Conservative capitalists have always tried to link democracy
and capitalism as essential handmaidens.
But as the evidence shows far from being democracy’s handmaiden – capitalism
is anathema to freedom. So-called libertarian Rand Paul is running for
president and his libertarian dream will be in reality a nightmare. The mere usurpation
of the word libertarian should demonstrate the deceit. A more exact description
of Rand Paul is propertarian where he is an avowed defender of private property
rights. Never mind that the rich in the US are the richest in the developed
world (in both absolute and relative terms). Never mind that the US has one of
the highest levels of inequality in the developed world. This inegalitarianism
is still not enough for Paul's tastes. He wants more inequality.
Among his proposals is a "flat tax." By increasing
taxes on the bottom and middle while decreasing them on the top, Paul's
"flat tax" plan redistributes the national income upwards. Of course,
making tax burdens "flatter" as part of a project to increase the
overall tax level can be justified provided surplus revenue is buried into
transfers. But Paul has no intention of making the overall tax level higher. He
intends to make it lower. He seeks to eliminate capital taxes. Paul wants to
clear out the entire slate of taxes that fall almost entirely on the
super-rich, including taxes on capital gains, dividends, interest, estates, and
enormous gifts. Such a reform would be a massive giveaway to the rich. Paul
protests "today, the top 10 percent pays nearly 71 percent of all income
taxes" while "the bottom 50 percent contributes 2.25 percent and many
in this category have a negative tax liability." And that is unfair to the
rich so they according to Paul logic deserve more tax breaks.
So Paul Jnr. wants to block welfare benefit programs. To
balance the budget while reducing the overall tax level, outlays have to be cut
somewhere. Given what the federal government does, that means either cuts in
social insurance or cuts in the military. Last month, Rand Paul proposed a
budget amendment that would add $76.5 billion to defense spending that leads on
to a $190 billion addition over the next two years. How does Paul propose
offsetting the increased cost? With $212 billion in cuts to things like climate
change research, the EPA, and departments of Housing and Urban Development,
Commerce and Education.
So, that leaves social insurance cuts. To cut social
insurance, the conventional Republican strategy, which Paul adopts, is to block
grant a bunch of the benefit programs to the states while slowly suffocating
their funding. This is what they did to TANF and the program is basically a
zombie on a march towards eventual death. Block granting programs like SNAP,
WIC, and Medicaid reduces benefits for the poor while also making the benefits
less responsive (sometimes even entirely unresponsive) to cyclical downturns,
which is when the benefits are most needed.
In total, Paul wants to give away huge sums of money to the
rich via the elimination of capital income taxes and switching into his
"flat tax." The "flat tax" also, all else equal, reduces
the disposable incomes of the bottom and the middle. This tax reform would
lower the overall tax level, necessitating social insurance and transfer cuts
that will fall heavily on the poor, as well as on the elderly and sick. Like all the other advocates of so called “trickle
down economics” and upwards redistribution, Paul assures us this reform would
generate growth that would actually leave the bottom and middle better off even
while it spikes inequality. The problem is that this growth theory is not
supported by studies.
Paul wants to partially privatize Social Security, increase
the retirement age, and cut benefits for upper-middle-income earners — all
things George W. Bush fought for. He would privatize Medicare and block-grant
Medicaid and food stamps, all staples in Paul Ryan's budgets. He wants to cuts
the Food and Drug Administration budget to limit government "intrusion
into the nation’s food supply." He wants to cut the budget of those consumer watch-dogs, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health, as well
as the US Geological Survey, the National Parks, and eliminate entirely the
Bureau of Indian Affairs…the list of cuts goes on and on across the whole
spectrum of American government spending. Not just the technical parts of the
administration but the federal spending on education and housing. Paul would
either eliminate or render nonrefundable the Earned Income Tax Credit and the
Child Tax Credit; the former is the US's most significant cash transfer program
for non-elderly poor, and the latter also provides substantial assistance to
low-income people.
In 2013, the Washington Free Beacon broke the news that one
of Paul’s social media staffers, Jack Hunter, moonlighted as the “Southern
Avenger,” a Confederate flag-bedecked white-supremacist writer. Paul ultimately
didn’t have to fire Hunter (which might have had the unfortunate side effect of
alienating some of his more right-wing supporters). Instead, Hunter resigned,
allowing Paul to have it both ways: He didn’t have to condemn the aggressive
racist he had hired, nor did he have to be associated with him. In an effort to
reach out to possible black voters he has condescendingly, and largely in
error, presented a myopic history of Republicans and civil rights. He also
asked the audience if anyone knew that the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) had been founded by Republicans. The
Republican Party and the Democratic Party were not the same parties back then.
Yet in 2010, Paul said he sought to modify”
one of the articles of the Civil Rights law, about private institutions which would
legally allow discrimination based on race. Later he explained (then denied he
said it) “I don’t like the idea of telling private business owners — I abhor
racism, I think it’s a bad business decision to ever exclude anybody from your
restaurant, but at the same time I do believe in private ownership… In a free
society, we will tolerate boorish people who have abhorrent behavior.”
Rand Paul is a climate change denier. Last April, he said he
is "not sure anybody exactly knows why" the climate is changing. He
went on to call the science "not conclusive" and complain about
"alarmist stuff." If you're wondering what he means by "alarmist
stuff," in 2011, while arguing for a bill that would prevent the EPA from
regulating carbon emissions, Paul said, "If you listen to the hysterics,…you
would think that the Statue of Liberty will shortly be under water and the
polar bears are all drowning, and that we're dying from pollution. It's
absolutely and utterly untrue." Paul went on to assert that children are
being misled into believing that "pollution" has gotten "a lot
worse," when "It's actually much better now." Paul, of course,
was conflating conventional air pollution—like sulfur dioxide, which has
declined in the US—and climate pollution, which is cumulative and global, and
therefore gets worse every year, even if America's annual emissions drop. Paul
has voted to strip the EPA of its legal authority to regulate greenhouse gas
emissions, to force approval of the Keystone XL oil pipeline, and to prevent
Congress from placing any tax or fee on carbon pollution. Paul's lifetime
voting score from the League of Conservation Voters is 9 percent. Of course in
recent months to ensure vote-catching from some liberal youth, Paul has started
to adjust the record, suggesting that he supports action to cut air pollution
and believes
that man-made greenhouse-gas emissions are contributing to climate
change. However, that's not the same thing as supporting action to cut climate
pollution. He has not supported a single bill or taken a single vote to limit
emissions of conventional air pollutants or carbon dioxide. It is not the same
thing as saying the government should mandate emissions limits. Senator Brian
Schatz sponsored an amendment saying human activity is
"significantly" responsible for climate change. That was a real
endorsement of climate science, and only five Republican senators voted for it.
Rand Paul was not one of them. Paul is prone to being sympathetic to conspiracist
statements about science in general. In October, he suggested to Breitbart News
that Ebola may be more easily spread than scientists say and that the White
House had been misleading the country on the issue. And in February, Paul told
CNBC, "I've heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking normal children
who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines." This despite
the fact that the supposed connection between autism and vaccination has been
thoroughly debunked.
Much was made of his father’s Ron Paul’s non-interventionism
in foreign affairs and it assumed that Rand Paul follows in his father’s footsteps.
Not so. Paul has stopped saying things that will potentially upset pro-Israel
voters. Additionally, Paul has produced an Orwellian-titled pro-Israel bill:
The Defend Israel by Defunding Palestinian Foreign Aid Act of 2015. The bill
would cut funding to Palestine unless they stop seeking recognition at the
International Criminal Court. Paul's also responsible for the Stand With Israel
Act, a piece of legislation that would also cut financial aid. As for cutting
aid to Israel, the country that takes the most in taxpayer money, Paul has
assured citizens that his stance on foreign aid is specifically inconsistent:
"I've never said oh my goodness! Let's target aid to Israel…I said you
know what, to get to an ultimate goal maybe we should start by eliminating aid
to countries that hate us, countries that burn our flag. I've been very up
front to acknowledge that Israel isn't one of the countries. Israel is our
friend. I have never had a bill that had Israel's name in it to eliminate aid
to Israel." On the subject of ISIS, Paul has supported the military
air-attacks and although he does not want American boots on the ground, he is
happy to provide the finance and the supplies for a local proxy force such as
arming the Kurds. Rand Paul supports intervention in Syria—but just with less
gusto.
His campaign slogans featured on his site: “Stand With Rand”
and “Defeat the Washington machine. Unleash the American dream.” Unfortunately,
Rand Paul is on the side of the machine he claims to oppose. Don’t believe the
hype of his supposed anti-establishment positions. Several years ago he blocked
action on the District of Columbia Budget Autonomy Act, a power-to-the-people
measure designed to give the voters of Washington, DC, and their elected
representatives more authority over the spending of locally raised tax dollars.
Instead of embracing the decentralization plan, the senator used his position
to derail it. He’s just another top-down, autocratic, big-government
Republican. Despite the apparent populist rhetoric he is no better than the
others. He is interested in only winning and says what people want to hear but
he is purely another puppet for plutocracy regardless of the platitudes. Money
talks and whoever has more money has more voice, even if it is full of lies. Rand
Paul is an intellectual fraud. If he truly loved freedom and liberty he would
be advocating for another American revolution, this time a socialist
revolution, as the first one was a dismal failure in securing a civilized
society.
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