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June
15, 2007
Ron
Paul, The Mahatma
by Gary North, Ph.D.
I
was watching "Gandhi" recently, as I do every year
or two. It is inspirational to me. It tells the
story of a man who could not possibly win the
battles he chose to fight, but did anyway. There is
no doubt that it is a propaganda film, funded in
part by the Indian government. It scrambles his
chronology. But, on the whole, it got the story
right. Mohandas K. Gandhi, a lawyer, was able to
transform Indian politics. He did this through
force of moral character and shrewd tactics that
made every official response either "Damned if we
do; damned if we don't." I read The Gandhi
Nobody Knows when it was published in 1983, a
year before the movie was released.
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/185.htm
I know the strange side of the man. But he
mobilized a huge nation without recourse to
violence. That was his great legacy.
I also like the movie because it is the story of
a failed empire. By 1945, the British Empire had
spent itself into near bankruptcy because of two
wars. It was a pale shadow of itself. It would soon
grow much paler.
There are many scenes in the movie that have
long grabbed my imagination, but none so much as
the one in which Gandhi is seated at a table with a
British military official. The official asks
rhetorically, "You don't really expect us just to
march out of India, do you?" Gandhi replies, "Yes,
that is exactly what I expect you to do." In 1947,
they did.
What has this to do with Ron Paul, who is
running for President? At least this much: he also
opposes violence, he also opposes empire, and he
also believes in the long run that justice will
prevail. So, he does what Gandhi did. He keeps
telling the story of how a better society can be
built, must be built, and will eventually be built
when men reduce their commitment to violence as a
way of shaping the world. This includes violence
committed by the civil government.
They called Gandhi the mahatma: the great self.
Ron Paul is the mahatma of self-government.
He gains applause from the anti-war Left, small
as it is. He gains applause from free market
advocates, who are weary of government interference
in their lives. And he drives the muddled middle
crazy.
Note: he doesn't wear a loincloth.
THE WEB PHENOMENON
After the first debate among the ten Republican
candidates, the mainstream media's polls ranked
Giuliani, McCain, and Romney as the front-runners.
But the on-line polls were blowouts for Ron
Paul.
What was going on?
After the second debate, on May 15, broadcast by
Fox News, the Fox News website allowed viewers to
vote for the nominee. These presumably were
hard-core Fox News viewers. Over 40,000 voted.
Romney got 29%. Paul got 25%. Giuliani got 19%.
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/186.htm
Fox News has been supportive of the Iraq war
from the beginning. Paul in 2003 voted against the
funding of the Iraq war, one of the handful of
Republicans in Congress who did. So, how could it
be that Paul, an outspoken critic of the war, could
receive that high a percentage on Fox News' own
website?
He had done even better on MSNBC's website poll
after the first debate, broadcast by MSNBC on May
3. The results were amazing.
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/188.htm
He got very similar numbers on the CNN poll.
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/187.htm
The two networks that hosted the respective
debates drew audiences above a million -- close to
two million. In both cases, Ron Paul did extremely
well on the networks' web polling pages. Yet he is
invisible in the general polls, which are based on
random sampling.
I believe the general polls are correct. The
public does not know who Ron Paul is. But TV
viewers who were politically active enough to go to
the websites of the broadcasting networks are big
supporters of Paul.
There is a disconnect here. The Establishment's
pundits offer various explanations, but none has
any scientific support. One of the least plausible
explanations after the May 3 poll was that Paul's
supporters are so sophisticated digitally that they
found ways to overcome the designs of the two web
polling sites: MSNBC's and CNN's. A few libertarian
geeks somehow made it look as though there is a
large army of Paul supporters out there.
This argument is bizarre. There is a huge
problem with it. Where did all the other voters go?
Paul got half or more of the MSNBC voters in some
categories. There were around 75,000 votes
recorded.
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/187.htm
Somehow, the voters who were for the Big Three
had their votes sent into cyberspace by Paul's
nefarious genius computer programmers, who then
substituted votes for Paul. The Establishment
candidates' supporters did not have their votes
recorded. I call this the "hanging electrons"
explanation.
In the case of the CNN poll, the number of votes
cast was closer to 70,000 per question, which were
not the same questions as the MSNBC poll offered.
Yet the results were much the same. The libertarian
programmers somehow beat the protective designs of
two separate polling pages.
I think there is better explanation. About half
of the viewers who were enthusiastic enough to go
to the networks' web pages to vote were Ron Paul's
supporters. The logic of my explanation rests on
the percentage of viewers who voted, compared with
the 1.76 million people who watched MSNBC's
broadcast. The audience size figures are here:
www.GaryNorth.com/snip/188.htm
This means about 4.3% voted on CNN's site. That
is slightly over 4%. It was just under 4% for
MSNBC's site. We've seen this percentage before:
Pareto's 20/80 law. Twenty percent of 20% (4%)
voted on-line. This is exactly what I would have
predicted. In other words, the poll was a faithful
reflection of predictable responses. More than 6%
voting would have been a remarkable statistic, one
indicative of deep and wide interest in national
politics. There was no such enthusiasm. That is why
so few people tuned in.
This means that there were no missing votes for
the Big Three candidates. It also means that Ron
Paul's supporters are hard core fanatics. They were
the driving force of the web polls.
There are statistically inescapable facts
governing the Republican election campaign so far.
First, most people don't care and are not watching
the debates. Second, among those who watched, a
normal Pareto percentage of them went to the
trouble to vote on-line. These are the elite of the
Republican Party's ideological activists: 20% of
the elite 20%. About half of these people support
Ron Paul.
When I say "activists," don't mean people who
write checks, knock on doors, stuff envelopes,
stuff ballot boxes, and generally do the grunt work
of political campaigns. I mean people who care
enough about political ideas to sit through hours
of political piffle and then take the time to go to
a website and vote.
These people are presumably the wave of the
digital future. Like Gandhi's supporters in 1915,
they are not numerous. They will not determine the
outcome of the Republican primaries. They will not
attend the Republican Party's convention. But they
are out there, and they are unlikely to go
away.
I was part of such a group in 1960: the
"Goldwater for Vice President" movement. I was on
the geographical fringes. I was not in Chicago in
1960, nor did I get in the floor demonstration. But
I was for it. That group eventually grew. It got
Goldwater nominated in 1964 and got Reagan elected
in 1980.
What happened immediately after the debates in
May is bad news for the Republican Establishment.
They have dismissed this as irrelevant. They will
forget about it when Ron Paul fails to win the
nomination. But there is no question in my mind
that the Republican Party will move toward the
right -- the non-interventionist,
limited-government Old Right -- over the next three
or four decades. This will take place at the
bottom, i.e., at the local level, not at the top:
New York City's financial district and Washington,
D.C. The move toward the Old Right will accelerate
when the checks from Washington don't buy much
because of inflation. That day is coming.
Meanwhile, Ron Paul is building a digital
mailing list. This is the sleeper fact of the Great
Debates.
MAILING LISTS
The inventor of the political mailing list is
forgotten today. His name was Charles Bryan. His
brother, William Jennings Bryan, is well
remembered. So valuable was that mailing list and
the support it represented that the Democrats
nominated Charles Bryan for Vice President in 1924.
Charles Bryan had used that mailing list in three
Presidential campaigns: 1896, 1900, and 1980.
In early 1965, in the wake of Goldwater's
electoral defeat, Richard Viguerie sat down in the
office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives
and began writing down the names of people who had
donated $50 or more to Goldwater's campaign -- the
equivalent of about $300 today.
By law in those days, federal political
campaigns had to turn over to the Clerk the names
and addresses of donors of $50 or more. Goldwater's
campaign had filed 15,000 names and addresses.
Viguerie planned to write them all down and create
a mailing list with them.
After a few days, he realized that he could not
get the job done by himself. He hired some women to
do this grunt work. Then, after they had copied
12,500 names, the Clerk decided that he did not
like all this and forbade them to do it. Viguerie
says he should have told the Clerk to contact his
lawyer. But he was young and inexperienced back
then, so he complied.
Those 12,500 names became the basis of a mailing
list empire that changed American conservatism and,
through Ronald Reagan, the world. This book tells
the story, not just of Viguerie's strategy and
success, but of the transformation in Americans'
reading habits and political donating habits.
A similar result took place in 1972. It was
George McGovern who first spotted the potential of
direct mail in a Presidential campaign. More
accurately, his direct-mail operative, Morris Dees,
spotted it. The pre-convention McGovern campaign
was made possible by Dees' direct-mail skills.
As far as Presidential politics goes, three
technologies have undermined the Establishment's
monopoly: the mass-produced paperback book (1964),
direct mail (1972), and the Internet (2004). The
Presidential candidate who first made the Internet
work for him was Howard Dean, whose pre-convention
campaign in 2004 was entirely based on the
Internet. He raised over $40 million, but then
squandered both the money and his lead by a lack of
local organization in the primaries.
On all media fronts except direct mail, liberals
are falling behind. Network news shows have
steadily declined in popularity. Cable TV is
replacing the networks, which includes network
news. Newspaper readership has fallen like a stone
since 1993. In 1993, 58% of Americans said that
they had read a newspaper "yesterday." In 2002,
this percentage was 41%. Three-quarters of
Americans under age 30 do not read a newspaper
daily. In the 30-49 age group, it is 37%. Liberals
have bet the political farm on capital-intensive
technologies and government regulation of the
communications industry. They are losing the bet.
The best book on all this is by Richard Viguerie
and David Franke: America's Right Turn: How
Conservatives Used New and Alternative Media to
Take Power.
Now Ron Paul is assembling a digital mailing
list, or multiple lists, that will be used to
educate and motivate hard-core supporters. It is
under the radar of the Establishment.
COMMITMENT
It is clear to all sides that Ron Paul is the
most ideologically committed politician in the
country. There has been nothing like him since
Howard Buffett retired in the early 1950's. Nobody
remembers Howard Buffett today except hard core
libertarians and his son, Warren.
It is Ron Paul's uniquely consistent voting
record that gets him on liberal-left television
talk shows like the Daily Show and Bill Maher's
show. The hosts are willing to give him time on
camera because he opposed the Iraq war when nobody
else did. He has also voted to shrink the state
ever since he was elected in 1976. While they don't
share his view of domestic policy, they are
respectful to find any politician who just will not
toe the Party line.
For years, he had a narrow but highly committed
audience. Now, after three decades, he is beginning
to expand that audience. He speaks his mind, and
his mind is informed by a consistent philosophy of
limited government, meaning Constitutional
government as understood in 1788. The kinds of
voters who sit through an evening of bloviating
politicos and then go to a web page to vote are the
kinds of people he is attracting.
These mailing lists, if used to educate people
to the principles of limited civil government and
expanded self-government, will begin to affect the
next generation of voters.
It does not take postage to mail e-letters. It
does not take printers, ink, and paper.
He has been committed to a worldview. No other
politician is to the same degree. By being
committed at the cost of risking electoral defeat,
Ron Paul can now attract people who are looking for
their own areas of commitment.
If he gets this message to his subscribers, he
can help them become active in a movement to shrink
the strangling hand of tax-funded bureaucracy.
CONCLUSION
Ron Paul is convinced that self-government is
the wave of the future. Empire isn't. That was
Gandhi's message in 1915. It did not seem plausible
back then. By 1947, it did.
It has taken until quite recently for India to
move economically more toward self-government and
away from Nehru's Fabian socialism. Sadly, the U.S.
economy seems to be moving back toward Nehru. The
state keeps getting bigger in the visible affairs
of this world. But a great decentralization is
taking place: in education, on the Internet, and
with technology generally. The wave of the future
is not toward Fabianism and its legacy. Ron Paul's
campaign is proof of this.
So, let us sit back and enjoy the campaign. Sign
up to get on Ron Paul's mailing lists.
www.ronpaul2008.com
-- www.ronpaul.org
-- Or just call 1-800-RONPAUL
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
To
subscribe to Gary North's Reality Check go to
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/sub/GetReality.cfm
If
you enjoyed this essay and would like to read more
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http://www.garynorth.com
or http://www.freebooks.com
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