Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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DEATH ROW JOE
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Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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Want to work for the Paul campaign? Put a confederate jock strap on your face and praise the KKK.

Controversial videos led to employment by Paul family
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July 10, 2013 11:18 am

Controversial radio-pundit-turned-Senate-aide Jack Hunter’s work caught the eye of the Paul family years before he was hired as Sen. Rand Paul’s (R., Ky.) social media director, Hunter told the Washington Free Beacon in a Monday interview.

The Free Beacon reported on Tuesday that Hunter, 39, worked as a pro-secessionist radio pundit known as the “Southern Avenger” for nearly a decade before he was hired to help pen then-Senate-candidate Paul’s book The Tea Party Goes to Washington. Hunter has worked in Paul’s office as his social media director since 2012.

The news of Hunter’s association with the League of the South, which advocates secession, and the content of Hunter’s commentaries and YouTube videos wearing a wrestling mask emblazoned with the Confederate flag, sparked widespread criticism of Senator Paul, who has said he is interested in running for president in 2016.

Hunter described how he first became close with both Rand Paul and his father, former Rep. Ron Paul (R., Texas), in an interview with the Free Beacon on Monday.

Hunter also renounced comments he had made as a radio pundit between 2004 and 2008, ranging from his support for Abraham Lincoln’s assassin to his claim that the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was the worst terrorist attack in world history.

He refused to directly renounce his support for secession but said it was a “dead letter issue” in modern politics.

Paul’s office indicated late Tuesday that the senator would stand behind Hunter.

“Our office policy is that all employees treat individuals with the equal protection of the law. We find no evidence that this policy has been violated by any employee,” said spokeswoman Moira Bagley in a statement.

In a statement on the Southern Avenger website on Tuesday, Hunter said the report of his “not-very-hidden radio pundit background … does not accurately reflect me or my full, or true, views.”

“The role of a radio host is different from that of a political operative,” Hunter wrote. “In radio, sometimes you’re encouraged to be provocative and inflammatory. I’ve been guilty of both, and am embarrassed by some of the comments I made precisely because they do not represent me today. I was embarrassed by some of them even then.”

He also lashed out at Tuesday’s Free Beacon report, saying, “Not surprisingly, the reporter chose not to balance her piece” by citing columns Hunter wrote “promoting African-American history and politics, and many other writings.”

Hunter first came to know Ron Paul during his 2008 presidential run when he was known for his South Carolina radio commentary under the moniker the “Southern Avenger.”

At the time, Hunter had started posting his radio commentaries onto YouTube and was gaining a large following in libertarian circles.

The then-pundit introduced Ron Paul at South Carolina political rallies, he told the Free Beacon.

“I was a talk radio guy who had a lot of those libertarian views, who sort of coincided with this guy who was running for president who also had those views. It was sort of right place right time,” Hunter said.

Hunter said Rand Paul was already familiar with his work when he hired him to help write his 2011 book.

“[Paul] decided that he wanted to work with me, and he’d watched, he’d paid attention to some of my work,” he said.

“The publisher told me there was a list of other writers who could help with this who were more experienced than I was,” Hunter said. “I’ve always wanted to see that list to see who I beat out. But he chose me.”

It remains unclear whether Rand Paul was familiar with Hunter’s inflammatory radio punditry when he hired him. A representative for Paul did not respond to a request for comment.

Hunter said he forged a close relationship with the younger Paul while working on his book.

“I consider the senator a friend,” Hunter said. “I consider his father a friend. And I work for [Rand Paul], as I did his dad. We would spend long amounts of time in the campaign van in Kentucky because I was gathering material for the book. I interviewed his wife Kelly and did all sorts of personal anecdotes, so I spent a lot of time around gathering information.”

After the younger Paul was elected to the Senate, Ron Paul hired Hunter as a blogger and political consultant on his 2012 presidential campaign. Hunter said the elder Paul was a fan of his YouTube commentary.

“Ron would say, ‘This is Jack, he makes great videos.’ And he’s talking about YouTube,” Hunter said.

The Paul campaign touted the new hire in a July 2011 press release headlined “‘Southern Avenger’ signs on to blog, energize voters.”

“Jack Hunter is one of the nation’s foremost conservative commentators and his signing onto the campaign as blogger will be a great help in spreading Dr. Paul’s message of limited government and individual liberty,” said Ron Paul 2012 spokesman Jesse Benton in the statement.

Hunter also gave an address at Ron Paul’s Campaign for Liberty conference in October 2011.

“I still am the Southern Avenger. I haven’t exactly dropped it, so that’s okay to always use that,” he said in the speech.

His work for Ron Paul’s presidential campaign appears to have overlapped slightly with his work for Rand Paul’s office.

He is listed on the Ron Paul presidential payroll for “Consulting- Political Strategy” work from July 29, 2011 until Sept. 14, 2012, earning $65,000, according to FEC filings.

He joined Rand Paul’s payroll on Aug. 1, 2012, and was paid $40,000 between then and March 31, 2013, according to LegiStorm.

Hunter said his work for Rand Paul largely consists of social media outreach. He disputed reports that he is part of a circle of staffers who advise the senator on foreign policy.

“We talk about the issues of the day, what’s in the news,” Hunter said. “I think it’s a misrepresentation to call me a foreign policy adviser. One would have to be an expert in the field to be an adviser, right? I’m a political guy.”

Hunter said that when foreign policy issues come up, “I give my two cents. Whether [Paul] listens to it or not is a completely different story.”

Senator Paul became the subject of harsh criticism after Hunter’s views gained notoriety.

“Suffice it to say, if anyone in Paul’s office knew of this man’s background then Paul has a serious problem on his hands,” wrote the Washington Post’s conservative columnist Jennifer Rubin.

“And if no one bothered to vet Hunter, then concerns about the close-knit, amateurish staff will heighten.”

At the Daily Caller, Matt Lewis wrote that “arguably the most damaging part of the story comes toward the end, where Hunter seems to confess that Rand Paul is in the process of conning the pro-Israel lobby, neoconservatives, and other mainstream conservatives.”

Salon, the Huffington Post, and other left-leaning outlets also seized on the story.

“There are certain thing, certain views that put you outside of the boundaries of being listened to on anything,” said MSNBC “All In” host Chris Hayes. “I’d say white supremacy is one of those, and association with people that hold those views or endorsements of feature of those views—well, they render you unfit.”

The revelations about Rand Paul’s close aide could pose a serious problem for his 2016 presidential ambitions, political analysts said.

“This guy makes Paula Deen look like the chair of the NAACP,” Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, told the Courier-Journal.

Norman Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, told the Courier-Journal that if Rand Paul “is really serious about aggressively pursuing a presidential race, he cannot keep a guy around as a very close aide and co-author of his book with this kind of a background.”

Matt Berman at the National Journal wrote that the news “isn’t just a problem for Hunter, who renounced much of what he had written and said in an interview with the Free Beacon. It’s a problem for Rand Paul, who seems to have a consistent problem with being overshadowed by the far-right political fringe.”

“In all likelihood, Jack Hunter will be going away,” Berman wrote. “The radical cloud hovering over Rand Paul will not.”
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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Moggio wished he wrote:
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"Trump....his penis is teeny tiny but his love for us is large."
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

even Washington Times is bashing Rand for his blatant racism.


Rand Paul is not ready for prime time
On Tuesday, the Washington Free Beacon’s Alana Goodman reportedon an aide to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who had a long and colorful history of neo-Confederate sympathies. If you aren’t already familiar with the story, it’s best to read Goodman. But basically, during the 2000s, Jack Hunter, known by his moniker “The Southern Avenger,” was a South Carolina-based radio shock jock who wore a pro-wrestling style mask emblazoned with the Confederate flag, advocated secession, chaired the League of the South, and celebrated the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Hunter went on to work for Ron Paul’s presidential campaign before working on Rand Paul’s 2011 book, and he now does social media outreach work for Paul. I’ve largely let this story play out without commenting, but now feel compelled to after reading Paul’s utterly terrible response.


read rest here: http://washingtonexaminer.com/rand-paul ... le/2532942
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

Post by murdercitydevil08 »

Obama Rev Wright...

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Rev Wright - All whites are liars

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cp-1cjXbpMk
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DEATH ROW JOE
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

Post by DEATH ROW JOE »

murdercitydevil08 wrote:Obama Rev Wright...

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Rev Wright - All whites are liars

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cp-1cjXbpMk
You expecting someone to finish your post? How does that relate to the Paul's racism, the topic of this thread?

BTW, here's a picture of Obama and his white mother

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Tommy2Tone84
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

Post by Tommy2Tone84 »

murdercitydevil08 wrote:Obama Rev Wright...

Image

Rev Wright - All whites are liars

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cp-1cjXbpMk

Image

Image

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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

Post by Tommy2Tone84 »

DEATH ROW JOE wrote:even Washington Times is bashing Rand for his blatant racism.


Rand Paul is not ready for prime time
On Tuesday, the Washington Free Beacon’s Alana Goodman reportedon an aide to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who had a long and colorful history of neo-Confederate sympathies. If you aren’t already familiar with the story, it’s best to read Goodman. But basically, during the 2000s, Jack Hunter, known by his moniker “The Southern Avenger,” was a South Carolina-based radio shock jock who wore a pro-wrestling style mask emblazoned with the Confederate flag, advocated secession, chaired the League of the South, and celebrated the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Hunter went on to work for Ron Paul’s presidential campaign before working on Rand Paul’s 2011 book, and he now does social media outreach work for Paul. I’ve largely let this story play out without commenting, but now feel compelled to after reading Paul’s utterly terrible response.


read rest here: http://washingtonexaminer.com/rand-paul ... le/2532942
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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nycrue wrote:Magic Wand Original ‏@HitachiMagic 14 Feb 12
RT @hollywoodrose: the more I look at dating websites the more I know its gonna be just me and my @HitachiMagic for my whole life
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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Wheresthestagemanager? wrote:
Moggio wished he wrote:
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nycrue wrote:Magic Wand Original ‏@HitachiMagic 14 Feb 12
RT @hollywoodrose: the more I look at dating websites the more I know its gonna be just me and my @HitachiMagic for my whole life
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Re: Paul Family linked to another racist idiot

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Will Ron Paul’s Increasingly Bizarre Business Empire Hurt Rand’s Chances in 2016?
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Apparently not content with a quiet retirement, former Texas congressman Ron Paul is expanding and diversifying his libertarian cottage industry with the launch of a new online television network, the Ron Paul Channel.

The subscription-only network, which is set to air sometime next month, is an entrepreneurial attempt by Paul to corner part of the growing — and increasingly lucrative — conspiracy-theory media market currently dominated by Glenn Beck and Alex Jones. Running under the tagline "Turn Off Your TV. Turn on the Truth," the channel promises to give viewers the news they would "never be shown" by the lame-stream media.

"We're seeing the end of the era and the beginning of the new one," Paul prophesies in a teaser video. "The lying, conniving, and collusion between those who give us our news and information and the government — that's going to change." It is, in essence, a scheme to monetize the suspicion and distrust of his army of Internet-savvy, conspiracy-minded followers. In the abstract, it is a brilliant business move for a recently retired politician who refused, on ideological grounds, to participate in the congressional pension system.

The complication is that Paul’s son, Senator Rand Paul, is emerging as a serious candidate for the White House in 2016 and is making a concerted effort to distance himself from the fringe views and associations upon which his father built a career and a following. Ron Paul's refusal to retreat quietly to the farm — and his penchant for going off-script — escalates the already-present risk that his antics may begin to create real problems for Rand’s nascent campaign effort.

So far, Rand Paul has mostly managed to avoid being tarred by any of the players in Ron Paul's burgeoning libertarian-industrial complex. In April, the younger Paul was conspicuously absent from the opening of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, a noninterventionist think tank whose board members include a smattering of 9/11 truthers and Slobodan Milošević apologists.

But Ron Paul's postretirement antics have already been a source of awkwardness between father and son. When Ron Paul tweeted in February that the death of U.S. Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle "seems to confirm that 'he who lives by the sword dies by the sword,'" Rand Paul was forced to weigh in, telling Breitbart that Kyle "was a hero."

Last week's flare-up over reports that Rand Paul's Senate aide Jack Hunter, a.k.a. the Southern Avenger, used to traipse around South Carolina in a Stars and Bars luchador mask espousing neo-Confederate racism, proved again how easily stained the younger Paul is by the less-seemly elements of the far right. (Hunter, of course, was a self-inflicted wound.)

“Ron Paul was widely viewed by Republican voters as a kook, and voters are still recovering from that kook hangover,” said Republican strategist Steve Schmidt, who worked as a senior adviser to John McCain’s 2008 campaign. “A lot of Rand Paul's energy will go toward distancing himself from that kook factor. Having someone who calls himself the Southern Avenger on your staff makes that more difficult.”

Schmidt warns that should the younger Paul decide to run for president in 2016, his father's continued political involvement and postretirement ventures could get in the way of the campaign. “There is no scrutiny like the presidential campaign. Every day in the campaign that Ron Paul says something, the Rand Paul campaign is going to have to respond to that. And how well he does at answering those questions, and at distancing himself from his father, will determine how successful his campaign will be,” Schmidt said.

Rand Paul’s advisers — many of whom have put a lot of energy into separating father and son in the public mind — are sensitive to the idea that Ron Paul and his postretirement ventures could hurt his son's political prospects.

“Rand and Ron are each doing their own thing,” said John Tate, the president of the Campaign for Liberty and a longtime Paul confidant. “There is always curiosity about Rand as Ron’s son, but Rand has and will chart his own course. Polls — and even occasionally the media — treat Rand as Rand and Ron as Ron.”

That may prove true: A PPP poll released last week found that Rand Paul is leading the GOP field in Iowa, a key Republican caucus state, and holds a two-to-one advantage on the question of which candidate is the most conservative — the opposite of how Ron Paul polled in the state during his 2008 and 2012 bids.

But with two years to go until the 2016 Iowa straw poll, Paul can ill afford to spend his time dodging associations with the right-wing fringe, a problem that could be compounded by an online television channel solely devoted to Ron Paul and his ideas.

“The things that make television work don't augur well for politics,” said Doug Wead, a veteran Paul aide who advised Ron Paul's last two presidential campaigns. “Television needs entertainment, drama, and controversy, and those are things that can sink a campaign.”

“In hours and hours of television, people are bound to say things that are, shall we say, ill advised,” Wead said. “There will be controversy. And that will probably have some effect on Rand.”
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