter and the Ron Paul Freedom Report with Lew Rockwell, who had previously been his congressional chief of staff. He also sold precious metals under the auspices of Ron Paul Coins.

In 1988, he made his first run for the presidency as a Libertarian, defeating Native American activist Russell Means (who had previously seconded Larry Flynt in his bid for the Libertarian Party line) and coming in third nationwide. He considered running again in 1992, but instead decided to back Pat Buchanan’s campaign against President George H.W. Bush.

Coming Back to Congress

Ron Paul: The Untold Story of the Man Who Helped Inspire a New Generation of Liberty LoversPaul returned to Congress after a 1996 election with a huge assist from friends Nolan Ryan, Steve Forbes, and Pat Buchanan.

However, it was his 2008 presidential campaign that began to change the world of liberty. There is arguably no one more responsible for the spread of the liberty movement than Ron Paul, whose 2008 campaign electrified young people who would likely have largely been Democrats previously. The average Ron Paul supporter in 2008 was not the country club Republican or movement Libertarian one might have pegged, but more likely to be a tech-savvy college kid than anything else.

Thus, throughout the 2008 primary season, the acolytes of Ron Paul dominated political debate on the Internet and social media, the latter of which was still in its infancy at this point. Ron Paul’s campaign was the most searched for and his YouTube channel had even more followers than Barack Obama’s.

None of this translated into a terribly successful campaign. His highwater mark was a 25 percent second-place showing in Montana. He chose not to enter the general election as a third-party candidate, but did not endorse the eventual nominee, John McCain. Paul often claimed that he did not run as a third-party candidate because he had signed a binding agreement preventing him from doing so. He chose instead to endorse the four major third-party candidates: Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney, Libertarian Bob Barr (this despite his previous role in Ruby Ridge), the Constitution Party’s Chuck Baldwin, and independent Ralph Nader.

In 2012, Ron Paul was still considered an outsider, but had considerably raised his national profile since 2008. He remained hot on the heels of front-runner Mitt Romney throughout the entire Republican primary, but once again came up short of the nomination. Much like in 2008, he refused to endorse Mitt Romney and even refused to give a speech at the convention because it would have to be vetted by Romney’s team.

Ron Paul’s Criticisms of the Republican Party

Ron Paul: The Untold Story of the Man Who Helped Inspire a New Generation of Liberty LoversWhile Paul was a life-long Republican, he was often highly critical of the party and its leadership. Indeed, he was one of the only Republicans to vote against Ronald Reagan’s 1981 spending bill, despite being one of the first elected officials to endorse Reagan in both 1976 and 1980. He even had some extremely harsh words to say about Reagan while running for president in 1988. He called the Reagan administration “a dramatic failure,” continuing by saying that “Reagan’s record is disgraceful. He starts wars, breaks the law, supplies terrorists with guns made at taxpayers’ expense and lies about it to the American people.”

Since retiring from elected office and the presidential race, Ron Paul has become a fierce critic of the NSA and surveillance, as well as a supporter of Edward Snowden, whom he considers to be a great hero and champion of freedoms for Americans. He also founded the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity underneath the broader umbrella of his Foundation for Rational Economics and Education. He offers the Ron Paul Curriculum (developed by Gary North) free for homeschooled children from K-5 and paid for 6-12.

The Ron Paul Liberty Report has received more than 17 million views as of April 2019.

In 2016, Ron Paul became the oldest person to ever receive an electoral vote when a faithless elector in Texas voted for him.

Veterans of the Ron Paul rEVOLution are active in the liberty movement today. And how great is it that a man who has never smoked a cigarette in his life inspired a generation of pot-smoking techies to join the fight for liberty?

You can bet your last Ron Paul Dollar (remember those?) that Dr. Paul will be speaking hard truths, bucking the system and standing his ground until the day he dies. Libertarians will likely never find a champion quite like him.

Ron Paul: The Untold Story of the Man Who Helped Inspire a New Generation of Liberty Lovers originally appeared in The Resistance Library at Ammo.com.

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Author: Sam Jacobs

Sam Jacobs is the lead writer and chief historian at Ammo.com. His writing for Ammo.com's Resistance Library has been featured by USA Today, Reason, Bloomberg's Business Week, Zero Hedge, The Guardian, and National Review as well as many other prominent news and alt-news publications. Ammo.com believes that arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. That the rights codified in our Bill of Rights were not given to us in a document, but by our Creator. That an unalienable right is God-given. It isn't granted by a president, a king, or any government – otherwise it can be taken away.

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Unreconstructed
Unreconstructed
August 20, 2020 8:49 pm

I think Dr. Paul is one of the last true American statesmen/patriots. Was kinda glad when he didn’t get the Republican nomination in 2016 tho….was afraid he would have gotten himself Arkancided.

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
  Unreconstructed
August 21, 2020 2:46 am

I guess you missed 2012 when Ron Paul played the role of pretend opposition to Romney, who himself played pretend opposition to Obama.

Let’s not pretend Ron isn’t an actor like all the other actors in CONgress.

motley
motley
  22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
August 21, 2020 10:58 am

I generally don’t agree with this guy … but I have to here. What did Ron accomplish ? Nothing. Absolutely nothing. Politics is theatre to keep people occupied. Get mad all you want. That doesn’t change the truth.

mark
mark
  motley
August 21, 2020 7:57 pm

Motley,

What did he accomplish???

Are you kidding me…how about exposing the FED on a scale no one else in Congress in his time had the courage to do??????

Is it his fault most Americans are too brainwashed, propagandized, and dumbed down to grasp what he was saying and exposing?

What about what he said and stood for do you want to take on Motley???

Come on man…you want a fucking debate????

I was stunned he wasn’t murdered long ago. Maybe smothered with a pillow or shot with the CIA heart attack gun. Couldn’t blackmail him like the others.

Looks to me like the same 5 idiots who up voted loony tune .22 up voted you.

The 5 of you can kiss my ass. As far as .22 phhittttt…one in every 10 posts has merit, the rest are broken record bullshit.

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
  motley
August 21, 2020 10:37 pm

HA HA assholes.

At least one guy is smelling the coffee in 2020.

Ron Paul + Fake Oathkeepers + Pot smoking LOLbertarian techies + New Generation of fake Liberty loving jagoffs = The “Liberty Movement” is a scripted and managed debacle that went nowhere.

I missed the part about Forbes and crypto-Jew Buchanan helping Ron out in 1996. Forbes is literally a CIA owned shit-magazine in a cesspool of other CIA owned shit media. I’m glad the CIA was there to give Ron a hand.
comment image

mark
mark

Ron Paul the Righteous voice in the Congressional Wilderness.

.22. The loony toon lost deceived platform down vote king Mormon/Mathis piss ant who couldn’t tie RON PAUL’S shoelaces.

Hey you 5 upvoters…don’t look now but you are the type of thinkers the CIA loves.

Frigg’in idiots.

Monger
Monger
August 20, 2020 8:55 pm

Ron Paul, proof the american people no longer want or deserve there liberty.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Monger
August 21, 2020 3:26 am

Because not enough voters elected him President?

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Anonymous
August 21, 2020 8:53 am

No, they lacked energy and any thinking what so ever. They went with OvenMitt.

Monger
Monger
  Anonymous
August 21, 2020 10:05 am

Because the people are not even trying, Paul would of been at least an attempt at liberty. Even tho he ran as a Republican.

Monger
Monger
  Monger
August 21, 2020 8:39 pm

Don’t know wth i’m getting down votes here… these idiots voted for Obama twice, still sending the same shit bags to congress. Not many seem to want to resist by throwing sand in the gears. Present company excluded of course.

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
  Monger
August 21, 2020 10:40 pm

Yep, Fake Oathkeepers headlining “Paul Fest 2012” with a bunch of “Pot smoking [LOLbertarian] techies” in attendance!

Anybody who believes Ron Paul and Stewie Rhodes are anything but actors playing their assigned roles is thick in the head.
comment image

Sam Fox
Sam Fox
August 20, 2020 9:24 pm

Monger is full of something stinky.

Ron Paul was great!! He was submarined by the Repub ‘party’ & fake stream media. My daughter was in the Repub Ron Paul support group in Washington State. At their nominating thing she saw first hand the sneaky crap REPUBS pulled against Dr. Paul in Washington State.

One of the big lies was that Dr. Paul was an ‘isolationist’ when he is really a non-interventionist, just like the US Founders. One of whom said don’t go around the world looking for giants to destroy.

SamFox

PS: There a very good alternative to YouTube. From the Utah Gun Exchange there has come

https://videos.utahgunexchange.com/

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
  Sam Fox
August 21, 2020 2:50 am

Okay, but you’re not suggesting Ron was a genuine candidate in 2012 are you?

Someone had to play the role of opposition to Romney, and Ron Paul volunteered- knowing full well he wasn’t winning the nomination or election under any circumstances.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Having a hard time visualizing Romney as Pres.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  Anonymous
August 21, 2020 8:56 am

Romney isn’t a conservative, let alone Republican. He’s another political carbetbagger who should’ve fallen out of the Republican closet and gone full Democrat years ago, just like that worthless Buckeye Kasich who can’t seem to fade away into irrelevancy.

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
  e.d. ott
August 21, 2020 9:39 am

I listened to that recent Kasich commercial.

It’s pretty bad.

mark
mark

Ahhh…the one in 10.

William Williams
William Williams
  e.d. ott
August 21, 2020 9:27 pm

Kasich has actually done a first-rate job of fading away into irrelevancy.
But then he’s had tons of practice.

mark
mark

Someone has to play the role of a talking hoax…I guess you got the job .22.

CCRider
CCRider
August 20, 2020 9:36 pm

If liberty is to survive Dr. Ron Paul will take his place with the likes of Von Mises, Rothbard, Jefferson and Locke as one of the men who made it possible. He’s a true giant. I offer to my grandchildren the evidence that I have supported him since I first heard him speak in 1976, that I tried to extend the message of individual liberty for them that, at least, I was on the side of peace and prosperity. It is what I wished for them.

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 20, 2020 10:17 pm

Ron Paul is a good man. He is much to moral to be a politician.

Diaperless in NH ILuvCO2
Diaperless in NH ILuvCO2
August 20, 2020 10:57 pm

God bless Ron Paul.

Yahsure
Yahsure
August 20, 2020 11:15 pm

I like the man. He ran a lousy campaign. (or his managers did)It was as if he didn’t want to win, just get his message out.
I think he was the last decent person I remember running for office.

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
August 20, 2020 11:48 pm

Oh, the nostalgia!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
August 21, 2020 3:30 am

One of my favorite moments was Colin Powell informing the world about WMDs.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Stephanie Shepard
August 21, 2020 9:41 am

Glad you are still around,Stephanie.

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
August 21, 2020 3:34 am

“Veterans of the Ron Paul rEVOLution are active in the liberty movement today. And how great is it that a man who has never smoked a cigarette in his life inspired a generation of pot-smoking techies to join the fight for liberty?”

Pardon me while I laugh my ass off.

Liberty movements comprised of pot-smoking techies following an aging career politician are not liberty movements, they are a fucking joke.

The BALLOT BOX has been dead for decades and Ron Paul knows this full well. So, if you think Paul was a real candidate for President in 2012 and not just playing the role of pretend opposition to Romney, you should probably put down the bong.

All of Paul’s hot air about auditing the FED and the evils of “big government” was misdirection too.

Evil lies in the hearts of men, not in institutions- and systemic corruption isn’t a fixable component of the current system.

It is the current system.

StackingStock
StackingStock
August 21, 2020 8:48 am

Dr Paul cured my apathy.

BUCKHED/BUY MORE AMMO
BUCKHED/BUY MORE AMMO
August 21, 2020 9:56 am

Ron is a good guy and his good points outweigh his bad points. One bad point is that like most politicians he has a PAC that employs his wife and daughter

brewer55
brewer55
August 21, 2020 10:45 am

As someone who lives in the state of Georgia and who is very familiar with Cynthia McKinney, I’m trying to figure out what Ron Paul saw in her to endorse her candidacy. If you remember, she was the one that was willing to accept that Muslim Prince’s $10 million dollar donation.

RiNS
RiNS
August 21, 2020 1:39 pm
Baba Looey
Baba Looey
August 21, 2020 2:59 pm

What you have to understand about 2012 was how close the Paul campaign was to winning the nomination with his delegate strategy, only to have the GOP change the rules like a petulant child losing at Candyland. The delegates could have been released and he had the support to win the nomination.

But that would be like letting a steer decide if it wanted to be butchered or not, I suppose.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Baba Looey
August 21, 2020 4:15 pm

Well the RNC is a private corporation. They can change the rules anytime.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  StackingStock
August 21, 2020 7:25 pm

Especially when the globalists own the corporation.

William Williams
William Williams
  Baba Looey
August 21, 2020 9:41 pm

To the Legacy Media, Ron could be mentioned as a human-interest story, but when it came to reporting votes, they did everything possible to NOT even mention his name.

In one of the early primaries (2012?) Ron was actually running second or third in early returns; the major TeeVee Network I was watching displayed a large pie chart of voting percentages with one large slice (Ron’s) simply left blank and unlabeled.

Bullwinkle
Bullwinkle
August 21, 2020 7:29 pm

I understand that he was the king of putting financial ear marks on bills to get money for his district.
I do not agree that he was such a great guy.
Once again, the great man fallacy proves true.
Believe the legend, and not the truth.
I am sure this will get me band.

mark
mark
  Bullwinkle
August 21, 2020 8:10 pm

Bullwinkle,

If you think that opinion will get you banned you have no idea on how the Platform on fire works.

Being wrong is common.

By the way, you carried Rocky, frigg’in tree rat.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Bullwinkle
August 21, 2020 8:23 pm

Bull.
It won’t but that spelling will bring out the spelling police.
Band?

Administrator
Administrator
  Bullwinkle
August 21, 2020 9:07 pm

I should ban you for being such a dumfuck that you can’t spell banned. I guess the low IQ crowd has arrived.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Bullwinkle
August 21, 2020 9:37 pm

Winkles..
do you have some evidence to back that remark. That’s the first I ever heard that in my 72 years. Please shoot me some links because I don’t have 72 more years to find it myself.
I ask because it’s a matter of record that his fellow congressmen called him Dr. NO.
His fellow Texan LBJ lived on earmarks which is well known just for comparison.

mark
mark
August 21, 2020 8:47 pm

Congressman McFadden on the Federal Reserve Corporation Remarks in Congress, 1934

AN ASTOUNDING EXPOSURE

http://hiwaay.net/~becraft/mcfadden.html

Louis Thomas McFadden

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Thomas_McFadden

Political career
In 1914, McFadden was elected as a Republican Representative to the Sixty-fourth Congress and to the nine succeeding Congresses.[2] He served as Chairman of the United States House Committee on Banking and Currency during the Sixty-sixth through Seventy-first Congresses, or 1920-1931.[2] Though re-elected without opposition in 1932, he lost to the Democratic nominee in 1934. He was an unsuccessful candidate for nomination in 1936.[2]

McFadden’s main official legacy was the working on and the passing of the McFadden Act of 1927, limiting nationally-chartered branch banks to the state in which the main branch operates. The Act sought to give national banks competitive equality with state-chartered banks by letting national banks operate branch banks to the extent permitted by state law. The McFadden Act specifically prohibited interstate branching by allowing national banks to branch only within the state in which they were situated. Although the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 repealed this provision of the McFadden Act, it specified that state law continues to control intrastate branching, or branching within a state’s borders, for both state and national banks.[3]

McFadden in 1931
McFadden was a “vociferous foe of the Federal Reserve”,[4] which he claimed was created and operated by Jewish banking interests who conspired to economically control the United States. On June 10, 1932, McFadden made a 25-minute speech before the House of Representatives,[5] in which he accused the Federal Reserve of deliberately causing the Great Depression. McFadden also claimed that Wall Street bankers funded the Bolshevik Revolution[6] through the Federal Reserve banks and the European central banks with which it cooperated.

After the expulsion from Washington, D.C., of the veteran petitioners of the Bonus Army, which he called “the greatest crime in modern history”, McFadden moved to impeach President Herbert Hoover in 1932,[7] and he also introduced a resolution bringing conspiracy charges against the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. The impeachment resolution was defeated by a vote of 361 to 8; it was seen as a big vote of confidence to President Hoover from the House.[8] According to Time magazine McFadden was “denounced and condemned by all Republicans for his ‘contemptible gesture’.”[4][8] The Central Press Association reported that he was “virtually read out of his party … [had] his committee posts … taken away from him…was ostracized by Republicans [and] called crazy …”.[9] Sen. David A. Reed (R-PA) said “We intend to act to all practical purposes as though McFadden had died”.[10]

In 1933, he introduced House Resolution No. 158, which included articles of impeachment for the Secretary of the Treasury, two assistant Secretaries of the Treasury, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, and the officers and directors of its twelve regional banks.[11]

In 1934, he made several anti-Semitic comments from the floor of the house and in newsletters to his constituents wherein he cited the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, claimed the Roosevelt administration was controlled by Jews, and objected to Henry Morgenthau, Jr., a Jew, becoming Secretary of the Treasury.[12][13][14][15][16] Drew Pearson claimed in his “Washington Merry-Go-Round” column that, in a publication by the American fascist Silver Shirts, McFadden had been “extensively” quoted “in support of Adolf Hitler”.[17] In September the Nazi tabloid Der Stuermer praised McFadden.[18] He was also lauded by the publications of William Dudley Pelley, leader of the Silver Shirts, on several occasions.[13][19] On election day that year he lost to Charles E. Dietrich by “about 2,000 votes”.[20] This was the only election between 1912 and 1950 when the district elected a Democrat.[21]

According to McFadden’s Jewish Telegraphic Agency obituary: “In January 1935, he announced his candidacy for president with the backing of an organization called ‘the Independent Republican National Christian-Gentile Committee’ on a platform to ‘keep the Jew out of control of the Republican Party!'”[22] Not garnering much support for his presidential bid, he tried to win back his congressional seat. He lost the nomination by a wide-margin to Col. Albert G. Rutherford[23][24] who went on to win the general election.

Death
He was in New York City visiting with his wife and son in late September 1936, when he was taken ill at his hotel and died of coronary thrombosis[25][26] shortly thereafter in the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled, in Manhattan.[22][27] He was interred in East Canton Cemetery in Canton, Pennsylvania.[2]

I was always amazed Ron Paul was not murdered: