Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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DEATH ROW JOE
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Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

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Bestselling author Tom Woods, who will teach history and government courses in the upper grades of the program, introduces the Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum.
http://youtu.be/Di25p0I-Xy4
http://www.RonPaulCurriculum.com
http://www.TomWoods.com

The Meltdown of Thomas E. Woods
http://www.freecolorado.com/2009/04/mel ... woods.html
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"Even disregarding Woods's past associations, he clearly believes that liberty has its roots in theology and is defined by theology. Thus, it is no surprise that Ron Paul, who has vacillated between a state's-rights argument against abortion and a federal amendment laying the grounds for outlawing abortion, wrote the foreword to Woods's latest book.

I do not doubt that Woods has many insights into the financial meltdown. Nor do I doubt that, ultimately, he is as dangerous an enemy of liberty as any leftist."


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Ron Paul: I don't believe in evolution
http://youtu.be/6JyvkjSKMLw
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Is tuition payable in gold? :lol:

If so, I anxiously await the Home School MD program.

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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by *flick* »

Is that Dr. Gary North of "Duct Tape Will Be Money During Y2K" fame?
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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In the comments section:

Chuck Moe said...:

"You've taken a communist's blog and a blatantly biased review, sprinkled in some misinterpretation of an article he wrote, topped it off with an anti-Ron Paul smear, and created a really poor conclusion of Thomas Woods contribution to the liberty movement. I don't think you understand where Thomas Woods is coming from.

I would urge you to come to CU and hear him speak. There also may be time to speak with him and perhaps, you may find your article rather unfair."



Lastly, when Ari stated, "There are plenty of other credible people explaining the economic crisis," and then gave his list of credible people, he should've realized that Peter Schiff was Ron Paul's financial advisor and still supports him to this day... :roll:


Fucking hell, you guys are idiots... :lol:
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by Turner Coates »

Hey look!
Moggio found an opinion to adopt....in the comments section.
Perhaps he'll repeat it over and over....to let us know how deeply seated it is.
:lol:
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

Moggio wrote:Fucking hell, you guys are idiots... :lol:
LMFAO, Moggio it's been 5 months since you predicted the collapse of the US economy. You said it was going to happen in 5,4,3,2....

So 5 what? Apparently not months.


You told everyone to buy gold Nov 6, 2012.
Moggio on Nov 6, 2012 wrote:Buy Gold everyone. You're going to need to...
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=280116&p=5809406#p5809406

Gold closed at 1,723.30/oz on Nov 6th, 2012.

Today it closed at 1,582.50.

Anyone following your advice lost 8% of their money in a mere 5 months.

You still sticking to this advice dumb ass? Apparently so since you still are sporting that idiotic signature.

It's not clear what is the point of your post. Are you suggesting that Tom Woods and Ron Paul do not believe that "liberty has its roots in theology and is defined by theology"?

Care to explain why Gary North is Director of Curriculum Development?

Don't bother dumb ass. Its fun watching you sink like a overloaded jackass who stepped into quicksand. You hitched your wagon to an ideology you do not understand.

A few links to help you comprehend the lunacy you are buying into and to help you understand why anyone who knows something about politics in the USA is laughing at you:

The Libertarian Theocrats
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v22n3 ... arian.html

Gary North (economist)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_North_%28economist%29

Rousas John Rushdoony
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rousas_John_Rushdoony
*flick* wrote:Is that Dr. Gary North of "Duct Tape Will Be Money During Y2K" fame?
Interesting choice as "Director of Curriculum Development."

"Scary" Gary
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v22n3 ... arian.html

Dominionist theology generally and Christian Reconstruction specifically would not be what they are today without Gary North. When he first met Rushdoony in 1962, the two grew so close that North eventfully married Rushdoony's daughter, Sharon, in the early 1970s. As Rushdoony's son-in-law, North proved to be a prolific and able popularizer of Rushdoony's complex theological ideas. North demonstrated a willingness to reach out across sectarian boundaries in order to engage folks who were not quite as Christian as Rushdoony might have preferred, and directly engaged politically active conservatives, something Rushdoony largely avoided unless he could maintain strict control over their theological allegiances. As a result of his popular appeal and tireless advocacy of the Reconstructionist world-view, one could argue that North did more than any other Reconstructionist short of Rushdoony to reconstruct the world for Christendom.

Beginning in 1963 Rushdoony helped North secure a series of jobs working for the Volker Fund and the Foundation for Economic Education. So by the time North went to work for Rushdoony's Chalcedon Foundation in 1973, he was a bona fide veteran of the American libertarian movement. He had worked for two of its most important organizations and maintained friendly relationships with men like Opitz, among many others. Rushdoony brought him to Chalcedon to research the relationship between biblical law and laissez-faire economics. North threw himself into a project that he has yet to finish. Since 1977 he has spent a minimum of ten hours a week, fifty weeks a year writing a commentary on biblical economics.

This nineteen volume (and counting) series documents North's assessment of the relationship between Rushdoony-style "theonomy" (or God-rooted law) and the prescriptions for economic behavior North believed he found in the Bible. A complex mix of Austrian economic theory, Van Til-inspired ethics, and acrid prose, North's study of biblical economics laid the foundation for a series of failed predictions regarding the imminent collapse of the federal government. Most notoriously, North predicted that the Y2K computer glitch would lead to the total collapse of the global economy, leaving Christians in the United States to pick up the pieces.24 North's pessimism, unrelenting literary output, and hardboiled rhetoric eventually earned him the nickname "Scary Gary."

"Scary's" track record of failed predictions belies a neglected aspect of his theology. North, unlike Rushdoony, believes that the eternal human social institution is the Christian church. In the event of the catastrophic collapse of such transient institutions as the federal government, churches will step into the void left by its implosion. While this view of the emergent, decentralized church is consistent with North's unique fusion of libertarianism and postmillenarian eschatology, it is sharply at odds with Rushdoony's view. Rushdoony envisioned the church and family as two separate, exclusive spheres. For Rushdoony the family is the primary social unit while the church represents a limited ecclesiastical organization of believers in Christ. Conversely, North believed men owed their allegiances to a church first and the family second.

Like all aspects of Reconstructionist theology, these two perspectives have real-world consequences. When translated into theology, North's focus on the future role of the church led him to embrace a more active political agenda. Long before North and Rushdoony publicly parted ways, North had already aggressively sought out political influence. In 1976 he worked in Washington, D.C. as a staffer for Texas Representative Ron Paul. After Paul's defeat, North wrote a testy screed warning Christians that Washington was a cesspool that can't be changed overnight.25 He turned his back on national politics and began developing practical tactics for churches to deploy at the grassroots level.26 Unlike Rushdoony who focused most of his attention on ideas, North explicitly worked to pull together disparate church groups, most notably reaching out to charismatic and Pentecostal congregations in the South in an effort to fuse Reconstructionism's grassroots activism with committed congregations. When American society collapses under the combined weight of massive foreign debt, military overstretch, and internal decadence, North hopes to have a network of churches ready to step into the breech. In preparation, he has written book after book aimed at educating Christians on how to live debt free, avoid electronic surveillance, and develop the skills necessary for surviving economic collapse.27 In short, North's version of Reconstructionism blazed a path for the militia and Christian survivalist groups of the 1990s to follow.

For all their tension, North and Rushdoony did agree on one point: the Kingdom of God would emerge over time. They disagreed on the conditions of this emergence. Rushdoony's perspective was patient. He argued that over the course of thousands of years God's grace would regenerate enough people so that a Kingdom of reconstructed men would willingly submit to the strictures of God's law. North on the other hand constantly warned of impending disaster. At the moment of cataclysmic collapse, Godly men could suddenly step forward and rule. God's law was therefore a blueprint for reestablishing social order following the collapse of the current secular system. Both men agreed that the invisible hand of God's grace and not the top-down imposition of authority would guide the process. In theory, men will submit to God's law voluntarily, leaving no place for a ruling body of theocratic clerics.

Of course, in practice, things are much more complicated.

Michael McVicar is a PhD candidate in the Department of Comparative Studies at the Ohio State University. His dissertation on the life and ministry of R.J. Rushdoony focuses on his relationship to religion and politics in contemporary American society. He can be reached at [email protected].
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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If he can't afford a ticket to see Prince, I doubt that he can afford to buy any kind of gold, except for something like this:

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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by Moggio »

DEATH ROW BLOW JOB wrote:
Moggio wrote:Fucking hell, you guys are idiots... :lol:
LMFAO, Moggio it's been 5 months since you predicted the collapse of the US economy. You said it was going to happen in 5,4,3,2....

So 5 what? Apparently not months.
The Currency/Treasuries Bubble will burst by the end of Obama's second term.
DEATH ROW BLOW JOB wrote:You told everyone to buy gold Nov 6, 2012.
Moggio on Nov 6, 2012 wrote:Buy Gold everyone. You're going to need to...
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=280116&p=5809406#p5809406

Gold closed at 1,723.30/oz on Nov 6th, 2012.

Today it closed at 1,582.50.

Anyone following your advice lost 8% of their money in a mere 5 months.

You still sticking to this advice dumb ass? Apparently so since you still are sporting that idiotic signature.
Gold has SKY-ROCKETED in value over the past decade (roughly 80% higher than it was 10-12 year ago), especially over the past 4 or 5 years, dipshit. Just because there's a SLIGHT lull right now, doesn't mean shit. There's ALWAYS some peak and valleys in the markets. :roll:
DEATH ROW BLOW JOB wrote:It's not clear what is the point of your post. Are you suggesting that Tom Woods and Ron Paul do not believe that "liberty has its roots in theology and is defined by theology"?

Care to explain why Gary North is Director of Curriculum Development?

Don't bother dumb ass. Its fun watching you sink like a overloaded jackass who stepped into quicksand. You hitched your wagon to an ideology you do not understand.

A few links to help you comprehend the lunacy you are buying into and to help you understand why anyone who knows something about politics in the USA is laughing at you:

The Libertarian Theocrats
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v22n3 ... arian.html

Gary North (economist)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_North_%28economist%29

Rousas John Rushdoony
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rousas_John_Rushdoony

"Scary" Gary
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v22n3 ... arian.html
So, just because they're Christians who happen to be Theologians and economists, they're automatically wrong?!

Not only that but you do know most Libertarians are NOT religious, right?
DEATH ROW BLOW JOB wrote:North's study of biblical economics laid the foundation for a series of failed predictions regarding the imminent collapse of the federal government.
List ALL of his "failed" predictions, asshole. :roll:



Keep tryin' and you'll keep failin'... :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by KneelandBobDylan »

Moggio wrote:
So, just because they're Christians who happen to be Theologians and economists, they're automatically wrong?!

Not only that but you do know most Libertarians are NOT religious, right?

This statement proves without a shadow of doubt that you make shit up as you go.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

Notice the quote from Schiff:

“People believe the U.S. economy is recovering. It’s not,” said Mr. Schiff.

Moggio runs around here parroting that line.

Actually, the economy has been recovering for nearly 4 years.

Gold, Long a Secure Investment, Loses Its Luster
April 10, 2013
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/11/busin ... nted=print


By NATHANIEL POPPER

Below the streets of Lower Manhattan, in the vault of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the world’s largest trove of gold — half a million bars — has lost about $75 billion of its value. In Fort Knox, Ky., at the United States Bullion Depository, the damage totals $50 billion.

And in Pocatello, Idaho, the tiny golden treasure of Jon Norstog has dwindled, too. A $29,000 investment that Mr. Norstog made in 2011 is now worth about $17,000, a loss of 42 percent.

“I thought if worst came to worst and the government brought down the world economy, I would still have something that was worth something,” Mr. Norstog, 67, says of his foray into gold.

Gold, pride of Croesus and store of wealth since time immemorial, has turned out to be a very bad investment of late. A mere two years after its price raced to a nominal high, gold is sinking — fast. Its price has fallen 17 percent since late 2011. Wednesday was another bad day for gold: the price of bullion dropped $28 to $1,558 an ounce.

It is a remarkable turnabout for an investment that many have long regarded as one of the safest of all. The decline has been so swift that some Wall Street analysts are declaring the end of a golden age of gold. The stakes are high: the last time the metal went through a patch like this, in the 1980s, its price took 30 years to recover.

What went wrong? The answer, in part, lies in what went right. Analysts say gold is losing its allure after an astonishing 650 percent rally from August 1999 to August 2011. Fast-money hedge fund managers and ordinary savers alike flocked to gold, that haven of havens, when the world economy teetered on the brink in 2009. Now, the worst of the Great Recession has passed. Things are looking up for the economy and, as a result, down for gold. On top of that, concern that the loose monetary policy at Federal Reserve might set off inflation — a prospect that drove investors to gold — have so far proved to be unfounded.

And so Wall Street is growing increasingly bearish on gold, an investment banks and others had deftly marketed to the masses only a few years ago. On Wednesday, Goldman Sachs became the latest big bank to predict further declines, forecasting that the price of gold would sink to $1,390 within a year, down 11 percent from where it traded on Wednesday. Société Générale of France last week issued a report titled, “The End of the Gold Era,” which said the price should fall to $1,375 by the end of the year and could keep falling for years.

Granted, gold has gone through booms and busts before, including at least two from its peak in 1980, when it traded at $835, to its high in 2011. And anyone who bought gold in 1999 and held on has done far better than the average stock market investor. Even after the recent decline, gold is still up 515 percent.

But for a generation of investors, the golden decade created the illusion that the metal would keep rising forever. The financial industry seized on such hopes to market a growing range of gold investments, making the current downturn in gold felt more widely than previous ones. That triumph of marketing gold was apparent in an April 2011 poll by Gallup, which found that 34 percent of Americans thought that gold was the best long-term investment, more than another other investment category, including real estate and mutual funds.

It is hard to know just how much money ordinary Americans plowed into gold, given the array of investment vehicles, including government-minted coins, publicly traded commodity funds, mining company stocks and physical bullion. But $5 billion that flowed into gold-focused mutual funds in 2009 and 2010, according to Morningstar, helped the funds reach a peak value of $26.3 billion. Since hitting a peak in April 2011, those funds have lost half of their value.

“Gold is very much a psychological market,” said William O’Neill, a co-founder of the research firm Logic Advisors, which told its investors to get out of all gold positions in December after recommending the investment for years. “Unless there is some unforeseen development, I think the market is going lower.”

Gold’s abrupt reversal has also been painful for companies that were cashing in on the gold craze. In the last year, two gold-focused mutual funds were liquidated after years of new fund openings, Morningstar data shows. Perhaps the most famous company to come out of the 2011 gold rush, the retail trading company Goldline, has drastically cut back its advertising on cable television, lowering spending to $3.7 million from $17.8 million in 2010, according to Kantar Media.

Goldline agreed to pay $4.5 million last year to settle charges brought by the city attorney of Santa Monica, Calif., accusing the company of running a bait-and-switch operation. Goldline did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

But the worst news for gold is probably good news for the broader economy, which, though still struggling to grow, has recovered from its lows.

“As the economy improves, the demand for gold as a financial hedge declines more than the fundamental demand for gold jewelry increases,” said Daniel J. Arbess, a partner at Perella Weinberg Partners, who sold off his fund’s large stake in gold in the fourth quarter of 2012.

Investment professionals, who have focused many of their bets on gold exchange-traded funds, or E.T.F.’s, have been faster than retail investors to catch wind of gold’s changing fortune. The outflow at the most popular E.T.F., the SPDR Gold Shares, was the biggest of any E.T.F. in the first quarter of this year as hedge funds and traders pulled out $6.6 billion, according to the data firm IndexUniverse. Two prominent hedge fund managers who had taken big positions in gold E.T.F.’s, George Soros and Louis M. Bacon, sold in the last quarter of 2012, according to recent regulatory filings.

“Gold was destroyed as a safe haven, proved to be unsafe,” Mr. Soros said in an interview last week with The South China Morning Post of Hong Kong. “Because of the disappointment, most people are reducing their holdings of gold.”

Gold’s most vocal bulls say gold doubters are losing faith too easily. Peter Schiff, the chief executive of the investment firm Euro Pacific Capital, said that he still expected gold to hit $5,000 an ounce within a few years because, he said, the world is headed for a period of dangerous hyperinflation.

“People believe the U.S. economy is recovering. It’s not,” said Mr. Schiff.

The most famous investor who is standing by gold is John Paulson, the hedge fund manager who made a fortune betting against the American housing market. His $900 million gold fund reportedly dropped 26 percent in the first two months of this year.

Mr. Paulson’s losses were particularly severe because he bet heavily on gold mining companies, which have fallen more sharply than gold itself.

Mr. Norstog, in Pocatello, made a similar mistake. He put his money in a gold fund that was focused on mining company stocks.

“If I had to do it all over again, I would have just bought the gold,” Mr. Norstog said. “At least that way I could have run my fingers through the glittering coins.”
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Ron Paul's Christian Reconstructionist Roots
by Michelle Goldberg Jan 3, 2012 4:45 AM EST
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... roots.html
The surging libertarian is no stranger to the religious right’s fringe. Michelle Goldberg on his Christian Reconstructionist fans—and what they have in common with the Taliban.

On the surface, last week’s defection of Kent Sorenson, Michele Bachmann’s Iowa chair, to Ron Paul might have seemed bizarre. Bachmann, after all, is a hawkish arch-Zionist who has blasted Obama for being soft on Iran and frequently warns of the threat of a global caliphate. Paul, by contrast, wants to end aid to Israel. He argued, in an Iowa debate last month, that the real danger in Iran is one of American overreaction, prompting Bachmann to respond, “I think I have never heard a more dangerous answer for American security than the one that we just heard from Ron Paul.” Bachmann built her career crusading against gay marriage, while Paul voted against a 2006 constitutional amendment limiting marriage to partners of the opposite sex. These are extremely different candidates.
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And yet, in the final days of the Iowa campaign, Paul seems to be picking up quite a few of the ultra-right evangelicals who once supported Bachmann. A Dec. 28 CNN poll found that Paul was second only to Rick Santorum in evangelical support, with 18 percent. “Most Bachmann people would tell you their second choice is either Ron Paul or Rick Santorum, depending on why they’re for her,” says Steve Deace, an influential Iowa evangelical radio host. At the same time, he adds, “every Paul person who is hard core has told me the only other person they’d vote for is Michele.”

Sorenson’s jump, says Drew Ivers, Paul’s Iowa chair, is “a reflection of the Christian right moving toward Ron Paul. The bandwagon, so to speak, has been rolling. He got on it.”

This development is not as surprising as it might appear. Unlike Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich, Paul doesn’t demagogue about a putative war on Christianity being waged by the Obama administration. He hasn’t promised, like Rick Santorum, to use his presidency to fight against the evils of birth control.

Though a committed Baptist, Paul writes on his website, “My faith is a deeply private issue to me, and I don’t speak on it in great detail during my speeches because I want to avoid any appearance of exploiting it for political gain.”

Nevertheless, Paul’s support among the country’s most committed theocrats is deep and longstanding, something that’s poorly understood among those who simply see him as a libertarian. That’s why it wasn’t surprising when the Paul campaign touted the endorsement of Phil Kayser, a Nebraska pastor with an Iowa following who calls for the execution of homosexuals. Nor was it shocking to learn that Mike Heath, Paul’s Iowa state director, is a former board chairman of “Americans for Truth About Homosexuality,” which the Southern Poverty Law Center classifies as a hate group. Should Paul win the Iowa caucuses, it will actually be a triumph for a fundamentalist faction that has until now been considered a fringe even on the Christian right.

To understand Paul’s religious-right support, it’s necessary to wade a bit into the theological weeds. Most American evangelicals are premillennial dispensationalists. They believe that God has a special plan for the nation of Israel, which will play a key role in the end of days and the return of Christ. A smaller segment of evangelicals hews to what’s called reformed or covenant theology, which, as Deace explains, “tends to teach that in this day the church is what Israel was in the Old Testament.” In other words, Christians are the new chosen people. Covenant theologians aren’t necessarily anti-Israel, but they don’t give it any special religious significance.

Covenant theologians, it’s important to stress, aren’t more liberal than mainstream evangelicals. In fact, they’re often much further to the right. While dispensationalists believe that Christ will return imminently and establish a biblical reign on earth, covenant theologians tend to believe its man’s job to create Christ’s kingdom before he comes back. The most radical faction of covenant theology is called Christian Reconstructionism, a movement founded by R. J. Rushdoony that seeks to turn the book of Leviticus into law, imposing the death penalty for gay people, blasphemers, unchaste women, and myriad other sinners.

Mainstream figures in the religious right have typically recoiled from Reconstructionists, even as they’ve incorporated ideas that originated in the movement. In 1981, for example, Gary North, Rushdoony’s son-in-law and a key theorist of Christian Reconstructionism, wrote of the need to “smooth the transition to Christian political leadership … Christians must begin to organize politically within the present party structure, and they must begin to infiltrate the existing political order.” That’s exactly what Ralph Reed did when he set out to capture the Republican Party for the Christian Coalition. Nevertheless, writing in his 1996 book, Active Faith, Reed denounced Reconstructionism as “an authoritarian ideology that threatens the most basic civil liberties of a free and democratic society.”

Ron Paul has long been a favorite politician of Christian Reconstructionists. North was a Paul staffer during the Texas congressman’s first term and has called him the “mahatma of self-government.” As Adele Stan reported on Alternet, in 2008, Howard Phillips, a Christian Reconstructionist who founded the Constitution Party, was the keynote speaker at the rally Paul convened in the shadow of the Republican convention. (That year, Paul endorsed the Constitution Party candidate for president over John McCain.) “The people who I know who are big Ron Paul guys are old school Reconstructionists,” says Paul supporter Brian D. Nolder, the pastor of Christ the Redeemer Church in Pella, Iowa.

It might seem that Paul’s libertarianism is the very opposite of theocracy, but that’s true only if you want to impose theocracy at the federal level. In general, Christian Reconstructionists favor a radically decentralized society, with communities ruled by male religious patriarchs. Freed from the power of the Supreme Court and the federal government, they believe that local governments could adopt official religions and enforce biblical law.

“One of the things we forget is that when the Constitution was passed, even though the Bill of Rights said there was going to be no federal religions, every state in the union had basically a state religion and the Constitution was not designed to overturn that,” says Nolder. Among Reconstructionists, he says, “there’s a desire for a theocracy, but it has to be one from the bottom up, not from the top down.”

Reconstructionists take biblical morality far beyond traditional social issues. They believe that the Bible contains specific instructions on every aspect of life, including monetary policy, something they place great emphasis on. Many argue that there’s a biblical mandate for a gold standard. “The constant concern of The Old Testament law with the honesty of weights and measures was equally applicable to honest money,” writes North in his book An Introduction to Christian Economics. He claims that “legal tender laws are immoral; currency debasement is immoral; printed unbacked paper money is immoral.”

If Reconstructionism remains marginal, Deace believes that the broader movement of covenant theology is growing. “The younger generation of American Christians, a lot of them are turning away from premillennial dispensationalism” he says. “The emerging generation does not trust the traditional religious right. They think we’ve largely sold out and have compromised our faith. They’re attracted to the fact that Paul hates all the people they don’t trust and don’t like.”

Thus, Paul has been able to create one of the strangest coalitions in American political history, bringing together libertarian hipsters with those who want to subject the sexually impure to Taliban-style public stonings. (Stoning is Reconstructionists’ preferred method of execution because it is both biblical and fiscally responsible, rocks being, in North’s words, “cheap, plentiful, and convenient.”) “I described it recently as people who are mixing the philosophies espoused in Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged and John Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion,” says Deace. We’re about to learn whether that can be a recipe for victory.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

No surprise that there is a strong connection between Christian Reconstructionism and the John Birch Society.

Ron Paul speaking at the 50th anniversary of the John Birch Society.
http://youtu.be/HdASDHJ2qAc

Christian Reconstructionism
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v08n1/chrisre1.html
Reconstructionist leaders seem to have two consistent characteristics: a background in conservative Presbyterianism, and connections to the John Birch Society (JBS).

In 1973, R. J. Rushdoony compared the structure of the JBS to the "early church." He wrote in Institutes: "The key to the John Birch Society's effectiveness has been a plan of operation which has a strong resemblance to the early church; have meetings, local `lay' leaders, area supervisors or `bishops.'"

The JBS connection does not stop there. Most leading Reconstructionists have either been JBS members or have close ties to the organization. Reconstructionist literature can be found in JBS-affiliated American Opinion bookstores.

Indeed, the conspiracist views of Reconstructionist writers (focusing on the United Nations and the Council on Foreign Relations, among others) are consistent with those of the John Birch Society. A classic statement of the JBS world view, Call It Conspiracy by Larry Abraham, features a prologue and an epilogue by Reconstructionist Gary North. In fact, former JBS chairman Larry McDonald may himself have been a Reconstructionist.

As opposed to JBS beliefs, however, Reconstructionists emphasize the primacy of Christianity over politics. Gary North, for example, insists that it is the institution of the Church itself to which loyalty and energy are owed, before any other arena of life. Christians are called to Christianity first and foremost, and Christianization should extend to all areas of life. This emphasis on Christianity has political implications because, in the 1990s, it is likely that the JBS world view is persuasive to more people when packaged as a Biblical world view.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

Ron Paul Curriculum Launched by Reconstructionist Gary North and Neo-Confederate Thomas Woods
Rachel Tabachnick
Tue Apr 09, 2013 at 12:44:34 PM EST
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2013/4/9/124434/9216

Christian Post and other media sources have announced the April 6 launch of the Ron Paul Curriculum for home schoolers. Fox News described the program as "libertarian-edged" but Paul's curriculum is being produced by Gary North, a leading Christian Reconstructionist, and Thomas Woods, Jr., a self-described founder of The League of the South. This launch demonstrates Ron Paul's ongoing commitment to a worldview that is dramatically different from that of the libertarian label Paul usually receives, a worldview that has been described by Talk2action contributors as theocratic libertarianism. Those embracing this ideology prefer to call themselves "Constitutional conservatives."

The plan for a Ron Paul Curriculum has been in the works for several years. American Vision, Gary DeMar's Reconstructionist ministry, was soliciting readers in 2010 to contact Ron Paul and encourage him to support North's curriculum plan. North also wrote about the planned curriculum in 2010 on the blog of Lew Rockwell, founder of the Ludwig von Mises Institute.

[Author's note: Thanks to a comment from Talk2action reader James E. Scaminaci, I'm adding this link showing that the plan for the curriculum dates back to at least 2008, and is part of a larger agenda described by North. The page includes North's statement, "The blinder the mainstream media are to what is really going on here, the better."]

The curriculum is going to be released beginning on September 2, 2013, followed by the publication of Ron Paul's new book The School Revolution on September 17, 2013.

Ron Paul is one of the signers of the proclamation of the Alliance for Separation of School and State to "end government involvement in education." According to C. Jay Engel at Reformed Libertarian, Gary North has "given educrats their fatal blow," adding,

This is a planned, blueprinted, and excellently marketed revolution.

North is advertising the program as home schooling curriculum and also as a way to start a profitable K-12 private school. The curriculum is self-taught, requiring minimal teacher guidance, and North is not charging for K-5 participation. The 6 -12 grade curriculum is marketed for $250 dollars per student per year, plus $50 dollars per course. North describes the coursework as teaching the "Biblical principle of self-government and personal responsibility."

North is one of the leading thinkers and writers of Christian Reconstructionism, or the belief that the nation must be "reconstructed" according to biblical law. He advocates the use of the "doctrine of religious liberty" in order to advance theocracy.

"So let us be blunt about it: we must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy constructing a Bible-based social, political, and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God. Murder, abortion, and pornography will be illegal. God's law will be enforced. It will take time. A minority religion cannot do this. Theocracy must flow from the heart of a majority of citizens, just as compulsory education came only after most people had their children in schools of some sort."

This quote is from a 1982 Christian Reconstructionist publication, quoted at length in my article, "Theocratic Libertarianism: Quotes from Gary North, Ludwig von Mises Institute Scholar." Like his father-in-law and founder of modern Christian Reconstructionism - Rousas J. Rushdoony - North teaches "Biblical Economics" and blends extreme free market economics with Christian Dominionism, or the belief that Christians must take control over society and government. Both North and Thomas Woods are affiliated with the Ludwig von Mises Institute, the flagship of the Austrian School of Economics.

Woods is from Massachusetts with degrees from Harvard and Columbia, but he has described himself as one of "the founders of the League of the South." He is also affiliated with the Abbeville Institute, described by the Chronicle of Higher Education as a group of 64 scholars nostalgic for the Old South and Secession. Time Magazine described the institute, founded by Emory University professor Donald Livingston, as a group of "Lincoln loathers." The Southern Poverty Law Center has listed the Abbeville Institute founder as one of the leaders in the modern neo-Confederate movement and, as described in a Chronicle of Higher Education article, pointed out the following quote in its mission statement.

"Rarely these days, even on Southern campuses, is it possible to acknowledge the achievements of white people in the South."


Woods is a convert to Catholicism and credited as one of the intellectual leaders in promoting Austrian School economics to Catholics. He is the author of The Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy. In the The Poisoned Spring of Economic Libertarianism, Catholic author Angus Sibley writes about the incompatibility of "Catholic Social Teaching" with the Austrian School of Economics. A chapter titled "Libertarian Catholicism?" focuses on Woods, Michael Novak (American Enterprise Institute) and Thomas Sirico (Acton Institute) as leading the shift in Catholicism to "market idolatry."

Woods current bio does not mention his role with the League of the South, and he has apparently tried to purge the internet of much of his history with publications like the Southern Partisan. For example, the current link to a 1997 Southern Partisan article by Woods titled "Christendom's Last Stand" states, "Removed by request of the author." In this article Woods wrote,

"But the growth of the Southern League and the continuing popularity of Southern Partisan reminds us that many Southerners are prepared to defend their civilization, and a people that still possesses even a spark of resistance, a sense of history and tradition, an attachment to the locality, and a strong Christian faith -- is a potential threat to the Left's new order.

Indeed, Southerners have had too many strange philosophies shoved down their throats already to go quietly in the face of this one. As former presidential candidate Pat Buchanan explained, speaking not of Southerners in particular but of his supporters in general: "We love the old republic, and when we hear phrases like 'New World Order,' we release the safety catches on our revolvers." Make no mistake: the persecutors of the South hate her today for the same masons [sic] they hated her in 1860. An 1868 article in the pro-South periodical The Land We Love summed them up quite well:

"Her conservatism, her love of the Constitution; her attachment to the old usages of society, her devotion to principles, her faith in Bible truth -- all these involved her in a long and bloody war with that radicalism which seeks to overthrow all that is venerable, respectable and of good repute."


So the War Between the States, far from a conflict over mere material interests, was for the South a struggle against an atheistic individualism and an unrelenting rationalism in politics and religion, in favor of a Christian understanding of authority, social order and theology itself. The intelligent Left knows this, and even the incurably stupid, like Carol Moseley-Braun, must at least sense it. For all their ignorant blather about slavery and civil rights, what truly enrages most liberals about the Confederate Battle Flag is its message of defiance. They see in it the remnants of a traditional society determined to resist cultural and political homogenization, and refusing to be steamrolled by the forces of progress.

I have been a Northerner for my entire 24 years. But when we reflect on what was really at stake in the "late unpleasantness," we can join with Alexander Stephens in observing that "the cause of the South is the cause of us all."


Below the article is a brief bio.

Thomas E. Woods Jr., a founding member of the League of the South, is a doctoral candidate in history at Columbia University in New York City.

Woods' 2005 book, The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History was reviewed by Cathy Young of Reason Magazine who also managed to access Woods' 1997 article for Southern Partisan. Young wrote in the review,

In a 1997 essay, he writes that the Confederacy's defeat was the ''real watershed from which we can trace many of the destructive trends" in modern America. He vilifies abolitionists and endorses a Southern theologian's description of slavery's defenders as ''friends of order and regulated freedom."

Woods' 2005 bestseller was also reviewed by Max Boot, who remarked that the New York Times describes Woods book as a "neocon retelling of this nation's back story." Max Boot review, written for the flagship publication of neoconservatism- the Weekly Standard, - is titled "Incorrect History" and states,

Soon enough, however, the guide starts to slip from conventional history into a Bizarro world where every state has the right to disregard any piece of federal legislation it doesn't like or even to secede. "There is, obviously, no provision in the Constitution that explicitly authorizes nullification," the author concedes, but Woods nevertheless is convinced that this right exists. His source? Mainly the writings of the Southern pro-slavery politician John C. Calhoun.

There is no love lost between Ron Paulites and the neoconservatives of the Weekly Standard. This is perhaps one of the reasons that young people across the nation who are opposed to America's ongoing wars have found Paul appealing. However, the enemy of one's enemy is not always a friend, and in this case the Paulites' opposition to neoconservatives does not make them friends of progressivism or even classical libertarianism for that matter.

Hopefully Paul's latest venture will help young Paulites across the nation to understand that their hero's anti-war stance is indeed rooted in a theocratic and neo-Confederate worldview.

Also see:

-An explanation of Ron Paul's brand of libertarianism.
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2012/1/4/234938/0298

-Frederick Clarkson's series on Reconstructionism in The Public Eye of Political Research Associates.
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v08n1/chrisre1.html

-An explanation of the "Theocratic Libertarian" view of slavery.
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2010/7/13/115425/990

-An example of an existing textbook from a similar worldview titled America's Providential History.
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2013/3/14/11144/4794

-Examples of Rushdoony's theocratic libertarianism at work in the nation's statehouses.
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2011/3/15/142615/800
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

Gary North: The ‘Paleo-Libertarian’ Taliban Writing Ron Paul’s Curriculum
By Daniel Bier On 04.08.201
http://blog.skepticallibertarian.com/20 ... n-taliban/

Let this serve as a warning to the libertarian and Christian homeschooling communities: Gary North, the man who is writing and publishing the “Ron Paul Curriculum,” is certifiably nuts. North subscribes to an ultra-ultra-fundamentalist religious ideology called “Christian Reconstructionism,” which aspires to establish a global Christian theocracy and reinstitute all of Old Testament law. I am not exaggerating.

North, who has been lurking around the fringes of the libertarian community for decades, has reemerged from his cave to pen a homeschooling curriculum under Ron Paul’s name, based “first and foremost” on “biblical principles.” (Tom Woods, who has done some writing for Dr. Paul before, is also involved in the project.)

Paul’s involvement in the project appears to be minimal, and statements allegedly from him on the curriculum site are written in the style and voice of Gary North (peppered with transparently self-conscious first-person references to remind the reader that this is really Paul, not North, speaking). The site itself appears to be modeled, if not an actual clone, of North’s own subscription website. For instance, “Ron Paul’s” 100% guarantee reads a lot like North’s own, and the domain RonPaulCurriculum.com was first registered in 2010 to “GaryNorth.com, Inc.” The fee for the curriculum is $25 to start, $250 a year after that, plus $50 per course. (I notice that for all the grousing about “worthless FRNs,” he still expects to be paid in dollars.)

While none of this is wrong in itself (high-profile people often lend their names to their friends’ projects–and it is North’s project), parents should be concerned about about Gary North, and what his agenda is in educating their children. North has been quite explicit about this in the past, and he laid out his ultimate goals in an article in Christianity and Civilization, which you can find on his website:

Everyone talks about religious liberty, but no one believes it. So let us be blunt about it: we must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political, and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God.

North wrote this totalitarian screed in 1982, but, as he said then, he’s playing the long game: “It will take time. A minority religion cannot do this. Theocracy must flow from the hearts of a majority of citizens.” Although he despises the notion of religious liberty, he accepts its use as a strategic deception (“As a tactic, it is legitimate; we are jockeying for power. We are buying time”) until he and his fellow Reconstructionists are in a position to seize power and destroy the “enemies of God.”

fter using homeschooling and Christian schools to indoctrinate an army of fundamentalists ready to abolish secular government, what sort of state does North advocate putting in its place? Not to put too fine a point on it, but the Taliban have probably come closest to North’s ideal Christian government.

Walter Olson summarized people who can expect to die under the Reconstructionist regime:

Those who would face execution include not only gays but a very long list of others: blasphemers, heretics, apostate Christians, people who cursed or struck their parents, females guilty of “unchastity before marriage,” “incorrigible” juvenile delinquents, adulterers, and (probably) telephone psychics. And that’s to say nothing of murderers and those guilty of raping married women or “betrothed virgins.” Adulterers, among others, might meet their doom by being publicly stoned…

Say what? Children should be killed? According to North, this isn’t just acceptable, it’s mandatory. In his book The Sinai Strategy*, he writes:

Then is there a general prohibition against cursing? On what grounds could a church prosecute a cursing rebel? … A curse is a threat: calling the wrath of God down upon someone. … Restitution could be imposed by the civil magistrate to defend a church or an individual who is victimized by cursing.

He suggests that if someone then curses at the “civil magistrate,” public flogging (“up to forty lashes”) is an appropriate response. And so on. Bear in mind, this is not a historical analysis of what these laws meant to the ancient Israelites–this is his interpretation of what Scripture requires of Christians today.
This is what they want for all of us.

This is what they want for all of us.

And did you catch that bit about “being publicly stoned” earlier? That is not a metaphor. Oh no, North is an enthusiastic promoter of public and communal executions by hurling rocks at people until their brains are bashed in and their bodies lie battered to a pulp. North explains:

Why stoning? There are many reasons. First, the implements of execution are available to everyone at virtually no cost. Second, no one blow can be traced to any person. In other words, no one citizen can regard himself as “the executioner,” the sole cause of another man’s death. Psychologically, this is important; it relieves potential guilt problems in the mind of a sensitive person.

… Those who abstain from the “dirty business” of enforcing God’s law have a tendency to elevate their behavior as being more moral than the executioner’s, where in point of fact such abstention is itself immoral. … Executions are community projects–not with spectators who watch a professional executioner do `his’ duty, but rather with actual participants.


Translation: “First, it’s cheap, and with so many people to kill, you’ll need to be economical. Second, if you’re ‘sensitive’ about the prospect of beating a child to death with a rock, it’s really better to do it as part of a group, so you don’t feel ‘guilty’ (Ha! As if!) about doing God’s ‘dirty business.’ Those stuck-up humanists think they’re better than us infanticidal lunatics, but we know it would be wrong not to participate in gruesome and ritualistic murder! But most importantly, have fun–executing blasphemers is really about bringing the whole community together.”

He concludes by explaining western civilization’s rejection of stoning and capital punishment as “God-hating humanistic concepts of justice” replacing “the infallible Old Testament” (how dreadful that would be). By North’s account, “God-denying economists” have somehow convinced Christians that a violent mob bludgeoning someone to death with rocks in the town square is “sinister” (can you imagine?).

That modern Christians never consider the possibility of the re-introduction of stoning for capital crimes indicates how thoroughly humanistic concepts of punishment have influenced the thinking of Christians. If humanistic concepts of punishment have persuaded Christians that there was something sinister about the Old Testament’s specified mode of execution, then we should not be surprised to discover that humanistic concepts of justice, including economic justice, have also become influential in the thinking of Christians. Christians have voluntarily transferred their allegiance from the infallible Old Testament to contemporary God-hating and God-denying criminologists and economists.

If this doesn’t seem like the tame, gentle Christianity you’re familiar with, that’s because Reconstructionists reject the idea that Jesus somehow repealed or replaced Mosaic Law. Olson explains:

American evangelicals have tended to hold that the bloodthirsty pre-Talmudic Mosaic code, with its quick resort to capital punishment, its flogging and stoning and countenancing of slavery, was mostly if not entirely superseded by the milder precepts of the New Testament (the “dispensationalist” view, as it’s called). Not so, say the Reconstructionists. They reckon only a relative few dietary and ritualistic observances were overthrown.

So all those pages and pages of killing and beating and torturing that you’re accustomed to skipping over in the early pages of your Bible, that’s all still required, according to North and the Reconstructionists. Even the hardcore evangelicals are scared of these guys.

It is abundantly clear that Gary North does not have a clue what about constitutes a civil society. This is a man whose worldview is so violent, bigoted, intolerant, homophobic, sexist, dogmatic, and bloodthirsty that it makes the Ku Klux Klan look like the NAACP. I wouldn’t feel comfortable letting my children in the same room with him, much less pay him money to indoctrinate them with his views on government, Western civilization, and the Bible. A man with North’s history would be more appropriate as a guest lecturer at the Westboro Baptist Church than a representative of classical liberalism.

We don’t know what the “Ron Paul Curriculum” will consist of yet, but if history is any guide, Dr. Paul should be more careful about picking his ghost writers and what he chooses to lend his name to. I certainly hope this project doesn’t turn out to be another ugly, public scandal for the libertarian brand–and maybe it won’t–but it would be behoove Dr. Paul and Dr. Woods to extricate themselves from their involvement with North before they find themselves “training up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government.”

* Ed. note: North deleted this and other sections from the version of Sinai now on his website, but you can download the original here.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

The Gary North Videos:

"This video is unlisted. Only those with the link can see it. " <-----shady as fuck

Ron Paul Curriculum: Introduction
http://youtu.be/dei_bt22lIY

Ron Paul Curriculum: High School Preparation Course
http://youtu.be/3JpIcZsCKeo
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by Moggio »

KneelandBobDylan wrote:
Moggio wrote:
So, just because they're Christians who happen to be Theologians and economists, they're automatically wrong?!

Not only that but you do know most Libertarians are NOT religious, right?
This statement proves without a shadow of doubt that you make shit up as you go.
This statement proves without a shadow of a doubt that you don't have a fucking CLUE what you're talking about.



-------------------------------------



You didn't answer my questions, DRBJ. :lol:

I'm certainly not religious, nor do I EVER care to be. But again, how does this make Ron Paul automatically wrong? Ron Paul has accurately predicted the Housing Bubble Crisis, the Iraq War, the drastic increase and value of Gold over the past 10-12 years, arguably 9-11, etc., etc., etc.

Also, your extremely leftist and bias propaganda machine can interpret things however which way they want to. However, the home schooling curriculum is called the Ron Paul Curriculum, not the Gary North Curriculum (despite the fact Gary is involved in the project). Nor does it apparently comprise the quantity of Biblical material that you make it out to include.

And ANYONE who thinks that there's anything but an ARTIFICIAL recovery going on right now, considering the Fed is now printing $85 BILLION per month (up from $40 BILLION per month), and that the US is borrowing $3 BILLION+ per day from creditors like China, Japan (who are already in recession themselves), etc., and that interest/inflation rates aren't ARTIFICIAL manipulated by the Fed at 0% or nearly 0% in order to prevent the Currency/Treasuries Bubble from bursting quicker than it otherwise would, have their heads so far up their asses, that the only light they'll be seeing any time soon is through their nostrils. Oh...and did I already mention that more Americans are on food stamps than EVER before (48 million, as opposed to 32 million 4 years ago) and that the Employment Rate is the lowest it's been since May of 1979 at 63.3%?!

Lastly, not even ONE quote or statement above that you've posted disproves ANYTHING I've stated in this thread. But keep posting away, it's always quite the entertaining show...

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...Keep tryin' and you'll keep failin'...:lol: :lol: :lol:
ONE NATION UNDER SOCIALISM

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Because of Obamination's spending & socialist BS, America and much of the world will endure one of the worst depressions in history in 5...4...3...2...
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by KneelandBobDylan »

Moggio wrote:
KneelandBobDylan wrote:
Moggio wrote:
So, just because they're Christians who happen to be Theologians and economists, they're automatically wrong?!

Not only that but you do know most Libertarians are NOT religious, right?
This statement proves without a shadow of doubt that you make shit up as you go.
This statement proves without a shadow of a doubt that you don't have a fucking CLUE what you're talking about.



-------------------------------------



You didn't answer my questions, DRBJ. :lol:

I'm certainly not religious, nor do I EVER care to be. But again, how does this make Ron Paul automatically wrong? Ron Paul has accurately predicted the Housing Bubble Crisis, the Iraq War, the drastic increase and value of Gold over the past 10-12 years, arguably 9-11, etc., etc., etc.

Also, your extremely leftist and bias propaganda machine can interpret things however which way they want to. However, the home schooling curriculum is called the Ron Paul Curriculum, not the Gary North Curriculum (despite the fact Gary is involved in the project). Nor does it apparently comprise the quantity of Biblical material that you make it out to include.

And ANYONE who thinks that there's anything but an ARTIFICIAL recovery going on right now, considering the Fed is now printing $85 BILLION per month (up from $40 BILLION per month), and that the US is borrowing $3 BILLION+ per day from creditors like China, Japan (who are already in recession themselves), etc., and that interest/inflation rates aren't ARTIFICIAL manipulated by the Fed at 0% or nearly 0% in order to prevent the Currency/Treasuries Bubble from bursting quicker than it otherwise would, have their heads so far up their asses, that the only light they'll be seeing any time soon is through their nostrils. Oh...and did I already mention that more Americans are on food stamps than EVER before (48 million, as opposed to 32 million 4 years ago) and that the Employment Rate is the lowest it's been since May of 1979 at 63.3%?!

Lastly, not even ONE quote or statement above that you've posted disproves ANYTHING I've stated in this thread. But keep posting away, it's always quite the entertaining show...

Image


...Keep tryin' and you'll keep failin'...:lol: :lol: :lol:

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90% of people believe in a god, so how can "most" libertarians not be religious.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

GOLD NOV 6, 2012: $1,723.30/oz
GOLD April 12, 2012: $1,485.60/oz

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Lust for Gold
April 11, 2013
By PAUL KRUGMAN

News flash: Recent declines in the price of gold, which is off about 17 percent from its peak, show that this price can go down as well as up. You may consider this an obvious point, but, as an article in The Times on Thursday reports, it has come as a rude shock to many small gold investors, who imagined that they were buying the safest of all assets.

And thereby hangs a tale. One of the central facts about modern America is that everything is political; on the right, in particular, people choose their views about everything, from environmental science to gun safety, to suit their political prejudices. And the remarkable recent rise of “goldbuggism,” in the teeth of all the evidence, shows that this politicization can influence investments as well as voting.

What do I mean by goldbuggism? Not the notion that buying gold sometimes makes sense. Gold has been a very good investment since the early 2000s, and it’s probably not all bubble. One way to think about this is that gold is like a very long-term bond that’s protected from inflation; and actual long-term inflation-protected bonds have also seen big price increases, reflecting a general perception that there aren’t enough alternative good investments.

No, being a goldbug means asserting that gold offers unique security in troubled times; it also means asserting that all would be well if we abolished the Federal Reserve and returned to the good old gold standard, in which the value of the dollar was fixed in terms of gold and that was that. And both forms of goldbuggism soared after 2008.

In the wake of the financial crisis — and to a considerable extent even now — to watch business news on TV, especially on Fox, was to see a lot of talking heads touting gold, not to mention many, many ads from the likes of Goldline. Many Americans were convinced: A third of those polled by Gallup in 2011 declared that gold was the best long-term investment.

At the same time, calls for a return to the gold standard proliferated, and not just among marginal figures. Indeed, the 2012 Republican platform effectively demanded a return to gold, calling for a commission to “investigate possible ways to set a fixed value for the dollar” (which it took as self-evidently desirable), and making it clear that the preferred route involved a “metallic basis” for the currency.

So the financial crisis of 2008 brought a surge in gold fever (although that surge has abated a bit since 2011). But why?

After all, historically, gold has been anything but a safe investment. Sometimes it yields big gains, as it did in the late 1970s and again between 2001 and 2011. But that 1970s run-up was followed by an epic plunge, with the real value of gold falling by more than two-thirds.

Meanwhile, the modern world’s closest equivalent to the classical gold standard is the euro, which puts European countries back under more or less the same constraints they faced when gold ruled. It’s true that the European Central Bank can print money if it chooses to, but individual countries, like nations on the gold standard, can’t. And who would hold up these countries’ recent experience as an example of something we’d like to emulate?

So how can we rationalize the modern goldbug position? Basically, it depends on the claim that runaway inflation is just around the corner.

Why have so many people found this claim persuasive? John Maynard Keynes famously dismissed the gold standard as a “barbarous relic,” noting the absurdity of yoking the fortunes of a modern industrial society to the supply of a decorative metal. But he also acknowledged that “gold has become part of the apparatus of conservatism and is one of the matters which we cannot expect to see handled without prejudice.”

And so it remains to this day. Conservative-minded people tend to support a gold standard — and to buy gold — because they’re very easily persuaded that “fiat money,” money created on a discretionary basis in an attempt to stabilize the economy, is really just part of the larger plot to take away their hard-earned wealth and give it to you-know-who.

But the runaway inflation that was supposed to follow reckless money-printing — inflation that the usual suspects have been declaring imminent for four years and more — keeps not happening. For a while, rising gold prices helped create some credibility for the goldbugs even as their predictions about everything else proved wrong, but now gold as an investment has turned sour, too. So will we be seeing prominent goldbugs change their views, or at least lose a lot of their followers?

I wouldn’t bet on it. In modern America, as I suggested at the beginning, everything is political; and goldbuggism, which fits so perfectly with common political prejudices, will probably continue to flourish no matter how wrong it proves.

================
Twenty-one Reasons to sell gold, one reason to buy gold

Moggio, meet Societe Generale’s big (bearish) scorecard on “the end of the gold era”


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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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The Christian fundamentalism behind Ron Paul's home-schooling curriculum
Do supporters of the small-government libertarian realise how wedded Paul is to a rigidly dogmatic religious conservatism?
Sarah Posner
guardian.co.uk, Friday 12 April 2013 08.30 EDT


Former Representative Ron Paul's announcement this week of the upcoming launch of his eponymous home-schooling curriculum makes clear that the end of his career as a gadfly Republican presidential candidate does not spell the end of his role at the helm of a movement aimed at transforming the way Americans think about government – and God.

The Tea Party godfather has always enjoyed a devoted following of home-schoolers, a relatively quiet segment of the Paul coalition that frequently has flown under the media's radar. After all, one-time Republican candidates better known for their hyper-competitive citation of the Bible, like Mike Huckabee, Michele Bachmann, or Rick Santorum, make a much bigger spectacle of their support from advocates of shielding your kids from the evils of secular public school education.

While Paul's dedication to the home-schooling cause is emblematic of his widely known views of limited government, the "Ron Paul Curriculum" reveals the far-reaching nature of his religious beliefs.

Paul's advocacy of home-schooling is not just about getting kids out of what home-schoolers disparagingly call "government schools". It's not just about teaching them that government should be small and largely inconsequential. It's based on the idea that the government is largely illegitimate, and that one must create a society in which the populace will follow "moral" (that is, biblical) laws, rather than the laws created by an overzealous, tyrannical government.

When they talk about government tyranny, they're not just talking about statutes and regulations: they're talking about supreme court case law, too. Paul, for example, believes that Roe v Wade is illegitimate, and that states should be able to criminalize abortion, regardless of what the supreme court has to say.

Paul's new director of curriculum development is Gary North, the son-in-law of Christian Reconstructionism founder RJ Rushdoony. Reconstructionism is a movement based on the claim that God granted only limited "jurisdiction" to government, and that biblical law should supplant civil law in all but a handful of circumstances.

Rushdoony was one of the first advocates of Christian home-schooling and a developer of its early curriculums, according to Julie Ingersoll, associate professor of religious studies at the University of North Florida, who is writing a book on Christian Reconstructionism. He later acted as an expert witness in court cases, laying the groundwork for claims that government refusal to allow parents to home-school their children was a violation of the free exercise clause of the first amendment, by arguing that public school infringed on their religious beliefs. Says Ingersoll:

"He laid the intellectual foundation, he popularized it by traveling around and talking to Christian organizations, Christian schools, and churches, and then by testifying in court cases."

North has described his late father-in-law's 1963 book, The Messianic Character of American Education, as "a highly condensed, thoroughly documented, and theologically astute critique of the educational philosophies of over two dozen of the major founders and philosophers of American progressive education, from Horace Mann to John Dewey. Nothing like it had ever been published before, and nothing equal to it has been published since." A leading architect of a Reconstructionist view of economics – and a former congressional staffer to Paul – North says in an introductory video on the Ron Paul curriculum website that it will "teach the biblical principle of self-government and personal responsibility".

That sounds like standard religious right fare, and to some extent it is – except that Ron Paul's religious followers believe the religious right known within the beltway power structure has betrayed fundamental beliefs and allowed itself to be co-opted by Washington politics. That's why you'll hear Ron Paul's religious followers say that groups like the American Family Association and Focus on the Family are "not my type of Christian", or complain that the religious right is "a hollow creature" that has "lost its moorings".

They might explain to you how they believe that slavery can be biblical. Instead of debating cuts to the federal budget, they'll talk to you about creating an alternative currency, based on the Book of Deuteronomy.

Ron Paul has never identified as a Reconstructionist, but he has been friendly with the Constitution party, founded (as the US Taxpayer party) on Reconstructionist ideology, by former Reagan administration official Howard Phillips, a follower of Rushdoony. Paul has, however, stated his adherence to Reconstructionism's bedrock idea.

Asked in 2007 by radio host John Lofton, "would you agree that biblically speaking it is not the role of the civil government at any level, federal, state or local, to house or feed or clothe or educate anybody?" Paul replied, "That would be my personal belief." He went on to criticize the left, with whom "I work at times … on some issues of civil liberties and foreign policy", who "don't see for a minute what they do with economic policy and welfare policy is the false use of force, at a government level, to try to achieve certain goals". The notion that government is inherently coercive – including through public education – lies at the heart of Paul's views on issues ranging from civil rights to gun control.

Among those slated to be instructors for Paul's new curriculum is Paul favorite Thomas Woods, a Harvard-educated historian long criticized for his ties to neo-Confederate groups, a charge he has frequently tries to deflect. Cathy Young, writing in 2005 in the libertarian magazine Reason, excoriated Woods for being a neo-Confederate rather than a libertarian:

"He favorably quotes a 19th-century southern theologian who described the defenders of slavery as 'friends of order and regulated freedom, and portrays the civil war as 'a struggle against an atheistic individualism and an unrelenting rationalism in politics and religion, in favor of a Christian understanding of authority, social order and theology itself.' The southern cause, he concludes, is 'the cause of us all'."

When I was in Iowa in 2012, just before the caucuses, Woods' books were all the rage among Paul's religious followers. Pastor Brian Nolder of Pella, Iowa, who endorsed Paul in the caucuses, told me that Woods' book, Who Killed the Constitution? (answer: the government), "started me on the path" of supporting Paul. I asked Nolder if he thought we'd see start to see more religious supporters of Paul like himself.

"You have a Rand Paul coming up in the wings, and, I would suspect that just like the fruit of the Reagan Revolution was people getting involved in the grassroots leading to the Christian Coalition and the success in the 90s," he said, there would be more of what he described as "conservative libertarians" running for local office. With the Ron Paul-branded home-school curriculum starting in kindergarten, some future candidates are getting an early start.

==============
comments:
jae426

12 April 2013 1:36pm
Recommend
46

No, they don't. On another forum I debated this with a Ron Paul acolyte who has a religious zeal about libertarianism, but no religious convictions about God.

When I pointed out that Paul himself is a religious fundamentalist, he became as predictably hostile as you'd expect somebody who has replaced passion with reason. No, he's not, the zealot protested. He just goes to church, like most Americans.

Then I posted the link to the video where Paul dismisses as utterly preposterous the idea that man wasn't created by God a few thousand years ago, and may have evolved from lesser primates.

Silence.

These people are so ignorant they don't even know how much they don't know.
==
dubo6524

12 April 2013 1:42pm
Recommend
47

Ron Paul has advocated religious tests for government office. Anyone who doesn't know what a religious nut he is hasn't been paying attention to what he advocates (which of course, includes almost all of his supporters).
==
JimNolan

12 April 2013 3:07pm
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10

This is all good news. The American hard-right has become a black hole, where the Randian nihilists and the Creationists and the Confederates and the Truthers nd the homophobes are all clinging to each other for comfort because they can see they're on the wrong side of history.
==
JustOneWay

12 April 2013 3:17pm
Recommend
9

This article goes very easy on the writer of the Ron Paul curriculum.
Apparently, Gary North, the man writing the Ron Paul curriculum is someone who hypocritically believes that religious liberty should be used to... ....overthrow religious liberty.
Gary North also believes we should all enthusiastically embrace public stonings for old testament crimes, such as children being insolent to their parents.
Those who think Ron Paul is an OK sort of chap might want to ponder their associations with these people.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Creationist Loon Ron Paul Thinks The Bible Dictates Monetary Policy
http://youtu.be/zhIAYh-2LX0
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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DEATH ROW JOE wrote:Creationist Loon Ron Paul Thinks The Bible Dictates Monetary Policy
http://youtu.be/zhIAYh-2LX0
^^^^^^^^^^
Ron Paul:
"The bible says we're supposed to have HONEST currency!"

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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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KneelandBobDylan wrote:90% of people believe in a god, so how can "most" libertarians not be religious.
90% of the world aren't Libertarians, moron. :lol:




------------------------------------------



ONE. MORE. TIME. FOR. THE. WORLD.:


You didn't answer my questions, DRBJ.

I'm certainly not religious, nor do I EVER care to be. But again, how does this make Ron Paul automatically wrong? Ron Paul has accurately predicted the Housing Bubble Crisis, the Iraq War, the drastic increase and value of Gold over the past 10-12 years, arguably 9-11, etc., etc., etc.

Also, your extremely leftist and bias propaganda machine can interpret things however which way they want to. However, the home schooling curriculum is called the Ron Paul Curriculum, not the Gary North Curriculum (despite the fact Gary is involved in the project). Nor does it apparently comprise the quantity of Biblical material that you make it out to include.

And ANYONE who thinks that there's anything but an ARTIFICIAL recovery going on right now, considering the Fed is now printing $85 BILLION per month (up from $40 BILLION per month), and that the US is borrowing $3 BILLION+ per day from creditors like China, Japan (who are already in recession themselves), etc., and that interest/inflation rates aren't ARTIFICIAL manipulated by the Fed at 0% or nearly 0% in order to prevent the Currency/Treasuries Bubble from bursting quicker than it otherwise would, have their heads so far up their asses, that the only light they'll be seeing any time soon is through their nostrils. Oh...and did I already mention that more Americans are on food stamps than EVER before (48 million, as opposed to 32 million 4 years ago) and that the Employment Rate is the lowest it's been since May of 1979 at 63.3%?!

You're obviously too BUTTHURT over my constant OWNAGE. And you're also too stupid to realize that Gold has SKY-ROCKETED over the past 10-12 years, increasing roughly 80%. Not only that, but you didn't mention that ALL markets experience lulls from time to time...and that there are NO exceptions. And just because there's been a lull in Gold over the past 6 or so months means JACK SHIT ALL.

Lastly, not even ONE quote or statement above that you've posted disproves ANYTHING I've stated in this thread. But keep posting away, it's always quite the entertaining show...

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Keep tryin' and you'll keep failin'... :lol: :lol: :lol:
ONE NATION UNDER SOCIALISM

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Because of Obamination's spending & socialist BS, America and much of the world will endure one of the worst depressions in history in 5...4...3...2...
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Ron Paul's Home Schooling Curriculum Will Turn Your Kid into a Little Ron Paul
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics ... lum/64047/
Ron Paul's revolution is not yet complete. The two-time presidential candidate has launched a home schooling curriculum which promises to get your elementary school student up-to-speed on the hijacking of the Constitution in no time. Seriously. It promises that.

The curriculum was announced on Sunday in a post from Paul himself.

A common feature of authoritarian regimes is the criminalization of alternatives to government-controlled education. Dictators recognize the danger that free thought poses to their rule, and few things promote the thinking of “unapproved” thoughts like an education controlled by parents instead of the state. That is why the National Socialist (Nazi) government of Germany outlawed homeschooling in 1938.

Et cetera. The announcement didn't generate a ton of press coverage for some reason. Fox News offered a skeptical assessment, for example.

We are more excited, primarily because of the introductory video. It stars Gary North, research assistant to then-Rep. Paul in 1976, and now Director of Curriculum Development for The Ron Paul Curriculum. Do not adjust your screen; it does indeed bear the aesthetic of a 1960s educational filmstrip, down to North himself. It is not clear whether or not this is meant to be ironic.

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North outlines the four goals that he and Paul agreed upon for this curriculum. The following are direct quotes.

It should teach the Biblical principle of self-government and personal responsibility, which is also the foundation of the free market economy.
It should be based on a detailed study of the history of liberty as well as liberty's rivals, in Western civilization and the United States.
It should provide a thorough understanding of Austrian school economics.
It should be an academically rigorous curriculum that is tied to primary source documents — not textbooks. Textbooks are screened by committees. They dumb down the material.

If your child completes the entire curriculum — which runs from K through 12 — here is what he or she should be able to do, again quoting.

Speak in public and speak confidently
Write effectively
Run a website
Operate a YouTube channel
Understand mathematics
Understand basic science
Start a home business
Defend the free market system intellectually
Understand the history of Western civilization
Understand American history
Understand the U.S. Constitution and how it has been hijacked
Understand the interaction between literature and historical development
Understand Christianity's influence in the West
Understand Austrian-school economics

That's the order in which North presents the outcomes, but it's not clear whether or not it represents the order of importance. Regardless, your now-five-year-old should, by the year 2026, be able to operate a YouTube channel.

Let's get down to brass tacks. Echoing the business model of other addictive substances, the Ron Paul Curriculum provides grades K through 5 for free. After that, you have to pay — $250 a year. The curriculum tools are a combination of PDFs and YouTube videos, with prescribed periods for testing and writing assignments. Or, they will be. The site is a bit light on content right now.

The kindergarten course, for example, is slated for completion in September. Its author, Cheryl Page, hints that it "will show mothers the basics of teaching phonics. It will be video-based, with instructions for the mothers on how to teach every aspect of basic phonics to their child." Mother not included.

The rest of the free curricula — first through fifth grades — are incomplete, but North offers other outlets for home-schooling. "Why should I promote a rival product?" he asks. "Because this site is not complete."

North does provide a (for pay) course in high school preparation, including:

STUDY TECHNIQUES. Lesson #3: Your Home Office
STUDY TECHNIQUES. Lesson #4: Follow Instructions
HOW TO WRITE. Lesson #11: The Book Review ("This is a crucial skill. Learn it early.")

North's desired outcome is not that students get a high school degree. His vision is as follows:

If a student finishes high school at (say) 16 or 17, then it's time to find a mentor who will apprentice the high school graduate locally. The student gets a technical skill that has a market.

Meanwhile, the student takes CLEP and DSST exams to quiz out of college. By age 20, the student is a college graduate, which the student has paid for with wages from the apprenticeship job. He or she is ready for a career.


Apprenticeship, not college, is his aim. ("The trade unions resisted this. But they are dead now, outside of government jobs.")

Not that college would be an option for your YouTube-savvy progeny. The curriculum is not accredited. Why not? Because North doesn't believe that it should "crawl on our bellies to the state." He writes

It is a sign of the almost overwhelming surrender of parents to the state that the parents, while saying they are fleeing from the state's schools, desperately want to use a curriculum that is accredited by the state. They are terrified of their own ability, meaning their inability, to teach their own children. They have no confidence in themselves. They do not have confidence that they can look at a curriculum, and then decide whether that curriculum is good or bad. The state has completely bamboozled them.

This follows a list of six invalid "assumptions" about accreditation. (North likes lists.)

The target date for the full curriculum is late 2015. Assuming that the kindergarten one goes up as scheduled, there's no reason to get started now. "Check back regularly to see if what you want is here," North offers. Because, hey, "the price is right."

It is not clear whether or not the curriculum will include a unit on the civil rights movement.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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Invitation to a Stoning
Getting cozy with theocrats
Walter Olson from the November 1998 issue
http://reason.com/archives/1998/11/01/i ... -a-stoning

For connoisseurs of surrealism on the American right, it's hard to beat an exchange that appeared about a decade ago in the Heritage Foundation magazine Policy Review. It started when two associates of the Rev. Jerry Falwell wrote an article which criticized Christian Reconstructionism, the influential movement led by theologian Rousas John (R.J.) Rushdoony, for advocating positions that even they as committed fundamentalists found "scary." Among Reconstructionism's highlights, the article cited support for laws "mandating the death penalty for homosexuals and drunkards." The Rev. Rushdoony fired off a letter to the editor complaining that the article had got his followers' views all wrong: They didn't intend to put drunkards to death.

Ah, yes, accuracy does count. In a world run by Rushdoony followers, sots would escape capital punishment--which would make them happy exceptions indeed. Those who would face execution include not only gays but a very long list of others: blasphemers, heretics, apostate Christians, people who cursed or struck their parents, females guilty of "unchastity before marriage," "incorrigible" juvenile delinquents, adulterers, and (probably) telephone psychics. And that's to say nothing of murderers and those guilty of raping married women or "betrothed virgins." Adulterers, among others, might meet their doom by being publicly stoned--a rather abrupt way for the Clinton presidency to end.

Mainstream outlets like the Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post are finally starting to take note of the influence Rushdoony and his followers have exerted for years in American conservative circles. But a second part of the story, of particular interest to readers of this magazine, is the degree to which Reconstructionists have gained prominence in libertarian causes, ranging from hard-money economics to the defense of home schooling. "Christian economist" Gary North, Rushdoony's son-in-law and star polemicist of the Reconstructionist movement, is widely cited as a spokesman for free markets, if not exactly free minds; he even served for a brief time on the House staff of Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), the Libertarian Party presidential nominee in 1988, when Paul was a member of Congress in the '70s. For his part, Rushdoony has blandly described himself to the press as a critic of "statism" and even as a "Christian libertarian." Say what?

An outgrowth of Calvinism, modern
Reconstructionism can be traced to Rushdoony's 1973 magnum opus, Institutes of Biblical Law. (Many leading Reconstructionists emerged from conservative Presbyterianism, but as with so much of today's religious ferment, the movement cuts across denominational lines.) Not one to pursue a high public profile, Rushdoony has set up his Chalcedon Institute in off-the-beaten-path Vallecito, California, while North runs his Institute for Christian Economics out of Tyler, Texas.

As a "post-millennialist" school of thought, Reconstructionism holds that believers should work toward achieving God's kingdom on earth in the here and now, rather than expect its advent only after a second coming of Christ. Some are in a bit of a hurry about it, too. "World conquest," proclaims George Grant, in what by Reconstructionist standards is not an especially breathless formulation. "It is dominion we are after. Not just a voice... not just influence...not just equal time. It is dominion we are after."

Well, OK, it's easy to laugh. Yet grandiosity does sometimes get results, especially when combined with an all-out conviction that one is historically predestined to win (the Communist Party in the '30s comes to mind). Reconstructionism has a record of turning out hugely prolific writers, tireless organizers who stay at meetings until the last chair is folded up, and driven activists willing to undergo arrest (Reconstructionist Randall Terry founded Operation Rescue, the lawbreaking anti-abortion campaign) to make their point.

Politically, Reconstructionists have been active both in the GOP and in the splinter U.S. Taxpayers Party; but their greater influence, as they themselves would doubtless agree, has been felt in the sphere of ideas, in helping change the terms of discourse on the traditionalist right. One of their effects has been to allow everyone else to feel moderate. To wit: Almost any anti-abortion stance seems nuanced when compared with Gary North's advocacy of public execution not just for women who undergo abortions but for those who advised them to do so. And with the Rushdoony faction proposing the actual judicial murder of gays, fewer blink at the position of a Gary Bauer or a Janet Folger, who support laws exposing them to mere imprisonment.

Among other ideas Reconstructionists have helped popularize is that state neutrality on the subject of religion is meaningless. Any legal order is bound to "establish" one religious order or another, the argument runs, and the only question is whose. Put the question that way, and watch your polemical troubles disappear. If we're getting a religious establishment anyway, why not mine?

"The Christian goal for the world," Recon theologian David Chilton has explained, is "the universal development of Biblical theocratic republics." Scripturally based law would be enforced by the state with a stern rod in these republics. And not just any scriptural law, either, but a hardline-originalist version of Old Testament law--the point at which even most fundamentalists agree things start to get "scary." American evangelicals have tended to hold that the bloodthirsty pre-Talmudic Mosaic code, with its quick resort to capital punishment, its flogging and stoning and countenancing of slavery, was mostly if not entirely superseded by the milder precepts of the New Testament (the "dispensationalist" view, as it's called). Not so, say the Reconstructionists. They reckon only a relative few dietary and ritualistic observances were overthrown.

So when Exodus 21:15-17 prescribes that cursing or striking a parent is to be punished by execution, that's fine with Gary North. "When people curse their parents, it unquestionably is a capital crime," he writes. "The integrity of the family must be maintained by the threat of death." Likewise with blasphemy, dealt with summarily in Leviticus 24:16: "And he that blasphemeth the name of the Lord, he shall surely be put to death, and all the congregation shall certainly stone him."

Reconstructionists provide the most enthusiastic constituency for stoning since the Taliban seized Kabul. "Why stoning?" asks North. "There are many reasons. First, the implements of execution are available to everyone at virtually no cost." Thrift and ubiquity aside, "executions are community projects--not with spectators who watch a professional executioner do `his' duty, but rather with actual participants." You might even say that like square dances or quilting bees, they represent the kind of hands-on neighborliness so often missed in this impersonal era. "That modern Christians never consider the possibility of the reintroduction of stoning for capital crimes," North continues, "indicates how thoroughly humanistic concepts of punishment have influenced the thinking of Christians." And he may be right about that last point, you know.

The Recons are keenly aware of the P.R. difficulties such views pose as they become more widely known. Brian Abshire writes in the January Chalcedon Report, the official magazine of Rushdoony's institute, that the "judicial sanctions" are "at the root" of the antipathy most evangelicals still show towards Reconstruction. Indeed, as the press spotlight has intensified, prominent religious conservatives have edged away. For a while the Coalition on Revival (COR), an umbrella group set up to "bring America back to its biblical foundations" by identifying common ground among Christian right activists of differing theological backgrounds, allowed leading Reconstructionists to chum around with such figures as televangelist D. James Kennedy (whose Coral Ridge Ministries also employed militant Reconstructionist George Grant as a vice president) and National Association of Evangelicals lobbyist Robert Dugan.

In recent years, however, the COR has lost many of its best-known members; former Virginia lieutenant governor candidate Mike Farris, for example, told The Washington Post that he left the group because "it started heading to a theocracy...and I don't believe in a theocracy." John Whitehead, a Rushdoony protégé who, with Chalcedon assistance, launched the Rutherford Institute to pursue religious litigation, has moved with some vigor to disavow his old mentor's views.

Prominent California philanthropist Howard F. Ahmanson Jr., who has given Rushdoony's operations more than $700,000 over the years, may also be loosening his ties. According to the June 30, 1996, Orange County Register, Ahmanson has departed the Chalcedon board and says he "does not embrace all of Rushdoony's teachings." An heir of the Home Savings bank fortune, Ahmanson has also been an important donor to numerous
other groups, including the Claremont Institute, the Seattle-based Discovery Institute and--just to show how complicated life gets--the Reason Foundation, the publisher of this magazine (for projects not associated with its publication).

The continuing, extensive Reconstructionist presence in fields like the home schooling movement poses for libertarians an obvious question: How serious do differences have to become before it becomes inappropriate to overlook them in an otherwise good cause? The printed program of last year's Separation of School & State Alliance convention constituted an odd ideological mix in which certified good guys such as Sheldon Richman, Jim Bovard, and Don Boudreaux alternated with Chalcedon stalwarts like Samuel Blumenfeld, Howard Phillips, and Rushdoony himself.

Lest such relations become unduly frictionless, here's a clip-and-save sampler of Reconstructionist quotes to keep on hand:

On the link between reason and liberty: "Reason itself is not an objective `given' but is itself a divinely created instrument employed by the unregenerate to further their attack on God." The "appeal to reason as final arbiter" must be rejected; "if man is permitted autonomy in one sphere he will soon claim autonomy in all spheres....We therefore deny every expression of human autonomy--liberal, conservative or libertarian." Thus affirmed Andrew Sandlin, in the January Chalcedon Report.

Intellectual liberty (other religions department): Hindus, Muslims, and the like would still be free to practice their rites "in the privacy of your own home....But you would not be allowed to proselytize and undermine the order of the state....every civil order protects its foundations," wrote the late Recon theologian Greg Bahnsen. Bahnsen added that the interdiction applies to "someone [who] comes and proselytizes for another god or another final authority (and by the way, that god may be man)."

Intellectual liberty (where secularists fit in department): "All sides of the humanistic spectrum are now, in principle, demonic; communists and conservatives, anarchists and socialists, fascists and republicans," explains Rushdoony. "When someone tries to undermine the commitment to Jehovah which is fundamental to the civil order of a godly state--then that person needs to be restrained by the magistrate...those who will not acknowledge Jehovah as the ultimate authority behind the civil law code which the magistrate is enforcing would be punished and repressed," wrote Bahnsen.

On ultimate goals: "So let us be blunt about it," says Gary North. "We must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God."
============================

ONE.MORE.TIME


On ultimate goals: "So let us be blunt about it," says Gary North. "We must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God."
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

Post by KneelandBobDylan »

Moggio wrote:
KneelandBobDylan wrote:90% of people believe in a god, so how can "most" libertarians not be religious.
90% of the world aren't Libertarians, moron. :lol:
No fucking shit, did you figure that out all on your own Sherlock? But that has nothing to do with anything that was said.

Let me dumb it down, you unthinking doofus, if 90% of people believe in god, how is it possible a "most" (your word) of libertarians not be religious? I'm going to need some sort of proof that is true.

No proof = yet another thing you have no clue about.
Last edited by KneelandBobDylan on Sun Apr 14, 2013 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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How many fucking times is Mongo gonna post that stupid "grasping at straws" pic? Insanity is posting the same pic over and over and thinking it's still clever.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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DEATH ROW JOE wrote:Invitation to a Stoning

This is clearly a ploy to reignite the patchouli-wearing demographic.
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Re: Ron Paul Homeschool Curriculum

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