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Exclusive Interview

Sunday, December 02, 2012

Pat Buchanan on His Latest Book, the Failure of Romney and What the GOP Has to Do Next

With Anthony Wile
26

Pat Buchanan

The Daily Bell is pleased to present this exclusive interview with Patrick Buchanan.

Introduction: Patrick Buchanan has been a senior advisor to three presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000. From 1966 through 1974, Buchanan was an assistant to Richard Nixon, and from 1985 to 1987, White House Director of Communications for Ronald Reagan. In 1992, Mr. Buchanan challenged George Bush for the Republican nomination and almost upset the president in the New Hampshire primary. In 1996, he won the New Hampshire primary and finished second to Sen. Bob Dole with three million Republican votes. Patrick Buchanan has written ten books, including seven straight New York Times bestsellers, most recently Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?

Daily Bell: Glad to have you back for another interview. Everyone knows who you are but remind us anyway. Give us some background on yourself and how you have developed professionally and intellectually.

Pat Buchanan: Very briefly, I started in journalism over 50 years ago in June. I was an editorial writer for three years and then joined Richard Nixon and his campaign and stayed with him right through his presidency. I became a syndicated journalist afterwards and served in Reagan's White House and ran three times for president myself. That's my basic summary.

Daily Bell: Suicide of a Superpower caused a lot of controversy. You eventually left MSNBC because of it. Can you fill us in?

Pat Buchanan: It's almost a year behind us. MSNBC's chief said he felt the ideas and beliefs in the book didn't belong being discussed on MSNBC or on national media. I obviously disagreed with that assessment, as did all the other networks who had me on the air, and it did become a New York Times bestseller but I guess it was a breaking point with MSNBC. I was delighted to be with them for ten years and enjoyed it and enjoyed a lot of my friends over there, even though very few of them agree with me.

Daily Bell: What's next on the agenda? Another book?

Pat Buchanan: I am working on another book right now on Richard Nixon and my first three years with him, from 1966 to 1969, about the great comeback and how he managed.

Daily Bell: Interesting how times have changed. You called the US a failing nation. Is it still failing?

Pat Buchanan: I think, in a way, like many of the Western nations, America is beginning to disintegrate along the lines of culture and ethnicity, and identity and social differences, and it does not seem to be the united country it used to be. That's what I write about in Suicide of a Superpower, the reasons why I believe the country and our civilization are in decline.

Daily Bell: Did you vote for the GOP's Romney for president?

Pat Buchanan: Yes, I did vote for Governor Romney and Paul Ryan and did so enthusiastically. My sister worked for his campaign as a national surrogate and I was disappointed in the outcome but it was not altogether unexpected. I think that Hurricane Sandy stopped the Governor's momentum. It was a great benefit to the President when you can play the role of comforter-in-chief. I think he did it well. After that, President Obama seemed to have regained the footing he had lost in the debates. So I was not wholly surprised. I had not predicted a Romney victory but I did have hopes.

Daily Bell: We believe the GOP hijacked the nomination and took it away from Ron Paul who was clearly gaining momentum and gave it to Romney. Agree? Disagree?

Pat Buchanan: I disagree with that. I think Romney won it fair and square and it was a very rough campaign. Ron Paul is a friend of mine and I have campaigned for him down in his congressional district in the old days. I like him and he's been true to his convictions but I don't think he was winning the nomination.

Daily Bell: Why the antipathy to Ron Paul from top GOPers? Isn't the GOP a big tent? Shouldn't it have rejoiced in Ron Paul's popularity? The numbers apparently said he had a chance to beat Obama where Romney did not.

Pat Buchanan: I do agree that Ron Paul belongs inside the Republican Party. Certainly he's been a loyal Republican but I think on some issues neither he nor I are in the mainstream of the Republican Party. We are both deeply skeptical of foreign intervention and foreign wars and I share that view with Dr. Paul. We both opposed the Iraq War and I believe we were right. I think our views do belong in the Republican Party and I think they are growing in terms of acceptance.

I've had a number of people agree with the campaigns I ran in the 1990s, where we said we ought to stay ought of these foreign quarrels and wars that are none of our business and are bleeding our country, literally bleeding it of its young people and, of course, bleeding it of enormous amounts of money and wealth – unless the vital interest of the United States is threatened we ought to be deeply skeptical about foreign wars.

So these ideas certainly are long in the Republican Party and they're not the dominant idea but I think on many social and cultural issues Ron Paul is in the mainstream. On his belief in small government and his opposition to taxes I think he qualifies as something of a purist but certainly in sync 100% with a lot of traditionalist conservatives so he's certainly part of the Republican Party. I was glad to see him do the job he did and he did tremendously well. I will say this: I believe, and I'm not certain, that he consistently out-polled any of the other Republicans among young voters.

Daily Bell: Why is the GOP the party of empire these days? Has it always been that way? How did the GOP evolve?

Pat Buchanan: The GOP evolved in the pre-war era, pre-WWII. Some of the Republican Party's leading lights and brilliant minds were leaders in the America-first movement to keep us out of WWII. While they succeeded for a long period of time, Hitler made his fatal blunder of attacking the Soviet Union and rival, Stalin. That's where most all the casualties in WWII occurred; even though our side of the war was bloody as it could be, the losses over there were literally in the millions.

I think that after the war was over many Republicans, some of them young – Richard Nixon and Eisenhower and others – reluctantly came to the conclusion that the United States was faced with a global challenge in the Soviet Empire and the Soviet Union in that it was imperialist, it was ideologically ambitious and it was hell-bent on global domination. I think they had good reason to believe that. So they adopted a defensive strategy during the Cold War of peace through strength and containment of the communist empire. I think that Republicans took over, if you will, the leadership of the Cold War when the Democratic Party broke and went with Senator McGovern in 1972. Republicans held the leadership, I think, all the way through the Cold War. There was Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Bush I. And the Democrats only had one president and that was Jimmy Carter.

I disagreed with the conservatives and the Republicans in that at the end of the Cold War I thought we should have come home. Our war was over. If it was necessary to contain the Soviet Empire we had done it. The Soviet Empire collapsed, the Soviet Union collapsed, the Berlin Wall went down, the Red Army got up and left Germany and left Eastern Europe and went back to the Urals, and I thought America should have done the same.

I think Ron Paul and I basically agreed and argued that point. I was against the Gulf War and I was against the Iraq War. So I think the rift came inside the Party, to a degree, back in the end of the Cold War, from about 1989 to 1991. I ran three times for president and Ron Paul's run a couple of times and our views did not ultimately prevail. They gained tremendous support but they didn't ultimately prevail.

Daily Bell: You are very concerned about mass immigration. Has your concern abated with Obama's re-election or has it increased?

Pat Buchanan: I think the problem is both legal and illegal immigration. Folks, we now have a mammoth welfare state, which if you add up all the transfer payments and welfare programs it's really something like a trillion dollars. And this also is a magnet to very poor people abroad. They come into the United States and if they don't get a job they are well taken care of nevertheless. I think the enormous numbers of folks coming in from the Third World have far more difficulty assimilating obviously in what still remains a First World nation. They don't bring the skills and the academic achievements, and the capacity to really succeed, like Baby Boomers did in a First World nation and in America, as advanced as it is, I think we are becoming two countries.

If you look at the election and stats of native-born white Americans, for example, Governor Romney won by 20 points and he lost by 40 points among immigrants and people of color, young people and single women who depend heavily on government. So do I think it's going to be solved? No. I don't think it's going to be solved.

Daily Bell: Do you think Romney would have done a better job on immigration from your standpoint?

Pat Buchanan: Sure, I certainly do.

Daily Bell: Libertarians believe that if all land were owned then there wouldn't be an immigration problem. The problem is that government sets immigration policy. Should the US give the one-third of the land it owns to the citizens and get out of the immigration business?

Pat Buchanan: I don't mean to be offensive, but are you kidding? But hey, listen. I admire, respect and like libertarians. Murray Rothbard was a friend of mine and he supported me in '92 and then he became disillusioned with me by '96. They are very principled people and I like them. They are very interesting in their ideas but to be truthful I don't know of a single great nation that's ever been built by libertarians. Libertarians say, sure, now we have all this industry from protectionism so let's soften the borders.

Daily Bell: Is it true that certain policymakers in the US want to create a North American Union? Is this why former president George Bush wanted to grant a blanket amnesty? Is it true that George Bush and now Obama have created agreements with Mexico and Canada that will reinforce a union?

Pat Buchanan: I think not in a formal sense but there's no question about it – the American Southwest is becoming, and will become, culturally, socially and linguistically as much a part of Mexico as it is of the United States. Politically, I think Republicans will probably capitulate and cease seeking to defend the border and send illegal aliens home and impose sanctions on those who hire illegals, and I think that's the end of one nation indivisible. With regard to Canada, I think there's less of a problem. If I were a Canadian I might want to build a border against the United States.

Daily Bell: US officials are very scared of terrorism. Is this why US regulatory agencies have purchased millions of dum-dum bullets? What are some other reasons?

Pat Buchanan: The reasons we are scared is because it can occur. It occurred in Europe, it's occurred in the United States, Madrid and London, repeatedly. The IRA was engaged in terror there, as well as Islamic terror, Muslim terror. It also happens because we are over there. I think terrorism occurs because we need to get out of all the countries we occupy and leave these countries alone.

I don't know who's purchasing dum-dum bullets but I do know that Black Friday marked the biggest sale of guns in United States history. I think the FBI gave clearance for the purchase of up to 150,000 weapons for one day. I don't think the American people need to fear that they are going to be disarmed. I think the folks who argue for second amendment rights basically won the battle, horse, foot and dragoons.

Daily Bell: Is the secession movement in the US picking up? If so, why?

Pat Buchanan: I posted a column on the secession movement at my website last week. I don't think it's as serious as the one my great-grandfathers were involved in that got one of them killed! One was from Mississippi and wound up in a federal penitentiary after being captured by the forces of General Sherman when he was trying to defend Atlanta. The otherr was killed and the only thing we found on his record was the word Vicksburg.

So is this serious? No, it's not. But I believe it's a manifestation of the fact that Americans really don't like each other, some have even come to detest each other, and many have come to dislike and detest the United States and would rather not be a part of this country and be in their own separate country.

How serious they are about this or whether this is just an expression of feelings I don't know. But I do know that this movement of people to associate with their own kind, if you will, and to pull away ancient states and nations is one thing I have written about in my book in the chapter on ethno-nationalism.

We see its manifestation with the Scots wanting to move out of Great Britain and the Catalonians wanting to break free of Spain and Flanders wanting to break out of Belgium and at last be a separate country. There are parts of northern Italy that want to break away. We saw Yugoslavia break up into seven different countries as soon as the Cold War was over. Czechoslovakia broke in half. The Soviet Union split into 15 pieces and is subdividing again.

So I think there is a tendency, it seems to me, to overcome the centrifugal forces that are pulling us toward one world and one-world government. That was a very powerful movement in the '90s, when you had the EU advanced, the Maastricht Treaty, you had NAFTA and you had the World Trade Organization and the Copenhagen Meetings, these environmental things – all these things creating one world – and eventually, one-world government with the EU as the model. I think that's gone into reverse.

Daily Bell: Is the US becoming a more authoritarian place?

Pat Buchanan: I think it's going to become a more authoritarian place. When you have different ethnic groups and races and also different fundamental religious beliefs – and I consider ideology political religion – and these multiply, then you become less like the country we were in 1960 than say the Habsburg Empire and eventually, I find it hard to see how a democracy works.

We already see the effort – and this is very well advanced in the Democratic Party – to buy off interest groups, ethnic groups and all the rest and create sort of a balkanized America. I see that coming. This is one of the reasons why the subtitle on my book is "Will America Survive Till 2025?" I see that it's certainly a geographic expression called America and maybe a political entity but will it be one country, indivisible? I'm not so sure.

Daily Bell: Are internal passports in the future? Will it be harder to get out of the US in the future?

Pat Buchanan: I don't see that as a big problem, to be honest. People are moving all over the country. They can't keep track of who's coming to the country, but I do see, and you see it because its disintegration of society ... you see identity cards and tags on students in schools so teachers know where they are at all times. Let's hope the mayor of New York is not the wave of the future. You can't smoke in Irish bars and you can't have a 17-ounce soda pop and all the rest of it. I do see the nanny state growing, there's no doubt about it.

The more people you have and the more diverse you become ideologically, racially, ethnically, socially, religiously, economically and when you commit yourself to egalitarianism and equality, the only way you can achieve equality in that kind of society is really to take from some and continue giving to others, which requires a bigger, stronger government.

Daily Bell: Why are the police and Homeland Security becoming ever more repressive?

Pat Buchanan: I just don't know. I think this is a libertarian issue with which I am not all that familiar. Maybe I should be but I don't see the Department of Homeland Security being that big of a problem.

Daily Bell: Why is the name of the organization "Homeland Security"? Why the appeal to what some perceive as having resonance with the Third Reich? Was this intention?

Pat Buchanan: No, not at all! The defense of the homeland is a very positive phrase to most Americans. Defense of the homeland – you have foreign policy and foreign wars so I don't read something horribly Third Reichian into the name of the department. It's another mammoth agency that was all cobbled together. All the various small agencies got rolled into one in I think probably a political response to 9/11.

Daily Bell: Is the American two-party system going to survive? Is a new party needed?

Pat Buchanan: Well, I tried that once and it didn't work. I think the real danger right now is for the Republican Party. It is demographically facing a very grim future because its political base, which is predominantly Caucasian and Christian, is shrinking with the growth of population as people of color are growing as a part of the population. I think it's about 38-40% and they will be more than one-half of the population by 2041. Anyone other than white or Caucasian, Barack Obama won those voters, if you aggregate them, 80% to 20%.

So I think the Republican Party faces a difficult problem but I don't see a successor party on the horizon. You know, I came into politics with and I was very much for Barry Goldwater. He was a good libertarian and he didn't do that well. But I came into politics when the Democratic Party was twice as large as the Republican Party, and working with Candidate Nixon from '65 to '69 and through '72, we began to convert the Republican Party into America's party and eventually it became that in the 1980s and early 1990s. But the mass immigration and the low birth rates with native-born Americans have combined to make the future of the Republican Party look terribly grim.

Daily Bell: You would never consider running for president again?

Pat Buchanan: I would consider it but I wouldn't do it! I have a lot of scar tissue!

Daily Bell: In closing, any final issues you want to mention?

Pat Buchanan: Well, I do think the Republican Party will make a terrible mistake if it lets itself be bullied into signing on to higher taxes and violating its pledge to not raise taxes and basically abandoning one of the main principals and planks of the Party, which have held this bunch together. I think they are headed down that road and I think it's a mistake. If they do it, I think they will rue the day they did it.

Daily Bell: Thanks for sitting down with us and answering the tough questions!

Pat Buchanan: Thank you.

Mr. Buchanan's worldview is expansive and informed, as one would expect from an author of many bestselling books on politics and US policy. Caveats can be presented as well, certainly from a libertarian point of view.

These might include Mr. Buchanan's perspective that Homeland Security is a fairly harmless agency. From our point of view it is an extraordinarily invasive and arrogant one with immense power.

It is bigness that makes so many bad ideas dangerous – if one is concerned about individual freedoms.

Just yesterday came the following news about the TSA, the Transportation Security Administration – one of Homeland Security's biggest subsidiaries – courtesy of Natural News. It's entitled, "TSA claims Congress has no jurisdiction over it; refuses to attend hearings." Here's an excerpt:

When officials who head up a federal agency created and funded by Congress no longer feel obligated to appear before the congressional committee charged with overseeing the function of that agency, a situation of genuine tyranny exists.

Enter John Pistole, the Obama Administration's head of the notorious Transportation Security Agency. He is not only refusing to appear before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, but he's even gone so far as to declare that said congressional committee possesses "no jurisdiction over the TSA."

That's more than just arrogance; that's a dangerous precedent to set.

We'd agree with that. Arrogance almost inevitably has an impact on subsequent actions. Here's another article from Natural News, circa 2011:

TSA backscatter radiation safety tests were rigged ... It can now be revealed by NaturalNews that the TSA faked its safety data on its X-ray airport scanners in order to deceive the public about the safety of such devices ...

The evidence of the TSA's fakery is now obvious thanks to the revelations of a letter signed by five professors from the University of California, San Francisco and Arizona State University. The letter reveals:??• To this day, there has been no credible scientific testing of the TSA's naked body scanners. The claimed "safety" of the technology by the TSA is based on rigged tests.??• The testing that did take place was done on a custom combination of spare parts rigged by the manufacturer of the machines (Rapidscan) and didn't even use the actual machines installed in airports. In other words, the testing was rigged.??• The names of the researchers who conducted the radiation tests at Rapidscan have been kept secret! This means the researchers are not available for scientific questioning of any kind, and there has been no opportunity to even ask whether they are qualified to conduct such tests. (Are they even scientists?)

Now, the issue of backscatter radiation has never been resolved, to the best of our knowledge, and it's a good example of the arrogance we're discussing. Hundreds of millions of people throughout the world are subject to these sorts of facilities and they may be receiving doses of radiation that will prove injurious.

This irradiation is being done in the name of the "war on terror" – itself a dubious invention. But it is hard to parse reality when it comes to government and power elite memes. It is bigness itself that makes them so resistant to scrutiny. Even when someone is declared responsible for this or that issue, the myriad of public servants below him or her may prove resistant to agreed-upon change.

Bigness is not merely ineffectual. When it comes to government, smaller is better.




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Showing 1 - 20 of 26 - Newest on top - Reorder Feedback
  Posted by clark on 12/04/12 01:57 PM

oops, it was of course, just a good interview.

  Posted by clark on 12/04/12 01:55 PM

This was a god interview.
Some questions were a nice surprise, more straight to the truth of matters, especially when compared to very old school MSM type in-lockstep questions.

Republicans in general do not seem to have a base of working principles from which to draw from to answer questions and solve dilemmas.

A Person might think Republicans would use the constitution as a basis for deciding the right or wrongness of things, a Person would be wrong to think that. I.e.:

Patrick_Henry wrote:

I usually agree with Pat, but he loses me right here.

" I just don't know. I think this is a libertarian issue with which I am not all that familiar. Maybe I should be but I don't see the Department of Homeland Security being that big of a problem."

The correct answer would have been, there is NO authority in the Constitution for the DHS. Therefore, it should not exist!

-

There were a couple of other similar examples in the interview, and it's not just Pat that is like this, imho, it's how most Republicans are and how they approach things.

A Person cannot go by what a Republican says. The words they use are often 'code-speak' for something else they want, and their past actions, as Laurence Vance keeps pointing out, is quite the opposite of their rhetoric:

"Hey Republicans: Why didn't you do anything during the time you controlled the government? Too busy instituting a police state... "
Click to view link

At least with the Democrats they are on the up and up somewhat, they want to take what others have and give it to the F.S.A. while killing or jailing everyone that gets in their way.

Two wings of the same bird of prey,... both are always expanding the state at the expense of the individual.

  Posted by agnosticanarchist on 12/04/12 05:32 AM

Mr.Buchanan said in the interview that while Murray Rothbard supported him in 1992, he had become disillusioned with him by 1996 in his next Presidential run. Murray Rothbard died in January 1995; this fact is enough to make one wonder if he really knew Rothbard as well as he has claimed to.

Anyway, that is a minor point of concern. My real gripe is that Pat Buchanan doesn't think the TSA should be abolished. To see such sentiments coming from someone professing to be in favor of individual liberty is enough to make me want to stop listening to him entirely. His thesis about ethno-nationalism and the segmenting of America is to me self evident. Basically, one massive group of citizens doesn't want to live under a set of rules that the other massive group has no qualms freely subjecting themselves to. It shouldn't take several books to make this plain. I, for one, am interested in more immediately pressing problems, one of which is government agencies conflicting with the liberty of citizens. Pat Buchanan, on the other hand, seems to have as his overarching concern the desire to stop the eroding Anglo-Saxon hegemony within the domestic voting bloc. Well, ok Pat. Beat that drum. Meanwhile, the tyranny continues unabated.

  Posted by Thomas Molitor on 12/03/12 01:41 PM

Excellent interview. Buchanan's political assessment is spot on. I wouldn't get too hung-up on his view of the TSA. Buchanan has always been an iron-fisted kind of guy in tone and manner. I suspect he has just not been paying as much attention to the growing signs of the US turning into pretorian state and its attendant violations of civil liberties as the attention this blog gives the signs.

  Posted by Carpenter on 12/03/12 05:03 AM

Cantigas321 tries that old mass-immigration lie aimed at conservatives: [i]"he is dead-wrong on the GOP, protectionism (econ 101), and immigration. Hispanics and Asians are hard-working, business-friendly, and family-oriented groups, essentially "natural conservatives.""[/i]

Sure, bud. Just like African and Arab immigrants in Europe are "family-oriented". And oh so "hard-working" these groups. (Compared to who? Whites? That must be why so many non-Whites seek out welfare programs, and those who help their racial brethren into Western countries immediately inform them of the cornucopia of welfare programs they can apply for.)

When Latinos, Africans and Arabs form gangs and attack people in the schools and in the streets - that is something Cantigas321 conveniently ignores. Because those groups are so "family-oriented". Their families. Not yours.

Gang rapes in Europe are carried out almost exclusively by immigrants. And a few "whigger" Whites, joining the immigrants. In the trials, [i]the families of the rapists show up to support them, and intimidate the rape victims[/i]. They shout "whore!" at the rape victims and tell them "We know where you live!

Yeah, Cardigas, so "family-oriented". Why don't you go and live in a neighborhood like Harlem then?

"The GOP should cater to immigrants!" goes the cry. The GOP has many non-White candidates and Affirmative Action appointees, and speakers at the RNC. Several Blacks and Latinos. The Blacks and Latinos still vote for the socialist party that gives them more money and started mass immigration, THE SAME VOTING PATTERN AS IN EVERY WESTERN COUNTRY. There is NO country where giving praise and privileges to immigrants has given the Right the majority of their votes. The immigrants ALWAYS vote socialist.

Cardigas probably knows this. His agenda is mass immigration, though. He wants Whites to become a minority, and he will say whatever needed to achieve that. You see these types of fake "conservative" posters all the time in comment sections. Then they go back to socialist forums and brag about manipulating the "racist whites".

Conservatism need to defend the West from becoming a Third World hell-hole. Blacks in South Africa had the highest purchasing power of all Black populations in Africa under White rule. Now, half of all women in South Africa have been raped under Black rule. Whites in Rhodesia suffer the same fate. There are cheers every time a White woman is raped by Black gangs. And we in the West hear nothing about it in the media, because the media want mass immigration to continue.

Cardigas here wants that future for us - the final control of "racist capitalist" Whites who have resisted the socialist takeover. The only question that really matters now is if conservative Whites can defend their countries, every other issue will depend on that.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Everything is racial? You are nothing but the color of your skin and gender? ...

  Posted by Wrusssr on 12/03/12 04:33 AM

In 1983, Tom Braden and Pat Buchanan debated Dr. Larry McDonald (D-Georgia) about the elite's work to establish a world government. McDonald wins the debate hands down. Both Braden and Buchanan knew what McDonald was talking about, and knew it was true. Braden was a life-long member of the Council on Foreign Relations-agents for the London bankers.Three months later McDonald was on a Korean airliner that supposedly ". . .strayed into Russian air space." It was all tidied up quickly. McDonald's name had been mentioned as a future presidential candidate

Click to view link

The 5-minute excerpt below from a 1963 JFK speech also applies to the same group McDonald refers to. Kennedy had signed executive order 11110 which would officially back U.S. currency with silver; a move that would greatly dilute (or eliminate) the Fed's stranglehold on America's currency and economy after President Wilson sold his soul to the London bankers (House, who McDonald refers to, was an agent for the London bankers); allowing them to set up their private central bank in America along with an "IRS" to collect their money. In return, the London bankers guaranteed his election and bankrolled his run for the presidency in 1913. Kennedy was assassinated six months after making this speech when he went to Dallas. Afterwards, when Kennedy's Vice President Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as president, he cancelled EO 11110 and returned power to the FED. This information is public knowledge.

Click to view link

  Posted by cantigas321 on 12/03/12 02:28 AM

Mr. Buchanan may be right on non-intervention and low taxation, but he is dead-wrong on the GOP, protectionism (econ 101), and immigration. Hispanics and Asians are hard-working, business-friendly, and family-oriented groups, essentially "natural conservatives." Sadly, many have been duped by liberal leaders time and time again on social programs (and well, Mr. Romney was a terrible candidate, just admit it). It is up to conservatives and libertarians to show them that we DO care- and that the free market is the only means to prosperity. Take responsibility to educate- don't just throw your hands up in the air and say they must be intellectually inferior. It is that type of stereotypical "conservative" talk that is exactly what makes most minority groups run the other way.

  Posted by Bluebird on 12/02/12 06:59 PM

Good interview. Thank you. I agree with your After Thoughts and many of the views given by other feedbackers. I just was wondering if he really believes the secession movement is because we don't "like" each other? Or it is about "color". Does he not see that the government is out of bounds?

Come Tuesday, I believe they are suppose to vote on whether to give the UN control over disabled persons. Looking back at history, what could possibly go wrong there? A provision is even included regarding said disabled's reproductive health. We should believe that they have the people's goodwill in mind when history shows sad results.

The UN cannot have my disabled children! Will Congress consider my views? Have they EVER? THIS is what the secession is about-we have had enough abuse! They are suppose to represent us and yet go against everything we hold dear.

  Posted by rossbcan on 12/02/12 06:53 PM

@Patrick_Henry

"NO authority in the Constitution... "

At All:

Click to view link

  Posted by rossbcan on 12/02/12 06:40 PM

@MetaCynic

"I don't understand why Congress is begging the TSA to attend Congressional hearings. Why not just cut off their funding and forget about the hearings?"

Really? When dealing with "problem solvers" whom we foolishly tolerate to define the "problem: and restrict the "solutions", THEY realized more than a century agao that "solved problems equals THEIR umemployment".

So, they pretend to be "independent" and, create "problems" for each other to "pretend to solve", thereby rationalizing (to an audience of fools) their "neccessary" (Machiavailli, falsely framed "arguments") control and resource consumption.

The fake "Cold War" was merely a "mutual understanding" that each side would use the "threat of the other" to control, exploit and enslave their respective populations. Research it, in the final decades of the USSR, the US was heavily "foreign aiding" the "evil empire, USSR", just to keep the scam afloat.

  Posted by Patrick_Henry on 12/02/12 05:16 PM

I usually agree with Pat, but he loses me right here.

" I just don't know. I think this is a libertarian issue with which I am not all that familiar. Maybe I should be but I don't see the Department of Homeland Security being that big of a problem."

The correct answer would have been, there is NO authority in the Constitution for the DHS. Therefore, it should not exist!

  Posted by MetaCynic on 12/02/12 03:45 PM

Buchanan is of the belief that the Cold War had to be fought to contain the expansionist Soviet Empire after WW2. He failed to mention that Roosevelt's unconditional surrender policy unnecessarily prolonged the war thus allowing Soviet entry into eastern and central Europe and provided an American rationale for the Cold War.

He knows of no great nation built by libertarians? How about America prior to 1776 and the US until 1861?! Neither were, of course, Rothbardian free market anarchies, but apart from slavery they were closer than any nation in history. Compared to today, the Old Republic was a libertarian paradise worthy of our nostalgia.

One probable reason why Asians and non Hispanic immigrants unexpectedly voted for Obama was that Romney embraced an even more belligerent foreign and trade policy than even Obama. These immigrants don't want to see their home countries bombed or those economies strangled by American and European trade sanctions.

I don't understand why Congress is begging the TSA to attend Congressional hearings. Why not just cut off their funding and forget about the hearings? The airport scanners are a blessing in disguise. The blue shirt and rubber glove battalions will all eventually sicken and die of daily exposure to those cancer boxes. These low intelligence power freaks, perverts and molesters will be removed from the human gene pool. Maybe the TSA will then whither away as normal humans, however desperate for work, will turn down these degrading suicidal jobs.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Good comments.

  Posted by Bosco Hurn on 12/02/12 01:28 PM

"... Murray Rothbard was a friend of mine... ."

Right. And some of my best friends are colored.

  Posted by saucerdesigner on 12/02/12 01:23 PM

I stopped reading when Buchanan said "I think Romney won it (the Republican nomination for 2012) fair and square... "
Republican Shill

  Posted by rgperrin on 12/02/12 01:04 PM

Are you sure you mean "centrifugal," not "centripetal" forces?

  Posted by Tolstoyan on 12/02/12 01:02 PM

"I don't mean to be offensive, but are you kidding? But hey, listen. I admire, respect and like libertarians. Murray Rothbard was a friend of mine and he supported me in '92 and then he became disillusioned with me by '96. They are very principled people and I like them. They are very interesting in their ideas but to be truthful I don't know of a single great nation that's ever been built by libertarians. Libertarians say, sure, now we have all this industry from protectionism so let's soften the borders."

Unfortunately, that condescending comment just put Buchanan on my do not read list.

  Posted by Bosco Hurn on 12/02/12 11:54 AM

Great points and questions, dimitri.

And does this exchange define "out of it" or what?

Daily Bell: Why are the police and Homeland Security becoming ever more repressive?

Pat Buchanan: I just don't know. I think this is a libertarian issue with which I am not all that familiar. Maybe I should be but I don't see the Department of Homeland Security being that big of a problem.

  Posted by IndyLyn on 12/02/12 11:25 AM

As usual, DB's After Thoughts sum up so well. Mr. Buchanan has become much more establishment Party over the years. It is too bad he didn't stick with Ron Paul libertarian principles. He might just have helped the Republican Party stick to its constitutional platform.

  Posted by bionic mosquito on 12/02/12 11:05 AM

It would be easy to write a critique of Buchanan's positions that are not libertarian, or that are otherwise accepting of the mainstream, acceptable dialogue. Instead, I will focus on where he has veered from that path, as I believe he has done valuable service in the one area that is of utmost importance. If I recall correctly, even Rothbard has stated that this issue is the single most important issue for libertarian focus.

Of the many immoralities that come with government as it is practiced today, the biggest immorality is the myth of the good war - good war basically having taking on the meaning of any war entered into by the United States or other Western regime. Twentieth (and now twenty-first) century war is the most final and evil manifestation of state power, destroying the lives of hundreds of millions dead and wounded, along with changing forever their families and communities.

Buchanan's views on foreign policy are quite sound. It is in this area where he comes closest to a libertarian / non-aggression viewpoint. On this most evil manifestation of the state, Buchanan receives high marks.

Buchanan wrote 'Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War,' and it is one of the most readable books on the myths of the Second World War. The book can be found here:

Click to view link

Where I have a slight disagreement with Buchanan on this topic might be regarding the roots of the cold war, as I believe the communists (both Russian and Chinese) were purposely established by the west during WWII (and in fact, this was a key objective for the west entering the war) in order to establish a perpetual enemy for perpetual war (for the perpetual health of the state). I go into this issue further, and cover my other thoughts on the ultimate 'good war' here, for those interested:

Click to view link

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the links.

  Posted by dimitri on 12/02/12 11:05 AM

Of course you were being facetious with your "answering the tough questions" closing remark? Tough questions would have been:
1) Was 9/11 an inside job?
2) Do you get groped and/or irradiated when you travel by commercial airliner?
3) Who assassinated the perfectly fine Democratic Cold War President, JFK?
4) Is the Fed a private bank and should it be exposed for its terminal corruption and ended?
5) Was Nixon a fear driven alcoholic?
6) Etc.
The old codger got some real soft ones to answer, and he answered them like the perfect elitist intellectual. But then, if you consistently fried these establishment types with hard questions, they'd eventually all start turning you down for interviews. Nothing like the Great Middle Way.

Reply from The Daily Bell

The old codger got some real soft ones to answer, and he answered them like the perfect elitist intellectual.

-----

DB: He's not an old codger. He's a tough, smart man.

And we asked him lots of questions including some pretty hard ones in our view.

We enjoy speaking with Mr. Buchanan and again take this opportunity to thank him for participating in another interview with us.

He is an important US intellectual and very high profile political person. His answers shed plenty of light on where the US is today and why it's there.

Sorry if you don't see that ...

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