I can understand why some people are concerned about Ron Paul.

Whoever wrote his newsletters, they certainly included some nasty and excruciating stuff:

If you have ever been robbed by a black teen-aged male, you know how unbelievably fleet-footed they can be. Given the inefficiencies of what D.C. laughingly calls the criminal justice system, I think we can safely assume that 95 percent of the black males in that city are semi-criminal or entirely criminal.

I can see why black people would be concerned about a statement like that, given the history of systemic discrimination against blacks in America. Now, Paul is adamant that most of these newsletters, including all the offending passages were ghostwritten, and that he was not aware of the offending content. He has also adamantly disavowed it.

But what if he wrote them himself, or at very least was aware that his ghostwriters had chosen a new incendiary direction?

That would be a pretty strong reason for anyone opposed to racism to oppose Ron Paul, wouldn’t it?

I don’t think so.

Paul is the only major Presidential candidate who opposes the war on drugs.

Paul believes that drug criminalisation in America had racist origins:

We do know that opium was used by the Chinese and the Chinese were not welcomed in this country. We do know that the blacks at times use heroin, opium and the laws have been used against them. There have been times that it has been recognized that the Latin Americans use marijuana and the laws have been written against them. But lo and behold the drug that inebriates most of the members of Congress has not been touched because they’re up there drinking alcohol.

But this is not merely a historical fact, like slavery or segregation. It is a modern fact, a deep and slippery well of real discrimination against racial minorities:

Mass arrests and incarceration of people of color – largely due to drug law violations – have hobbled families and communities by stigmatizing and removing substantial numbers of men and women. In the late 1990s, nearly one in three African-American men aged 20-29 were under criminal justice supervision, while more than two out of five had been incarcerated – substantially more than had been incarcerated a decade earlier and orders of magnitudes higher than that for the general population. Today, 1 in 15 African-American children and 1 in 42 Latino children have a parent in prison, compared to 1 in 111 white children. In some areas, a large majority of African-American men – 55 percent in Chicago, for example – are labeled felons for life, and, as a result, may be prevented from voting and accessing public housing, student loans and other public assistance.

This doesn’t just affect drug users, but entire communities:

The scale of the effects of parental incarceration on children can be revealed simply by statistics showing the number of children with a parent in prison or jail. Among white children in 1980, only 0.4 of 1 percent had an incarcerated parent; by 2008 this figure had increased to 1.75 percent. Rates of parental incarceration are roughly double among Latino children, with 3.5 percent of children having a parent locked up by 2008. Among African American children, 1.2 million, or about 11 percent, had a parent incarcerated by 2008.

Ron Paul is very clear — he will end the drug war, and release non-violent drug offenders from federal prisons. He will allow states to determine drug policy.

The racist effects of the war on drugs have been perpetuated by every recent President, including Barack Obama. One statistic rings out above all — there are more black men incarcerated via the drug war today (and thus engaging in free labour) than there were slaves in 1850. America might have a black President, but slavery is alive and well.

Those who oppose racism — including blacks who rightly fear discrimination and racial hatred — should be more concerned by the racist policies of the current administration and previous administrations than the supposed writings of a candidate who opposes the racist policies of the current administration.

However, my support for Ron Paul is for another reason altogether. Paul is the only major Presidential candidate who wants to diminish America’s imperial largesse. Simply, America’s current role in the world is not financially or economically sustainable.

Paul has stated:

We are like a man who used to be rich and is in the habit of paying for everybody’s meals and announces at a lavish dinner that he will pay the bill, only to then turn to the fellow sitting nearby and say, “Can I use your credit card? I will pay you back!”

Simply, Ron Paul opposes the neoconservative vision that America should be in more than 900 bases, acting as a global policeman, and engaging in proactive interventionism. America once led the world by example — she was once the greatest creditor in history, with the freest markets, and a constitution that enshrined life, liberty, property rights, due process, free speech, freedom of assembly and habeas corpus into law. While some of her founders might have been slavers, the Constitution they created sowed the seeds for that system’s destruction by guaranteeing that “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

Those are the values that I believe humanity should aspire to as we move deeper into the 21st Century. America’s contemporary economic and foreign policy has not only led to the American government engaging in unconstitutional activities like torture, warrantless wiretapping, indefinite detention, extrajudicial killing, etc. I believe that America’s contemporary economic and foreign policy is a danger to America’s long-term well-being.

As I explained in detail last month:

Neoconservatism holds that American and Western civilisation has a unique moral role in policing the world. That means military commitment, and frequent war. That, in turn, means spending. Spending has meant huge deb acquisition. There are many historical antecedents of empires convinced of their own special role in history, and determined to impose it on the rest of the world by force. Look at Rome — driven into the ground by the cost of imperialism, and her “bread and circuses” welfare state. Imperial Britain’s debt load hit its peak at the very point when its empire crumbled into the sand. This is not a co-incidence, and the good news for America is that once Britain ended its global role, growth soon returned, and Britain’s debt-to-GDP ratio fell back to a sustainable level. Of course, America’s debt position might be more sustainable if she was still the world’s greatest industrial powerhouse. But she has instead exported much of her productivity to her hostile creditor, China. The deindustrialisation of the West has allowed newly industrialised nations, especially China, to build up huge monetary wealth — trillions of dollars of Western currency. And neoconservatives continue to believe that America — dependent on foreign goods and resources, hugely indebted to hostile nations, and war fatigued — is somehow in a position to expand her empire, and to attack more countries?

Rome and Britain for all of their terrible imperial excesses also embodied many noble values. Yet their empires faded, and they lost influence as new empires arose. Today, a new empire rises: China. China’s political system embodies no liberal values whatever. Modern China’s founder Mao Zedong mused that it might be worth killing half of humanity to implement global socialism. The modern Chinese legal system, and its constitution are thoroughly authoritarian, and lack the American overtures to liberty, property rights, the pursuit of happiness, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly.

Through over-extension America slowly bankrupts herself, and makes herself ever more dependent on Chinese goods and components. While America outspends the world militarily, the cost of her military commitment is breaking her back.

This seems counter-intuitive: America’s hunger for global power is making her weak? Hawks like Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney might respond that the only way to maintain American primacy is through more military spending, the commitment of greater resources, and more determination to contain the expansion of China in the Pacific. But what is really happening is that America is breaking herself through the strain of effort. She ships her resources, her productivity, her young men and women overseas to guard sites in Afghanistan, Pakistan, South Korea, Germany and all of the 900 foreign military bases; in doing that she loses the productivity and wealth these people and things would create at home: infrastructure, education, medicine, technology, innovation. That — as empires always discover — is the cost of ruling the world. And it is a backbreaking one.

America should lead the world by example — through her own economic and technological development, through respect for individual and civil liberties and the Constitution, through diplomacy, through trade, through international friendship, and through being what the founders conceived her as — an independent nation that did not entangle alliances, much less policed the world.

How can America be an independent nation — in energy, in politics, in spirit — while she is chained by the shackles of maintaining and controlling an oil-dependent global empire?

Ron Paul is the only major Presidential candidate who comes close to articulating this vision. An independent and strong America can preserve the values enshrined in the Constitution. An America beaten into the ground by the implications of huge debt acquisition, systemic financial fragility and military over-extension may not even be able to preserve America.

Of course many in the media and the political establishment have already preordained that Paul cannot win. The global imperialism and the war on drugs must go on, or so they seem to believe. Anyone who points out the unsustainability of such an arrangement is marginalised, newsletters or none. Dennis Kucinich and Bernie Sanders — two other such Americans — are roundly ignored.

Alas, the march of history goes on too. Empires rise and fall. So mighty they seem, in their time.

As Percy Bysshe Shelley put it: