Why Young Voters Love Ron Paul
by David Sirota
Salon.com
Despite a sustained
campaign by the Washington media and political establishment to
marginalize him, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, is still
a serious contender for the Republican presidential nomination.
That has a lot to do with the support hes receiving from young
voters. In almost every survey
and activist
straw poll, Paul draws big numbers from voters between the ages
of 18 and 29.
The laziest
way to explain the counterintuitive phenomenon of youth rallying
around the GOPs oldest candidate is to insist that its
about kids silly college fling with unrealistic libertarianism
or that its about kids affinity for drug use
and more specifically, Pauls support
for legislation that would let states legalize marijuana. This degrading
mythology ignores the possibility that young people support Pauls
libertarianism for its overall critique of our governments
civil liberties transgressions (transgressions, by the way, now
being openly
waged against young people), nor does the narrative address
the possibility that young people support Pauls drug stance
not because they want to smoke weed, but because they see the War
on Drugs as a colossal waste of resources. Instead, Paul is presented
as merely a fringe protest candidate, and the young people who support
him are depicted as just dumb idealists, hedonistic pot smokers
or both.
One problem
with this fantastical tale, of course, is that it insults the intelligence
and motivation of young voters. But another, even more troubling
facet of this tale is how it uses speculative apocrypha and stereotyping
about ideology and drugs to suppress concrete social survey data
about the far-more-likely foreign policy motivations of young Ron
Paul supporters.
Read
the rest of the article
November
29, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Salon.com
|