Posted on 01/22/2005 8:12:00 AM PST by quidnunc
Was he the currency-board monetary policy guy who used to write for "Forbes," or is that some other guy?
I don't recall ever hearing that he wrote for Forbes and I can't find any evidence that he did via Google.
They may pose as paleo-ostriches but they are going to be the only "liberal" talk radio for the foreseeable future. What a waste of bandwidth!
Paleos=Antisemitic peace creeps with stock portfolios to protect and who wish the GOP and conservative movements to exclude all whose ancestry here is less than two hundred years.
Paul Craig Roberts must be one of about three of the paleos who could get credentialled in the Reagan administration. The rest were too socially eccentric or too closely resembled the look of a vintage Trotskite (before he was purged) to be ready for prime time.
Reagan knew better than to associate with the paleos generally. In 1986, they figured it out and have been hydrochloric or sulphuric toward conservatism ever since.
Antisemitism is not the only problem. One of their columnists, Sam Francis, was fired by the Washington Times when he spoke to a convention of neo-Nazis but them he was hired to edit the newspaper of the "Conservative" Citizens' Councils, as that group has been known since moving from Mississippi to Missouri and changing the name from White Citizens' Councils (the blow-dried Klan).
Thanks. I guess I'm thinking of someone totally different.
It was also worth noting the opinions of Kerry, McGovern, the Arkansas Antichrist, Mrs. Antichrist and others of their ilk to prevent their getting their slimy traitorous heads above water again. A good start in that direction would be to pay attention to Justine the AntiWar Queen (antiwar.com) before he/she/it ruins another public figure like he/she/it ruined Buchanan on foreign policy and defense. Justine sees a field of dead soldiers as so many lost social opportunities. Conservatives should know their enemies. Justine is one. Roberts is another.
PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
Address:http://www.townhall.com/columnists/BIOS/cbroberts.html
Paul Craig Roberts is the John M. Olin fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, research fellow at the Independent Institute and senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
A former editor and columnist for The Wall Street Journal, he writes a political commentary column for Creators Syndicate. He also writes a monthly economics column for Investors Business Daily . In 1992, he received the Warren Brookes Award for Excellence in Journalism.
In 1993, he was ranked as one of the top seven journalists by the Forbes Media Guide .
He was distinguished fellow at the Cato Institute from 1993 to 1996. From 1982 through 1993, he held the William E. Simon chair in political economy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. From 1981 to 1982, he served as assistant secretary of the Treasury for economic policy.
President Reagan and Treasury Secretary Regan credited him with a major role in the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, and he was awarded the Treasury Department's Meritorious Service Award for "his outstanding contributions to the formulation of United States economic policy."
______________________________________
By your enemy shall you be known.
Anyone with three names is always suspect:
John Wilkes Booth
Hilary Rodham Clinton
John Walker Lynde
Teresa Heinz Kerry
John Forbes Kerry
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Paul Craig Roberts
See the pattern?
Thank you. I was just mentioning this to Moose4...I grew up going to a fundamentalist church with a noticeable "end times" obsession (twice-yearly "prophecy conferences" with 30-foot charts tacked up on the wall), and I can guarantee you that none of the Christians there would have reacted with glee to all-out war in the Middle East.
Reagan made Buchanan his second term director of communications.
Have you ever read worldnetdaily.com ?
Read up on reform Judism and its beliefs. I think the liberal support will become clearer.
I'm finding more and more that paleoconservatism and anti-Semitism tend to go hand-in-hand.
-Dan
Not to notice, no. But none of the many fundamentalists that I personally have known would go "Oh boy, it's the end of the world!" Not even the ones that I considered on the far edge of sanity. :-)
Really? By examination of whose thoughts?
Murray Rothbard's? Frank Meyer's? Wm. Rusher's? Wm. F. Buckley's?
Or are you just spreading around the "you sound like Joe Sobran" guilt-by-association again?
I think you will find that the likes of Tom Fleming, Sam Francis, Llewellyn Rockwell, Justine the Queen and others wallowing in antiwar poetry, overdoses of port wine, an inordinate weepy resentment over all things military, and "blood and soil" "conservatism" ("If you look like me and have ancestors like mine and ethnicity like mine, etc.,, then you are mine and to hell with everyone else") were seldom credentialed by Ronaldus Maximus. National Review ran a very informative piece on these eccentric loons in April of 2003. David Frum (seldom my favorite author but when he is right, he is right) was the author.
Also, so long as the subject steers away from Jews generally, Israel in particular, and the the American-Israeli Political Action Committee's alleged influence in Washington and Israel's "Amen Corner in the United States" and the notions that Zulus would make bad neighbors for Virginians, you CAN dress Pat up and take him out in public without embarassment. I voted for him several times but not very recently. I have never heard even his sister Bay Buchanan defend Pat's newfound isolationism. Also Pat retains the common sense to support wars once they are begun.
When Dan Quayle bailed out of an engagement to address the Daughters of the American Revolution on foreign policy at their annual convenion in 1992 (?), Pat pinch hit and did a wonderful job, one of the best foreign policy addresses I ever heard (it was on C-SPAN). Later, he apparently fell under the influence of Justine Raimondo and the paleopantywaists and left the foreign policy part of his mind in the gutter. It could have been worse. He might have listened to Justine on social issues.
America and Americans should thank God that isolationism is nothing but a bad memory of an unaffordable naivete and gross policy error.
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