But what would you rather have, a tyranny like the old USSR or a laissez-faire decentralized country like early America? Don't give me "I don't care" cause that would be a lie. We all live in the present and we all would prefer more freedom to less freedom.
This is a false dichotomy, there isn't simply a choice out there between USSR and Paul's good ole 'merica. And even if there was, what I wanted or thought about it
wouldn't matter, because the leaders of our corprotocracy aren't really chosen democratically and even if they were, in the state I live the moderate demopublicans out number me 10 to 1.
But let's look beyond that, let's say I really did have a say in the election and Paul wins. What would change? As President Obama found out, saying what you would do if elected and getting the rest of politicians to hop on board are two different things. Paul knows this well, what he's gotten like one bill passed? The way I see it he may be able to cut back our foreign military wars and forays and perhaps use his veto power liberally to stop lots of bad legislation. So at best he would be able to slow the bleeding, but the dream of getting us back to laissez-faire America (which I don't really think it was all that it is cracked up to be) is just that, a dream separate from reality.
We must show the masses the correctness of our position that NO GOVERNMENT is the best solution; but that requires a sea-change in the thinking of most people. We need to guide them there. And one of the best ways is to show that the free, voluntary market (the freewill interaction of all the people) is the system of liberty and freedom. Show them that less is more. Less government is more happiness.
Ron Paul has done more to advance the ideas of freedom and liberty in the last 10 years than you or I will do in 60. For that, we should be appreciative.
And if people really do come to anarchism through what Paul does, than good for him. I'm still not donating money, voting, or telling people about how great he is, because I have better places to spend my money, take my time, and direct my conversations.
PS: Rothbard was never in politics, but he did write on politics a lot.
My point was if he did run, I wouldn't have voted for him.