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Author Topic: The people powering the Paul phenomenon  (Read 657 times)
Dig
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« on: October 30, 2007, 01:51:38 PM »

The people powering the Paul phenomenon-College students, old-line conservatives, anti-globalists back contender
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21521415/
By Tom Curry National affairs writer MSNBC Updated: 8:49 a.m. ET Oct 30, 2007 Tom Curry


DES MOINES, Iowa - Four college pals, John Friendly, Jeff Shipley, Brad Jahner, and Daniel Krauss, got a chance to whoop, holler and raise the roof Saturday. The four boisterous Iowan guys cheered on their hero, Republican presidential contender Ron Paul, as he addressed a rally in Des Moines. “I think he’s probably the only candidate who can make big enough changes in our government to save us from economic breakdown,” said Friendly after hearing Paul. Friendly is a sophomore at the University of Iowa, studying history and English.

“I was looking at Obama as somebody I was thinking about supporting,” Friendly recalled. Then his friend and roommate Krauss told him to look into Paul’s views. “I looked at his policies and they made a lot more sense than anybody else’s.” Friendly decided that Paul, who voted against the Iraq war in 2002, had more credibility on ending the war than any of the other presidential contenders, Democratic or Republican.  “He’s obviously going to do something about it if he gets elected — whereas with these other candidates, there’s no proof that they will,” Friendly said. He also agrees with Paul’s limited government views. “The states should have more power and I think we should have a smaller (federal) government because I think that’s what the Constitution originally intended.”

“The problem with the big candidates — Hillary, Bush, Obama — is they don’t stand on anything. You ask them a direct question, they circle around it,” said Jahner, a student at Des Moines Area Community College. Like Paul, he sees the end of welfare state as inevitable.  “It is hard to say to a crowd that we’re going to take away your crutch,” said Jahner. "But, the fact of the matter is, it has to happen. In order for the government not to go bankrupt, things have to get cut. What Ron Paul is saying is, ‘it’s coming, you knew it was coming anyway, prepare yourself.'” Jacob Bofferding, a student at Iowa State University, said he decided to work for Paul after seeing him on a televised debate. “For Ron Paul to stand up there and say, ‘people hate us because we intervene in their lives’ and for (Rudy) Giuliani to say ‘that’s ridiculous,’ that blew my mind,” said

'Stop subsidizing oppressive regimes'
“Our imperialistic foreign policy is the biggest threat to this country, not groups of terrorists that have no state sponsor,” Bofferding said. “The first thing you have to do is stop subsidizing oppressive regimes in the Middle East.” Bofferding calls himself “an extreme fiscal conservative." He adds, "I don’t think that the federal government has much responsibility in the way of our lives.”


Veronica Czastkiewicz, a student at Cornell College in Iowa, who is supporting Ron Paul. He hands out flyers at football games and otherwise drums up support for Paul, spending about five hours a week on the campaign.  He had the honor of introducing Paul when he spoke to a crowd of 700 supporters at Iowa State on Friday night. A small sample of Ron Paul’s supporters in Iowa in recent days found them to be a mix of young and old, mostly male, but some women. They inlcude traditional Christian social conservatives and homeschoolers, and fresh-faced fervent college students such as Friendly and Bofferding, who embrace his free market ideas and an anti-interventionist foreign policy. Veronica Czastkiewicz, a student at Cornell College in Iowa, showed up at Paul’s Ames speech Friday night. “I’m a constitutionalist like Ron Paul; his back-to-the-basics approach is very refreshing and inspiring,” she said. “So many politicians have gone off track.” She wasn’t old enough to vote in 2004, but supported Democrat John Kerry. “I was very socially liberal when I was younger,” she said.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
Dig
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« Reply #1 on: October 30, 2007, 03:14:30 PM »

Grassroots gaming: College kids playing Halo '12/7' for Ron Paul
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/College_kids_playing_Halo_127_for_1030.html
Jason Rhyne Published: Tuesday October 30, 2007


Gamers say Paul seems like the only candidate who has 'read the Constitution'
It may not end up matching the haul of a thousand-dollar-a-plate dinner, but a new fundraising event on behalf of GOP presidential hopeful Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) is a lot easier to dress for: it's three college kids playing a video game. In one of this campaign season's more creative grassroots efforts, students from an undisclosed southeastern university have committed to playing the massively popular Halo 3 video game for 12 hours a day, seven days a week -- "12/7" they brag -- and are broadcasting their marathon sessions live on the internet. Visitors tuning in to watch the multiplayer carnage, a number now surpassing 35,000 people according to a counter on the players' website, are encouraged to make a donation to Ron Paul's campaign. One of the Halo-playing crew, a gamer calling himself "J" who insists on anonymity for he and his cohorts, told RAW STORY that Paul was the only presidential contender in the bunch worth backing. "He just seems like the only candidate who supports the Constitution -- like the only one who has actually read the Constitution," said J, who is balancing his long hours of Halo with a part-time job.

Also sharing the workload during the long, noon-to-midnight span are fellow students Danielle, who also holds down a job as a health technician, and Mike, who "doesn't work," says an envious J. Battling away on a wide-screen TV in an off-campus apartment, the group has attracted a core group of watchers online who critique their play in an accompanying chat room and frequently become challengers themselves. The game, the third installment of the Halo series, allows a combination of multiple players to link up via an internet connection to fight in a vast, futuristic world of fantastic weaponry and fierce alien invaders. "It is kind of crazy, three people dedicating 12 hours a day to Halo," J acknowledged. "We try to entertain ourselves with alcohol." Although his candidacy isn't notching big-time numbers in national polls, the libertarian-leaning Paul has managed to parlay near-fanatical internet support for his campaign into some legitimate fundraising muscle -- $5 million in the third quarter of 2007 alone. That figure puts him just behind Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and ahead of former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee in total money raised for the same time period. "It seems like people voting for the first or second time in their lives are just excited about him," J said, adding that he thought the natural audience for watching a Halo webcast would be full of potential Paul supporters. "We figured teenagers, you know, 20 somethings would be interested." It's too early to tell if the video game fundraiser will translate into significant real-world dollars for the Paul campaign, but the plan is creating a buzz among fans of a game that boasts 1.2 million players online.
 
'The negative people have been mainly Hillary supporters'
J says response from visitors to the site, the majority of whom seem to be lured in for pure gaming reasons rather than any real political interest in Paul, has been largely positive. "Some people have been like, 'what's a Ron Paul?'" he reports. "The negative people have been mainly Hillary supporters." Although it's clear the students have some other interests at heart in their endeavor beyond supporting a political candidate -- they're also soliciting donations for a high definition TV tuner so viewers can watch a "perfect stream of game play" -- the gang plans to keep making good on its "twelve hour promise" to Paul for at least a few more weeks. And the current fundraising plan could just be the beginning, according to J, who envisions a day when Congressman Paul himself could fire up an Xbox console and tear around in Halo's sprawling digital universe. "We could set it up like a charity event: us vs. Ron Paul," he said, adding that possibility had been kicking around in the site's chat room. "People could pledge $10 for every kill Ron Paul makes." But Paul communications director Jesse Benton politely side-stepped the invitation Tuesday, telling RAW STORY that the candidate would need far too much practice time. "I'd be surprised if Ron has ever picked up a joystick," Benton said. "So I'm not sure there would really be any kind of match there. And it sounds like these guys are really good."

_______________________________

hahahaha military industrial complex funded the game HALO to make heartless kids immune to the power of the constitution, and they are waking up too.

NWO- just give up, you already lost!
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
chilicharger665
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« Reply #2 on: October 30, 2007, 03:20:17 PM »

Ironic indeed... Grin
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