One of the things we did this morning was go up on C-Span.org and watch Congressman Ron Paul deliver what is being called his “farewell address.”
It is an affecting speech, capping the end of his congressional career;
it lasts about an hour. It is about the same length as President
Washington’s farewell address.
We don’t want to make any inappropriate comparisons between Dr. Paul
and the most famous Founder. But we were struck with the similarity
between the key themes that Washington sounded and those struck by the
Texas Republican who, just in respect of his service in Congress, has
regularly over 23 years sworn an oath to support and defend the
Constitution over the writing of which Washington presided.
Dr. Paul is not as optimistic as Washington was at the dawn of the
American republic. “It was my opinion,” Dr. Paul said, “that the course
the U.S. embarked on in the latter part of the 20th Century would bring
us a major financial crisis
and engulf us in a foreign policy that would overextend us and
undermine our national security.” To achieve the goals he sought,
“government,” he said, “would have had to shrink in size and scope,
reduce spending, change the monetary system, and reject the
unsustainable costs of policing the world and expanding the American
Empire.” His basic prescription (he’s a physician by trade) was, as he
put it for starters, “just following the constraints placed on the
federal government by the Constitution.”
The congressman acknowledged that, “according to conventional
wisdom,” his “off-and-on career in Congress, from 1976 to 2012,
accomplished very little.” He noted that it includes no named
legislation, nor federal buildings or highways. “Thank goodness,” he
said. He rued the fact that “in spite of my efforts,” the government
“has grown exponentially, taxes remain excessive, and the prolific
increase of incomprehensible regulations continues.” He also noted that
“wars are constant and pursued without Congressional declaration,
deficits rise to the sky, poverty is rampant, and dependency on the
federal government is now worse than any time in our history.”
All this, Dr. Paul noted, has come upon us with “minimal concerns for
the deficits and unfunded liabilities that common sense tells us cannot
go on much longer.” He confessed he has thought a lot “about why those
of us who believe in liberty, as a solution, have done so poorly in
convincing others of its benefits.” He asks: “If liberty is what we claim
it is — the principle that protects all personal, social and economic
decisions necessary for maximum prosperity and the best chance for peace
— it should be an easy sell.” Yet, he noted, history has shown that the
American public has been “receptive to the promises of authoritarians,”
a development that he contrasted with the founding era and that, he
reckons, has ushered in an “age of redistribution.”
Our own view
is that the congressman should not get quite so down on himself. He
believes that the only way to avert a crisis that will bring America to
its knees is what he calls “an intellectual awakening.” In our
estimation there is something intellectually astir in our republic, and
we have no doubt that Dr. Paul has had an outsized hand in starting it.
These columns spent the just-ended election campaign pleading for
Governor Romney and the rest of the Republican leadership to be more
bold in putting out there the kinds of ideas that Dr. Paul has made his
trademark, and it has to be said that Governor Romney, in particular,
shrank from the task. Such a tack turned out to be tragic.
Dr. Paul’s ideas, though, are more broadly discussed today than at
any time we can remember in our career. The constitutional fundamentals
(enumerated powers, separated powers, limited government, rights secured
by restrictions on government) are being discussed on the airwaves. In
recent years voters have handed up to both the House and Senate a number
of new, young leaders who grasp these points down to the ground. None
of them are laughing at Dr. Paul. They are reading the same texts he has
studied, they are working through the problems with an eye on the
principles he has pressed at every turn.
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