Matthews was determined to make this debate explicitly about personal liberties, only mentioning foreign policy at the end of the segment and exclaiming that he “loved” Rep. Paul’s positions on those. But the bulk of the conversation centered on two very different topics– half the time was spent on Rep. Paul’s recent comments that heroin should be legalized and the other half on the Civil Rights Act. “It’s a sticking point about how far you go with your libertarianism,” Matthews argued, giving the Congressman space to discuss the matter. “
To prove his point, Matthews brought up the Civil Rights Act, to which Rep. Paul responded that he believed “property rights should be protected,” and that “it’s off the wall when you say ‘I’m for property rights and states’ rights and therefore I’m a racist.'” If this exchange sounds familiar, it’s because his son, Sen. Rand Paul, made very similar comments on Rachel Maddow while he was campaigning last year, making yesterday’s exchange with Matthews all the more bizarre. Matthews objected that he wasn’t saying “anybody is a racist,” but repeated that he believed there was something wrong with allowing business owners to not serve a customer based on race. The heated
Thus Rep. Paul’s two biggest contributions to the 2012 campaign season so far have been a staunch defense of heroin and a repudiation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. “That Ron Paul sure has his finger on the pulse of America!” many Republican strategist must be scoffing, with some libertarians wondering if there is any candidate on their side that will be able to escape the specter of this otherwise completely uncontroversial bit of legislation. But in a campaign season where the President’s birth certificate somehow became a primordial campaign issue, are the economic restrictions of a Johnson-era law or the War on Drugs any more ridiculous a topic? Similarly, Rep. Paul is entering a race where the frontrunners in the polls are either not officially running, completely preposterous, or both.
Matthews and big government types like him love to brandish the “Civil Rights Act card” at libertarians as if to prove that the entire philosophy is untenable, and certainly with as staunch a libertarian as Rep. Paul, the issue becomes severely problematic. Doubting that legislation that permanently changed the social psyche of America in such a positive way is a blemish on either Paul’s record. But it is difficult to believe that there is a contingent of Republican primary voters out there that would vote for either the younger or elder Paul based on their mostly philosophical pseudo-objection to a universally accepted law
Take a look, for example, at Rep. Paul’s appearance on the same day on the most ideologically distant program from Hardball possible: Fox Business’ Freedom Watch. When given free reign to pick the issues he talks about, Rep. Paul still makes statements that, to many on either side of the political spectrum, are absurd– his isolationist foreign policy sticks out in particular. And this, while far less polarizing than believing racism is a constitutional right, should still raise all sorts of far more legitimate red flags than philosophical beliefs no president would have time to implement.
Rep. Paul’s more issue-oriented discussion with Judge Andrew Napolitano via Fox Business below: