Ron Paul
Upsets Controlled-Media Debate as Clear Winner
Pundits &
Candidates Seek to Exile Statesman from Republican Party-- In Spite
of Leading Poll Numbers-- Over His Anti-Torture, Anti-War and
Anti-Tax Standpoint
Congressman
Ron Paul shook the establishment in last night's second round of
2008 Republican debates for the Presidency. Not only did his
anti-war, anti-torture and pro-liberty platform stand glaring in the
face of those political whores dubbed as "top-tier" but he managed
to catch the ire of 9/11 criminal Rudy Giuliani for daring to
suggest aggressive foreign policy would stir up blowback.
What's worse, Ron
Paul interrupted the worship of establishment-selected candidates by
winning the debate's own poll and forcing FOX to cover the mere
"second-tier" candidate-- a distinction mainstream media have been
using to marginalize those outside of direct control.
Ron Paul's performance
in his second debate victory-- as moderators repeatedly suggest
he doesn't belong in the Republican party
Ron Paul garnered
approximately 20 minutes of air-time on Fox alone last night--
including about 10 minutes of debate questions and another 10
minutes composed of attacks and dismissals by pundits, other
candidates and an interview with Hannity & Colmes.
Alan Colmes probed to
understand how Ron Paul could emerge the decisive leader in an
otherwise revolting adherence to policies advocating war expansion
and unrestrained use of "extreme interrogation tactics" which skirt
the damning name of "torture."
Fellow "second-tier"
candidate Duncan Hunter attributed Ron Paul's dominance in the FOX
text-message poll to his "entertainment value," insinuating that his
policies and views (including the controversy generated over 9/11
comments) could not be taken seriously.
GOPAC
chairman Michael Steele went so far as to suggest that Ron Paul
should not belong to the Republican party, stating that he was
"done" with Paul and did not care what the results of the FOX poll
were.
Debate moderators
pointed out Congressman Paul's distinction as the only Republican
candidate who voted against military action in Iraq as they
repeatedly demanded that he answer to being in the 'wrong party' or
'not fitting in with the Republican party.' Ron Paul answered
smartly-- pointing out that he wanted to lead the country, not the
party, and that 65-70% of the country was against the Iraq war and
long for an end to the mired conflict.
Regardless, he was
attacked for his adherence to non-interventionist philosophy and
defamed as some kind of 9/11 heretic-- as various pundits pretended
he had faltered in the debates and claimed that anonymous South
Carolina Republicans had reached consensus on the idea that Ron Paul
"did not acquit himself" and must be discarded.
Ron Paul is
defamed by pundits and candidates alike who make excuses for his
poll victory.
One pundit even goes
so far to suggest that Ron Paul's success in the poll was due
primarily to attention won after Giuliani attacked him on 9/11
statements, as well as organizational prowess amongst text-messaging
voters.
Sean Hannity refused
to believe Ron Paul won the debate, claiming he didn't have the
opportunity to text in his vote.
Yet, as Ron Paul
continued to win the debate poll, the live-results format
pigeonholed FOX News into ongoing coverage of the winner-- as his
only competition in poll results came from Mitt Romney, who briefly
led the poll with 27% when Ron Paul had only 26%.
It is continually
suggested that "second-tier" candidates such drop from the race and
make way for the "first-tier" candidates to shine, though the only
vote process at this stage-- polls-- all indicate Ron Paul as a
likely winner and certainly a top contender.
During
a post-debate interview with Hannity & Colmes, Ron Paul discusses
his differences in foreign policy and much more. Giuliani elaborates
on his reaction to Ron Paul's unsettling statements.
Though they would
like to exclude him from future debates, his back-to-back debate
victory may force moderators into a position of having to invite Ron
Paul-- for the time being.