Ron Paul's newsletters and the failures of mainstream journ-0-lism
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James Kirchik, or Jamie as his friends and associates know him, is a young
journalist, Yale educated, Jewish and gay, a fan of the late Christopher
Hitchens and a friend of many DC libertarians and conservatives, from tv
and radio personality Mary Katherine Hamm to the editors of *reason*
 magazine.


For full disclosure I should say that I know Jamie, have gone out drinking
with Jamie and his boyfriend in the past month, have attended one of his
birthday parties, have chatted with him at* reason* magazine happy hours
and CPAC events, and in my day time job as a real estate agent, sold him a
property a couple of years ago.    Indeed at CPAC 2011 I introduced Jamie
to a friend of mine who is Ron Paul's press person in his Congressional
office, since I socialize with both of them occasionally, and got to watch
them be awkward with each other before Jamie had to depart to his next
event.  He's smart, I think probably far more decent than many Beltway
journalists and political junkies, and good company.  If I was twenty years
younger I would probably think he is attractive.  He also has lovely
parents, both of whom I have met (and who are probably around my age).


Jamie made his name back when he was on the staff at the *New Republic* (in
whose offices I used to meet him to work on real estate contracts) by
exposing that some newsletters written 20 years ago by associates of Ron
Paul that ran under Ron Paul's byline, contained noxious, bigoted, content
(Paul associates Lew Rockwell, the late Murray Rothbard, and their
entourage are usually fingered as culprits).  There were among the many
years of this newsletter a few passages critical of gays, blacks, Israel
and AIPAC.  I am choosing my words carefully here because in the current
brouhaha some, including Jamie, are saying the newsletters are
anti-Semitic, and I do not think merely criticizing Israel or the AIPAC
lobby amounts to anti-Semitism; and neither did (Jewish) libertarian writer
Jacob Sullum (whose wife is a rabbi --  and I am almost embarrassed to add
that -- next I will be disclosing that some of my best dates have been with
Jews, and indeed in a few cases with Washington establishment gay Jewish
neoconservatives) when he reviewed the material for *reason* magazine
during the last election cycle.  And whether Ron Paul or his policies are
or are not "good for the Jews," they certainly have been good for *one* Jew,
since they have gained Jamie most of the publicity his writing (which is by
the way, usually very good, and is usually on deeper topics) has received.


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Two questions I have never seen asked nor answered are:  1) where did
20-something Jamie learn of these newsletters, since they were written when
he was a pre-teen (Kirchik was born in 1983), and most libertarians and Ron
Paulistas were ignorant of them until after his original *TNR* story?
*AND*  2)
who financed his excursion to the one or two libraries in Kansas or
Nebraska where he could find a still extant paper copy back in 2007-2008?
 Perhaps *The New Republic* financed it, as* TNR* has a long-standing fear
of libertarianism, with regular articles attacking fictional libertarian
straw men (which are then routinely exposed over at *reason*).  The answers
are likely perfectly innocent (though* rumor* is Jamie was connected to the
Giuliani campaign in 2008 and is supporting the Gingrich campaign in 2012)
and yet it would still be very interesting to know (feel free to reply
here).  Jamie's repetition and follow up of his 2008 articles in the
*Times* and
the *Weekly Standard *is timed both for the Iowa caucuses, which the
political class fears Paul may win -- and also, more innocently, for the
week when most readers would be interested and it would result in the most
website traffic.


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Jamie a day or two ago wrote an article called "Ron Paul's World" in the *New
York Times 
(*h<http://campaignstops.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/29/ron-pauls-world/>
ere), rehashing the newsletter story and responses by liberalish writers
like Andrew Sullivan at *the Atlantic* who support Ron Paul.  Jamie strings
together all of Ron Paul's past and present associations that an urban
liberal would find suspect.  And they definitely exist.  I attended, and
even sponsored, Ron Paul's *Liberty Political Action Conference* this fall
in Reno, Nevada, which included libertarian and liberaltarian elements, tea
partiers, independents, Republicans, Democrats, and some far right third
party types (who were local to Idaho, Wyoming, Montana etc and did not have
far to come).  Though the speakers and VIPs at LPAC were all respectable
Senators and academics and celebrities, Sen. Rand Paul, Sen. Mike Lee,
Prof. Walter Block, actor Vince Vaughn, some of the booths were manned by
ultra-conservative Christian groups.   Strangely, these theocrats were very
friendly to me, offering me pamphlets and trying to chat me up so much that
I was tempted to slap on a pink triangle to test their ardor or their
gaydar.  Jamie concludes from Paul's "failure" to tell off all of these
donors and supporters that Ron Paul is a conspiracy theorist.  I conclude
that Paul, an open and congenial man (I have met him) has been frozen out
of public debate by the ruling political class for so many years that he
will indeed go on a conspiracy kook's radio show if invited as long as the
kook supports his ideas about ending the Fed or the American empire.  That
may now be seen to be practically unwise and a strategic error in
hindsight.  But it may be the only venue he had years ago when the ruling
political class was censoring him the way they are still censoring former
New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson.


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Jamie and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (who he is affiliated
with, according to the *Times *piece) are upset in part that Paul is not an
automatic supporter of anything they believe is necessary for Israel's
survival.  There is nothing wrong with that.  My own views are a rather
recherche form of libertarian Zionism that makes no one happy, neither many
libertarians nor many neoconservatives and other Zionists.  (And I am
perfectly content with my specialness.)  Nothing that is, as long as one
understands his actual ideas and does not misreport his ideas or policies.


Jamie also does not understand much about Paul's economic policies. I
google chatted Jamie yesterday about how his gold standard riff was a
repetition of Dick Morris's inane misunderstandings/lies about Paul after
this article was posted and he replied that he -- *horrors* -- did not get
his ideas from Dick Morris. When I explained that Paul, following
economists like Nobel laureate FA Hayek (*The Denationalization of Money*)
and Lawrence White (*Competition in Currency*), believed in a free market
of privately issued, competing currencies, backed by whatever consumers
liked and thought would save value and protect savings against inflation,
and NOT a 19th century government currency with a government gold standard,
Jamie replied that he had never heard of such a thing and that that was
even crazier.  (And I must apologize to Jamie in that, though he knows I
blog and reads my blog, I did not tell him I was going to write this,
though at the time I didn't know I was going to write this.)


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How can you decide who is and is not a kook and what is and is not a
conspiracy if one has a Dick Morris level grasp of someone's ideas about
economic theory, history and policy?  For Ron Paul and other students of
the Austrian school of economics, the fact that half of every economic
transaction (money) is government owned, and that interest rates are
centrally planned by the State and its appointed banking cartel, is the
fundamental cause of economic disruption and unemployment, and hence
poverty and much racial inequity.  You can't judge how Paul's policies
would affect racial minorities or economic opportunity or prosperity if you
are in the shallow water thinking that his critique of corporate statism is
along standard Republican lines dealing with marginal tax rates or welfare
reform or affirmative action.


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If you are going to write articles on Ron Paul for 5 years, you should have
heard of a basic, well-known (among Paul supporters) idea put forward by
one of Ron Paul's major intellectual sources, a Nobel Prize winning
economist.  And it is not a "crazy" idea because the ruling class is
invested in the current system where a government currency is used to
finance government debt and bail out banks (and fund the American military
empire) by stealing average people's purchasing power through inflation or
because they fail to even discuss it in undergraduate classes at Yale.

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