THE RON PAUL REVOLUTION

 
 
Sisyphus Press -- P.O. Box 10495
State College, Pa. 16805-0495


The Ron Paul Revolution
by Congressman Ron Paul

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For this massive project, editors at Brandywine House pored over thousands of columns to put together the only book that covers a broad range of writings and opinions by Congressman Ron Paul. Contains an introduction by Charlotte Iserbyt and nearly 350 index entries.

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Editor's Note

Over the past 10 years, U.S. Congressman and Presidential Candidate Ron Paul has written literally hundreds of columns and speeches on a host of subjects of public interest, including the Constitution, money, war and peace, and healthcare. Ron Paul Revolution draws upon this wealth of information to compile what the editors consider to be a broad overview of the ideals and the vision laid out by the congressman. It is important to note that Paul’s writings do not appear in chronological order in this book. Instead, we felt it was more important to present what we believe best summed up the congressman’s thoughts on the most important issues.

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from Fight the Police State

Rep. Ron Paul gave the following speech on November 13, 2002. Mr. Speaker, when the process of creating a Department of Homeland Security commenced, Congress was led to believe that the legislation would be a simple reorganization aimed at increasing efficiency, not an attempt to expand federal power. Fiscally conser- vative members of Congress were even told that the bill would be budget neutral! Yet, when the House of Representatives initially considered creating a Department of Homeland Security, the leg- islative vehicle almost overnight grew from 32 pages to 282 pages— and the cost had ballooned to at least $3 billion. Now we are pre- pared to vote on a nearly 500-page bill that increases federal expen- ditures and raises troubling civil liberties questions. H.R. 5710 grants major new powers to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) by granting HHS the authority to “administer” the smallpox vaccine to members of the public if the Department unilaterally determines that there is a public health threat posed by smallpox. HHS would not even have to demonstrate an actual threat of a smallpox attack, merely the “potential” of an attack.

H.R. 5710 also expands the federal police state by allowing the attorney general to authorize federal agency inspectors general and their agents to carry firearms and make warrantless arrests. Arming the government while disarming the public encourages abuses of power.

 
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