My enthusiasm for Ron Paul
never extended to his son, Rand. While I was
hoping that
Senator Rand Paul might morph into a younger Ron, I never
expected it. Ron enjoyed being Dr. No, a lone voice in the Congressional and establishment wilderness. Rand, however, seemed too ambitious -- his ambitions heavily relying on
pleasing the GOP establishment.
The latest bit of disappointment from
Rand comes from a radio interview he give to the Iowa-based Jan
Mickelson. Brian Tashman of Right Wing Watch quotes Rand Paul as
saying:
"We won the war in Iraq. Why would
we be giving political asylum to people to come from a country where
we won the war? It's one thing if you're trying to escape Castro or
trying to escape Communism in Russia or Vietnam or somewhere else or
China. I can understand asylum. But when you win the war, why would
you give people asylum? And if the 60,000 coming here are friends of
the West, wouldn't you want that 60,000 to be in Iraq helping to form
a better country over there?
"...If you let the better people, the
people who like the United States leave and come here, then aren't
you diminishing the numbers of folks that would make that country a
better place to live? So I think the whole idea of resettling 60,000
people from Iraq over here was a mistake. But I also think that the
refugee program as well as the student visa program are some of the
highest risks for us to be attacked."
Rand Paul's comments will displease
libertarians for several reasons. Some might be upset because Rand
opposes open borders. Or that he rattles the saber against Muslims,
implying that Muslims in general -- many or even most Muslims -- are
a serious threat to Americans.
But what I find
most
disturbing is Rand's claim that the U.S. "won" the Iraq War
(implying that there was anything to win), and that because of
America's military "victory," the people of Iraq are much
better off and should have no reason to want to leave Iraq. That the
United States and Iraq are both better off because of the war. That
somehow the
Iraq War was a good thing.
In preparing for his presidential run, Rand is flirting with Republican
Neocons and
Islamophobes.
You can here the interview excerpt
here:
You can also read Brian Tashman's
report
on Alternet (May 19, 2015).
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