'This Is Where the Systematic Killing Took Place': 200 Days of War From...
Hamas Publishes Proof of Life Video for American Hostage
Watch Biden Lose the Battle With His Teleprompter Again
Thanks, Biden! Here's How Iran Is Still Making Billions to Fund Terrorism
Trump Not Sending His Best
Current Thoughts on the Campaign
UnitedHealth Has Too Much Power
Former Democratic Rep. Who Lost to John Fetterman Sure Doesn't Like the Senator...
Biden Rewrote Title IX to Protect 'Trans' People. Here's How Somes States Responded.
Watch: Joe Biden's Latest Flub Is Laugh-Out-Loud Funny
Hundreds of Athletes Urge the NCAA to Allow Men to Compete Against Women
‘Net Neutrality’ Would Give Biden Wartime Powers to Censor Online Speech
Lefty Journalist Deceptively Edits Clip of Fox News Legal Expert
Is the Marist Poll a Cause for Concern?
A Swiss Air Jet Nearly Collided With Four Planes at JFK Airport
Tipsheet

Ron Paul Says Goodbye

Presidential candidate and long time Representative Ron Paul said goodbye yesterday on the House floor as he prepares to make his exit from Congress after 23 years. He explained his consistent views throughout the past two decades and berated Washington for refusing to change or make hard decisions when it comes to the future. 

Advertisement

As the father of what many characterize as the buoyant, bi-partisan New Liberty Movement, Paul shared “the plain truth” about Washington, America’s current national crisis and the greatest threats to the future.

Paul began by explaining his goals in 1976: to promote peace and prosperity by a strict adherence to the principles of individual liberty. He entered Congress hoping to alter the course of the country, seeing major financial crisis and a foreign policy undermining national security in the pursuit of empire as inevitable.

Chastising himself, Paul sheds light on his internal struggle as the last American statesman. “I sought, government 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.”

He lists among his shortcomings the failure to halt the expansion of burdensome government, suffocating taxation, “incomprehensible” regulations, perpetual, unconstitutional wars, crippling deficits, rampant poverty and government dependency for corporations and special interests, which Paul admits is the most expansive in American history.

Advertisement



Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement