Glenn Greenwald has another excellent post on Ron Paul:
And — as the above-cited efforts to compel Congress to actually adhere to the Constitution demonstrate — few people have been as vigorous in defense of Constitutional principles as those principles have been mangled and trampled upon by this administration while most of our establishment stood by meekly. That’s just true.
Paul’s efforts in that regard may be “odd” in the sense that virtually nobody else seemed to care all that much about systematic unconstitutional actions, but that hardly makes him a “weirdo.” Sometimes — as the debate over the Iraq War should have demonstrated once and for all — the actual “fruitcake” positions are the ones that are held by the people who are welcome in our most respectable institutions and magazines, both conservative and liberal [bold mine-DL].
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This whole concept of singling out and labelling as “weirdos” and “fruitcakes” political figures because they espouse views that are held only by a small number of people is nothing more than an attempt to discredit someone without having to do the work to engage their arguments. It’s actually a tactic right out of the seventh grade cafeteria. It’s just a slothful mechanism for enforcing norms.
Alex Massie answers another tactic employed by some liberal critics of Rep. Paul here.
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November 13th, 2007 at 11:07 am
Howard J. Harrison
If you know how it has come to pass that an Internet visitor to mittromney.org finds himself highjacked and redirected to ronpaul2008.com, would you tell us?
November 13th, 2007 at 11:54 am
Daniel Larison
I don’t know how it happened, but Romney’s official site is mittromney.com. If mittromney.org was also an actual Romney-supporting site that has been hacked, whoever did it is either a very stupid Paul supporter or someone who wants to make it look as if a Paul supporter did it, but I don’t know whether mittromney.org was an active pro-Romney site or just a name. It may simply be the case that mittromney.org was an available site that the Romney campaign failed to grab for itself, so whoever did gain control of it decided to redirect visitors to Paul’s site. I would be glad to explain it if I knew anything definite.
November 13th, 2007 at 3:09 pm
Howard J. Harrison
Well, Daniel, that is about what I figured. Dr. Paul transparently has too much class to have encouraged or authorized a stunt like this. It’s a big country; no candidate can answer for what some two-bit agitator might try. I just thought that if anyone happened to be acquainted with the facts of the case, you might be, since you usually seem pretty well informed. Thanks anyway.
November 13th, 2007 at 3:29 pm
brendon
A Whois search for mittromney.org might answer some questions.
The domain was registered on 25 February, 2002. The domain registration was last updated on 16 March, 2007. It is supposedly registered by a company named “Strategery Media.” If you try to access the company’s second name server, ns2.strategerymedia.net, you are redirected to robertfkennedyjr.com.
My guess is that mittromeny.org was created when Romney was running for governor of Massachusetts, either as his official site or as an anti-Romney site. Either Romney and his people let the registration lapse and it was picked up by one of Ron Paul’s more liberal supporters, or the people running it decided to back Ron Paul and thus simple had the domain redirect to the official Ron Paul site.