@MoonShadow Why not drop those fools in the republican party. You know they are just not that into you libertarians. They are playing the tea party the way they used to play the Christian right. Promising things they have no intention to deliver while stealing your tax money for their business cronies.
They are never going to let someone like Ron Paul have a voice. They just want you to vote republican and STFU. If the libertarians and the liberals joined forces we would have a viable third party that could shake things up. I might vote for such a party, but I would never vote republican.
This is the endgame of a decade long endeavor among small-L libertarians to take over the Republican party. Keep in mind, that the Libertarian Party was born about 1971 because of a liberty purge that followed Barry Goldwater's unsuccessful presidential campaign. But a generation of activism as a third party has netted zero gain. During that entire time, libertarians never exceeded 6% of the electorate; which in our system (as opposed to a parlimentary system such as is common in Europe) that amounts to zero representation. It had become obvious to the Gen-X libertarians (and some of the old guard) that this third party thing was never going to amount to anything. So around 2002, or perhaps even earlier, a new plan was hatched. One that didn't require the total commitment of a population that is known for doing thier own thing. A campaign of educating (or indoctrinating, according to a certian perspective) of the young Millinial generation using their own, and at the time very new, methods of communications on the Internet. Ever noticed how the Internet, in general, appears to be very libertarian with pockets of liberalism? This lifted up a new generation of educated young voters, and now they are ready. I'm not saying this is what what was supposed to happen, this is what
did happen. And I have to admit that I am more than a little suprised to see it working, but it is. I am now a voting member of my local Republican Excutive Committee, in addtion to being a district chair. Nor am I alone on the committee. Our intent, and successes, are to inject ourselves into the party structure, demonstrate our political will as a block, and take over the party from the grassroots up. Ron Paul has been aware of, and agreed to be the figurehead of, this movement. So has his son Rand. I know this to be fact personally, as I have met both of them. Honestly, Ron Paul never expected to win the nomination, and probably didn't really want it anyway. But not only will we be a force to contend with at the national convention, local and state candidates that wish to stand a chance at winning officeare going to start talking to us and talking the talk. This doesn't mean that they will actually be liberty minded candidates, but it does improve those odds. The (R) nest to your name, as a liberty minded candidate, is a huge political advantage compared to trying to run an independent or (L) campaigin. In another 4 years, the demographics & votin trends says that enough Boomers will have died off that the center of the electorate in the US will shift directly to the Millinials, skipping my generation completely. This was never some off-the-cuff plan by a bunch of disorganised kids. This is a well executed long range plan, and the Republican Party will be the liberty party again for another generation. We have already affected change.