It was great. We had the largest crowd yet for a Ron Paul rally. The applause and the loudness made Ron Paul’s wife and granddaughter, who were sitting just off to the side of Ron Paul, giggle a lot. Los Angeles is wild!
He kept it short and simple. He talked about the decline of the dollar, the need for reform in the area of currency, and the threat to our economic freedom that the Federal Reserve poses.
He stuck it to both parties when it came to civil liberties, and excoriated the PATRIOT Act and NDAA. He bashed on the TSA and explained to the crowd of mostly college students the dire necessity of legalizing drugs. He explained that pharmaceutical drugs are much more dangerous than marijuana, and that they get subsidies from the federal government and are behind prohibition.
He denounced the military-industrial complex. He talked about the need to bring our troops home from around the world. From Japan. From South Korea. From Germany. From Uganda. And from the Middle East. He talked about engaging the world through free trade and the need to treat other nations as we would like to be treated. Unlike South Carolina, Los Angeles went wild with applause for his calm argument in favor of a rational and humble foreign policy.
He talked about the freedom to choose, the importance of tolerance, and about the need to abolish – outright – the 16th Amendment.
While waiting around for Ron Paul to speak, the crowd did the wave for a while, and chanted on and off again ‘President Paul’, ‘Ron Paul’, and of course ‘End the Fed’. While I am loosely associated with the libertarian groups on campus (I have to work if I am not studying; I am paying my own way through college), it was great to see their hard work pay off. These guys spent months working to get enough signatures from around LA County to bring Ron Paul to UCLA.
It was a night to remember, that’s for sure. I can’t believe the Republican Party had repudiated this man (I can totally believe that an intellectually bankrupt Left could do such a thing, though). The times are a’changin’ though, and change is in the air. The younger generation of Americans are fiscally conservative and socially liberal, and this is the libertarian fountain of progress.
Best of all, hearing Ron Paul speak replenished my thirst for individual liberty and justice for all.