
Posted in reply to the post by ubaru:
I just listened to Peter Schiff speak about Austrian economics from a lecture series sponsored by Ron Paul's office which speaks to a lot of what Hotspring44 and others in this thread have mentioned such as our economy's relation to China and other countries. He speaks to
the social value of eliminating some social programs. ie. If you don't have the hugely inefficient government running the Department of Education, the cost of education goes way down which means families won't be so put out to save for their kids' education and young people won't be graduating up to their eyeballs in toxic student loan debt.
He points out the obvious that I could not see, that now we are in a
government bubble that is bigger than any previous bubble economy, including the housing bubble, and in order to recover, we're going to either have to take the medicine preemptively or have it forced on us in crisis when other countries refuse to buy our debt. And then we need to stop operating any more debt-based bubbles in our economy which may be accomplished by ending the federal reserve.
Bottom line: Austrian economics makes for a prosperous society based on capital, not debt, and eliminates laws that stop the people from prospering as they will when they are unencumbered with them.
I've written more about it here, including on social security, and I've posted the video. It's worth listening to just to view all these issues through this lens which, in my opinion, is full of common sense. It also carries an assumption that life operates out of a higher intelligence and leads to a natural order and balance in all sectors of life when allowed to do so.
https://www.waccobb.net/forums/showt...884#post145884
I like that request, Clint, and Peter Schiff's reform discussion qualifies as practical and doable
IF we can organize enough people to audit the vote counting in the Republican primary where Paul would most certainly be winning if the vote weren't being tampered. And
we can.
As to Paul's position on infant circumcision, I can't speak for him, however Libertarian philosophy would say that it's up to the parents whom you can educate and persuade, but you can't ethically force by law to do anything. But then again, it may get into the "liberty and pursuit of happiness" part of the Constitution. ;-) I'm against it myself, but I'd hate to have the government make a law for or against it. We're currently at such an extreme end of the pendulum of control by government for it's own ends--total government, total control--that voting for Ron Paul feels essential. He certainly is a mouth piece of this long overdue revolution we are in.
Liz
