The Pauls’ New Crusade: “Internet Freedom”
Defending the Internet — and the corporations that invest in it — from government regulation is the new “End the Fed,” Paul advisors tell BuzzFeed exclusively. A new Paul manifesto: “This is our revolution.”
Ron and Rand Paul are set today to shift the central focus of their family’s long libertarian crusade to a new cause: Internet Freedom.
Kentucky senator Rand and his father Ron Paul, who has not yet formally conceded the Republican presidential nomination, will throw their weight behind a new online manifesto set to be released today by the Paul-founded Campaign for Liberty. The new push, Paul aides say, will in some ways displace what has been their movement’s long-running top priority, shutting down the Federal Reserve Bank. The move is an attempt to stake a libertarian claim to a central public issue of the next decade, and to move from the esoteric terrain of high finance to the everyday world of cable modems and Facebook.
The manifesto, obtained yesterday by BuzzFeed, is titled “The Technology Revolution” and lays out an argument — in doomsday tones —for keeping the government entirely out of regulating anything online, and for leaving the private sector to shape the new online space.
“The revolution is occurring around the world,” it reads. “It is occurring in the private sector, not the public sector. It is occurring despite wrongheaded attempts by governments to micromanage markets through disastrous industrial policy. And it is driven by the Internet, the single greatest catalyst in history for individual liberty and free markets.”
The manifesto quotes Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises and attacks not just the federal government, but also progressive groups that have called for similar measures to keep the Internet largely unregulated: “Today, the road to tyranny is being paved by a collectivist-Industrial complex — a dangerous brew of wealthy, international NGO’s, progressive do-gooders, corporate cronies and sympathetic political elites.”
The manifesto lays out five specific battles with government regulation and with liberals who state their goal of online liberty in similar terms, but who view corporate encroachment as a more immediate risk. The Paul manifesto seeks to rein in anti-trust actions against companies in new industries; to stop attempts to impose “Net Neutrality” rules on broadband providers; to prevent government control of online infrastructure; to broaden private control of the wireless spectrum, and shore up “private property rights on the Internet.”
The Pauls also take a stand for the growing industry known (and widely criticized) as “big data.”
They deride the notion that “private sector data collection practices must be scrutinized and tightly regulated inthe name of ‘protecting consumers,’ at the same time as government’s warrantless surveillance and collection of private citizens’ Internet data has dramatically increased.”
Paul’s so-called “Audit the Fed” bill will soon be put to a vote in the House of Representatives, and the new campaign will kick off shortly thereafter.
“We are going to bring to this project the same kind of intensity, resources and energy we brought to the Fed Audit,” said one Paul adviser.
The document is intended to serve as a conservative counterpoint to a Declaration of Internet Freedom released this week and hosted by the group FreePress, though the two share some goals. The earlier document, which sets out broad principles but does not take sides on divisive issues like Net Neutrality, was signed by groups including the American Civil Liberties Union as well as Internet companies such as Mozilla.
The language of the document tries to reclaim the issue of Internet freedom from the strange bedfellows that have staked a claim to it: progressives and tech companies on one hand, and more traditional conservative politicians like California Rep. Darrell Issa.
“Internet collectivists are clever,” the manifesto says, accusing their foes of series of Orwellian linguistic twists. “They are masters at hijacking the language of freedom and liberty to disingenuously pushfor more centralized control. ‘Openness’ means government control of privately owned infrastructure.’Net neutrality’ means government acting as arbiter and enforcer of what it deems tobe ‘neutral’.”
“This is our revolution — government needs to get out of the way,” the manifesto concludes.
This is also a new stage for what supporters refer to as the Ron Paul Revolution, and a way to make sure that Ron Paul’s followers stay on board with the movement after the congressman’s retirement from the House of Representatives. Paul supporters are already Internet-savvy, frequently launching digital campaigns of their own, and skew young. And the new cause gives his son Rand an easier way to connect with them, given that his relationship with his father’s supporters has often been fraught.
Internet freedom, Paul insiders say, is going to be Rand’s end-the-Fed.
Making Rand Paul the standard-bearer of Internet freedom “is one of the goals,” said a Republican strategist close to the campaign.
“As you may have noted he has been speaking out about Internet Freedom a fair amount including in his endorsement of Romney on Hannity,” the strategist said in an email. “Freedom online and freedom and liberty offline are seamlessly linked and Senator Paul gets that.”
A Paul adviser told BuzzFeed that the full Campaign for Liberty Internet project will start about two weeks after the Fed bill vote.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story mischaracterized the Declaration of Internet Freedom signed this week by several groups.
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Cogitator X 10 months agoThe Paulbots are out in force today. Freedom for the wealthy & powerful subservience for you that’s what a libertarian society would look like. But then I’m sure all these “libertarians” are just millionaires waiting for that big break.
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IambicPentaMaster 11 months agoInternet Freedom? How can there be when the Pauls don’t even have permission of the Internet’s inventor, Albert Gore, Jr. to dissent?
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johni7 11 months agoIt’s unfortunate that the Pauls don’t target the reason for corporate tyranny in the internet: intellectual property. As an Austrian economist, he should at least be familiar with the work of fellow Austrian Stephan Kinsella, who has written and talked extensively about how IP is a major reason for corporate takeovers.
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dustbowldaze 11 months agoIf you can’t be free in real life, at least you can pretend to be free on the internet. These guys are about 10 years too late keeping the internet free. Governments and corporations rule the roost!
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evilito 11 months agoLibertarians who think that the leaders of their movement are really all about liberty are being played for suckers. Today’s libertarians are essentially calling for plutocracy - unfettered rule by those with capital - and shielding it in pretty talk about liberty and freedom. Libertarians are against net neutrality, against measures that protect the public’s privacy from corporate whims, against the labeling of genetically modified foods…I could go on - but essentially, libertarians are all about shielding corporate power from any curb, no matter of the harm done to the public. The sad part is that many are being taken in by what they consider a vanguard philosophy or movement. They’re essentially working for their own serfdom.
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ObamaIs GodAwful 11 months agoThis won’t excite the Ron Paul groupies — you can’t smoke the Internet.
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ethicalfan 11 months agoI don’t think they have looked at the unintended consequences of “internet freedom” and the agenda behind this movement. In the US the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that from 2002 to 2011 the incomes of musicians decreased 45%. A substantial percentage of the unemployed and underemployed today are people who’s livelihood has been affected by piracy. Its not just music anymore. It has now dropped Home Video revenues by 25% and books are next. The “open internet” agenda is just an excuse to help greedy tech entrepreneurs flip companies built on other people’s content and sell search engine ads on the backs of “free” content. Mr. Paul loves the Constitution. Copyright was included in the Constitution to proect creators and spur innovation. ISPs and search engines are simply ignoring copyright law. That is not “freedom”, that is oppression.
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ringdinger 11 months agoYet another reason why Ron Paul is a blubbering belligerent baffling buffoon!!! Great job buzzfeed for exposing how craaaazy he is!!!
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jasonm52 11 months agoAs a self-described ‘moderate’ who would probably be labeled ‘liberal’ by others, I’ve always been baffled by those sympathetic to libertarian movement. If the libertarian worldview were fully implemented, it would lead down the same road of tyranny and authoritarianism as communism, or any collectivist socio-economic vision. Libertarianism is simply tyranny by a different name—instead of the politburo, power will be centralized within an ultra-wealthy, corporate elite. It’s imperfect, but a regulated, free-market system supported by a limited welfare state has proven time and time again to be the most prosperous, resilient and equitable. It needs to be reformed, made better; but not destroyed.
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dangerouslytalented 11 months agoThe Pauls are anarchocapitalists. They have the mantra that the government can’t do anything, and that would include any kind of regulation of the internet. The result would be that the main corporations (google and the telecommunications companies) will become the de facto government of the internet, completely usurping anything legitimately elected.
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mijmm 11 months agoShould people serve corporations or corporations serve people? what’s needed is an elected government that represents the people (in deed, not just in promises and propaganda) and actually fight against the ever increasing power of corps to govern our lives. Giving free rein to corps and reducing elected government control doesn’t reduce government. It just passes government over to corps. Government by corporations is government too. Unbridled power of corporations to control and govern people’s lives will be a nightmare of Stalinesque proportions. It’s a choice .. freedom for the individual and constrained corporations (corporations serve people), or freedom for corporations and constrained individuals (people serve corporations).
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