For those of you who are interested in hearing Paul Ryan in his
own words prior to his selection as Mitt Romney’s running mate, I
offer you this extended interview I had with Congressman Ryan in
May, 2011 when I was the host of Backbone Radio on 710 KNUS in
Aurora/Denver. (I have since moved to 850 KOA.)
It’s full of (in my opinion) interesting perspective into who
Paul Ryan really is, including our conversation about the
importance of the morality of our nation’s economic system. How
often do you hear a Congressman, talking about the intellectual
history of the left, say “I’ve read Hegel. I’ve read Weber and
Bismarck, and the thinkers of those times…”? How often do you
hear a Congressman talk about “Natural Rights”?
In a part of the conversation which is very relevant to today’s
situation, Ryan explains why he believes “Medi-scare” politics do
not have to be successful for the left.
Ryan has been consistent, including through today, despite
claims to the otherwise by Democrats, in his promise that Medicare
reform will not impact anyone currently in or near retirement.
We went on to an interesting discussion about the morality of
Medicare itself. The answer which Paul gives to my question is one
which utterly belies Democrat claims that Ryan is a radical who
wants to eliminate entitlements and “shred the safety net.” Indeed,
I wished he had been more anti-Medicare than he was.
I closed the interview by asking him about the betting odds of
his being the Republican nominee for president; little did I know
he would end up being the nominee for vice-president.
No politician is perfect, but Paul Ryan is the most intelligent
and principled Republican VP nominee in my lifetime. I don’t know
whether his selection will be a political winner, but it can’t be
all bad to turn this election into a discussion of big issues. For
that in particular, Mitt Romney has my appreciation. Upon
re-listening to my discussion with Paul Ryan, my confidence in him
and his vision was further reinforced. And my interest in this
election has moved from almost entirely being about removing Barack
Obama to be as much about helping the GOP ticket get elected
because I believe that they will do good things for this
country.
The BEST thing we could do for this country at this moment is to
remove obama.
Aside from his disastrous economic, border, and foreign policy
decisions; the supreme court hangs in the balance.
At minimum, 3 supreme court seats will open under his second
term, two of which will be conservative. Obama's supreme court
packing scheme could trump FDR's.
A president obama facing no electoral consequences, along with a
friendly supreme court, will issue executive orders like they're
high school hall passes.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause
and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress
impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist
surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our
culture.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it,
makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so
many people seem to be hostile to it?
Bob Grant| 8.15.12 @ 12:58AM
The BEST thing we could do for this country at this moment is to remove obama.
Aside from his disastrous economic, border, and foreign policy decisions; the supreme court hangs in the balance.
At minimum, 3 supreme court seats will open under his second term, two of which will be conservative. Obama's supreme court packing scheme could trump FDR's.
A president obama facing no electoral consequences, along with a friendly supreme court, will issue executive orders like they're high school hall passes.
This is a serious, serious problem.