Rand Paul thought it would be clever to compare President Obama
taking executive action on immigration to FDR putting Japanese-Americans
in internment camps.
Now that Rand Paul (r-KY) has announced that he is the biggest defender of minority rights in the Senate (against all facts to the contrary including his own hiring
of a neo-confederate pro-secessionist), he thought it would be clever
to compare President Obama taking executive action on immigration to FDR
putting Japanese-Americans in internment camps.
Watch here, courtesy of American Bridge:
Speaking in Lexington Kentucky the day after Obama’s announcement, Paul said (transcript courtesy of TPM),
“I care that too much power gets in one place. Why? Because there are
instances in our history where we allow power to gravitate toward one
person and that one person then makes decisions that really are
egregious. Think of what happened in World War II where they made the
decision. The president issued an executive order. He said to Japanese
people ‘we’re going to put you in a camp. We’re going to take away all
your rights and liberties and we’re going to intern you in a camp. We
shouldn’t allow that much power to gravitate to one individual. We need
to separate the power.”
This is a huge, Beckian fallacy.
Let’s reverse it. “I care that too much power gets
in one place. There are instances in our history were we allow power to
gravitate to one person and that one person makes decisions, like hiring secessionists
who advocates for the secession of the South as chairman of the
“implicitly racist group” League of the South and supports the
assassination of President Lincoln, that are really egregious. Think of
what happened in World War II, when Hitler hated on certain segments of
the population. He said, you’re jewish so you need to go to this camp,
which is the same as saying you’re black so you need to be a slave.
Like being against the Civil Rights Movement. We’re going to take away
all of your liberties and lock you up in slave camps and put you in gas
ovens. We shouldn’t allow that much power to gravitate to one
individual.”
Paul’s hiring of the racist Hunter was troubling to
even the Daily Caller (the place where they yell at the President in the
middle of his speech). Media Matters noted at the time:
Matt Lewis wrote a post after the publication of the Free Beacon story criticizing Paul’s association with Hunter, writing: “It’s one thing to have an aide with baggage (even very bad baggage), but the larger problem here is that this also speaks to credibility and honesty — to Paul’s fundamental character.” Lewis did not mention that Hunter has written for his site.
I observed a pattern at the time:
Rand Paul’s Senate campaign employee Tim Profitt stomped on a liberal woman’s head at a Paul rally. That could have been an anomaly, but then we also have his own son being arrested for aggressive physical force against a female flight attendant. Add in this new associate who is fringey and you have a pattern.
But none of that makes Paul guilty of being just
like someone who put people in internment camps. Just comparing
someone’s actions to internment camps doesn’t mean they have any
relationship whatsoever to internment camps. It would be ridiculous to
accuse Paul of being like Hitler, and it is also ridiculous to accuse
Obama of putting anyone in an internment camp.
In actuality, President Obama did the opposite of
putting people in an interment camp, and this is what makes Paul’s
comments so troubling. Is it that he doesn’t understand what being an
internment camp really is, or he doesn’t understand the realities
regarding Congress not providing enough funding to deport everyone, or
he doesn’t understand the need to act with compassion but also respect
for the law?
Speaking of abuse of power, it was Rand Paul who told a group of teabaggers,
“I think the first executive order that I would issue would be to
repeal all previous executive orders.” Oh, so that’s totally not a
dictator move. He’s just going to erase everyone else’s input from the
beginning of our country. That’s over 10,00 executive orders that Rand
Paul thinks should be just wiped out. As in, he is planning to put tons
of power in his own hands should he get elected. He thinks he should
have more power collectively than these other presidents each had. This
is what makes Rand Paul an empty suit. Some of the things he says make
sense, until you look under the hood and see how craven and unprincipled
his stands really are.
This isn’t freedom or liberty speaking, it’s
ignorance. This is what ignorance sounds like. Play it again. Yup. Just
another teenager trying to sound smart. But this one is going to run for
President.
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