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The Revolution: A Manifesto

Ron Paul's new book, The Revolution: A Manifesto, is currently at #1 on the Amazon best sellers list, and debuted this week at #7 on the New York Times best seller list.  Other presidential candidates on the Amazon list:  Barack Obama with his best selling book, Audacity of Hope, at #113, Hillary Clinton's book is at #21, 380 and John McCain's currently resides at #4,758.  Obama's books are also on the NY Times best seller list, but they've been out for a long time, as have Clinton's and McCain's.
 
I read Dr. Paul's 1986 campaign tome, Freedom Under Siege: The Constitution After 200 Years.  He has written a lot about monetary policy, but that book was his first, I think, to approach a wider spectrum of topics.  There have been 2 or 3 books released this campaign season by Dr. Paul, but Revolution is the first one that doesn't contain previous writings.  I haven't read it yet, but hope to do so, soon.
 
 
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Fractured Right Wing

A quick apology to the readers who've noticed I haven't posted on Townhall in a while.  I was having trouble posting to this site for a bit.
 
Super Tuesday has passed, and the results were less than expected for my candidate, Ron Paul.  They were less than expected for Mitt Romney, as well.  I think they were less than hoped for by the GOP in general.  George Bush has cut a new path for the Republican party that is not heading in a direction that works.  There are a few hard-headed people still following him into that blind alley, but most people are either abandoning that path, or leaving the party altogether.  Until conservatives wake up and realize they need to get back to the principles upon which this country was founded, the party will continue to lose.
 
I think the problem lies in the party leadership.  Good leaders recognize when they've made mistakes, or at least will take the time to assess any choices they've made to see if they were correct.  McConnel seems clueless, and will not even listen to reason.  He seems too full of himself to even consider the obvious possibility that he, and the party elite, are wrong.  Bush exhibits very much the same behavior.  I truly fear for conservatism with that kind of leadership. 
 
The GOP is fracturing.  Self-importance has taken the place of common sense and conservatism.  Saying, "I'm not wrong" has become more important than the good of America.  I hate to admit it, but we deserve it.  We've blindly pushed whatever agenda our leaders pumped out, whether or not we totally agreed with it, just because we wanted to be right.  Now we're paying for it.
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