Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Ron Paul, Libertarianism & Corporate Personhood

My friend, the "Renaissance Man*" Mike Bermel Jr., told me at his high school graduation party last weekend that I had "lied" to him about Ron Paul because I said Ron Paul was a corporate libertarian, which meant he wasn't really a populist since a corporate libertarian works against the liberties of flesh and blood persons. In other words, Ayn Rand-fan Ron Paul wasn't the kind of populist libertarian Mike thought he was in my opinion. I re-iterated this position, but Mike remained skeptical, so I decided to look up, once again, Paul's position on corporations.

Here's an excerpt from my e-mail to Mike today:

"In case you haven't done it yet, I've done it for you. I Googled 'ron paul corporate personhood,' and this is what came up:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&biw=1264&bih=702&q=ron+paul+corporate+personhood&aq=4&aqi=g10&aql=&oq=ron+paul+corpor

"If he's against corporate personhood, why the silence? What game is Ron Paul playing?

"I figure if I simply ask questions, it will be hard for you to accuse me of lying...which is a redundancy ignorant of the writer's paradox: 'all writers are liars; I am a writer.' The moment one speaks, one lies. Some Buddhists consider all language profane. Remember the Buddha's "Flower Sermon." That's why it's almost impossible to speak sufficiently when discussing politics, which is a charade of lies. All serious conversation must, therefore, be blatantly abstract, which is to say intellected [sic] fantasy...and to the actual point from something real, which is to say adequately mental [reality and actuality are two different things, reality being of one's mind and actuality being of things in themselves; reality, therefore, is always an opinionated clusterfuck of conspiratorial fictions manifesting themselves in the political-economy, aesthetics, etc. & et al]. The best we can do these days is 'keep our eyes wide as the chance won't come again...'"
Nonetheless, the question remains: Does Ron Paul Value the Freedoms of Flesh & Blood Humans More Than The Liberties of Corporations? What's the answer?
I'm not sure.
*Mike Jr. played saxophone, drums and guitar with his Dad's band, The Frame, Saturday, as well as performed lead vocals on a Tragically Hip tune whose title I forget [about cleaning an orca tank at Marineland]. He's going to college to study computers. He's fascinated by physics. Loves literature. Is leaning toward Buddhism. Seems spiritually and philosophically inclined...outgoing and very, very curious. The list goes on...

2 comments:

  1. I don't think you understand Paul's position on what our relationship with corporations should be, and how he feels about corporate bureaucracy, special interests, and their relationship with political corruption...

    He doesn't support corporate personhood and explains very clearly here:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ds7-1Nemrng

    More about his positions on big business:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OX2rAjP7EUA

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  2. I don't think you understand what corporate personhood is Luke, otherwise you would have realized he dodged the question, as he does those about his newsletters. Ron Paul's a goofy racist Libertarian who doesn't know what he's talking about. He's an Ayn Rand fan. So his views on big business are ridiculous and outdated. Capitalism isn't just a bankrupt political-economic philosophy, it's a bankrupt language. In other words, it's difficult to speak of late-stage capitalism because it owns the frameworks by which we think. Ron Paul's as inept at this game as all the other candidates.

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