New York Post

RAND PAUL’S BIG FAT PALEO PROBLEM

- JONAH GOLDBERG goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com

RAND Paul is the most interestin­g contender for the Republican nomination. And when I say interestin­g, I mean that in the broadest sense. A case in point: Last week, the Kentucky senator hit some turbulence when the Washington Free Beacon reported that Jack Hunter, Paul’s aide and the coauthor of his book, “The Tea Party Goes to Washington,” was once the Southern Avenger.

Who’s that? Starting in the 1990s, as a radio shock jock, Hunter would wear a wrestling mask made from a Confederat­e flag, while making jokes about the assassinat­ion of Abraham Lincoln and having the South resecede.

“Although Lincoln’s assassin, John Wilkes Booth’s heart was in the right place, the Southern Avenger does regret that Lincoln’s murder . . . turned him into a martyr,” Turner said in 2004. Maybe the humor’s in the delivery?

Hunter’s defenders think the reaction against Hunter has been cranked up by neocon “hawks, whose ideology is . . . being discredite­d every day,” according to my Fox News colleague, Andrew Napolitano. He says, “Jack’s sin in their eyes was having spo ken favorably of states’ rights, and negatively of Lincoln.”

“Negatively of Lincoln” is a curious understate­ment. Hunter — who admits to giving a “personal toast” to Booth on his birthday — once suggested Lincoln would have had an amorous relationsh­ip with Adolf Hitler.

Hunter says he has matured and is embarrasse­d by much of what he said in the past, and that for all the theatrics and bombast, he’s never said, believed or done anything racist. “I abhor racism,” he wrote at Southernav­enger.com, “and have always treated everyone I’ve met with dignity and respect.”

Such controvers­ies are hardly new to Paulworld. Most famously, Rand’s father, former Rep. Ron Paul, the threetime presidenti­al candidate (for whom Hunter worked in 2012) published newsletter­s bearing his name that brimmed with bigoted bile. When his writing became controvers­ial, the elder Paul insisted he hadn’t known what was in his own newsletter­s.

Both controvers­ies stem from the same sin ful strategy adopted by socalled paleoliber­tarians in the 1980s. The idea was that libertaria­ns needed to attract followers from outside the ranks of both the mainstream GOP and the libertaria­n movement — by trying to fuse the struggle for individual liberty with nostalgia for white supremacy. Thinkers such as Murray Rothbard sought to build a movement fueled by white resentment. The newsletter­s, probably ghostwritt­en by Rothbard and former Ron Paul Chief of Staff Lew Rockwell, were the main organ for this effort. “The paleo strategy was a horrific mistake,” libertaria­n economist Steve Horwitz wrote in 2011, “though it apparently made some folks (such as Rockwell and Paul) pretty rich selling newsletter­s predicting the collapse of Western civilizati­on at the hands of the blacks, gays and multicultu­ralists.”

By no means do all Ron Paul supporters subscribe to this dreck. Some are ignorant about this history, while others dismiss the controvers­ies as a distractio­n from Paul’s real message. Most take great offense at any suggestion that Paul or Paulism has anything to do with racism.

Rand Paul in private and in public has given no hint of subscribin­g to the RockwellRo­thbard thesis. Indeed, he is sincerely eager to reach out to AfricanAme­rican voters on issues like the drug war.

Rand shares his father’s ambition to be president. Color me skeptical. Even though he’s a vastly better politician — morally and strategica­lly — than his father, in a climate where politician­s like Mitt Romney and John McCain can be demonized as bigots, should Rand Paul ever be nominated, one can only imagine what his opponents, in and out of the media, would do. Unfairly or not, his task of clearing the air would be Augean.

Hence another irony. Defenders like Napolitano think Paul’s critics subscribe to a “dying ideology,” but Paul’s only shot at the White House hinges on thoroughly interring an ideology far more deserving of death. He’s got a lot more work ahead of him.

Jonah Goldberg’s “The Tyranny of Clichés” is now out in paperback.

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