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View Full Version : Ron Paul Speaks to Crowd of 2000 at Ariz. State Univ. Conference




bobbyw24
12-04-2009, 06:04 PM
WASHINGTON - (Business Wire) Today, Congressman Ron Paul delivered the keynote speech before 2,000 people at Arizona State University for the 1st Annual Arizona Campaign for Liberty State Convention.

Despite having to wait almost two hours for him to speak due to flight delays, Paul addressed an enthusiastic crowd at the university’s Memorial Union ballroom.

“It is great to see so many young people eager to hear the message of limited government, noninterventionist foreign policy, and sound money,” said John Tate, President of Campaign for Liberty. “We hope that this movement continues to grow and more people are introduced these ideas.”

Since the end of his 2008 presidential campaign, Ron Paul has been travelling regularly across the country speaking to groups of young people receptive to his message.

For more information, visit: www.CampaignForLiberty.com

Campaign for Liberty
Gary Howard, 703-865-7162 x109

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/ron-paul-speaks-to-crowd-of-2000-at-asu-conference,1075982.shtml

purplechoe
12-05-2009, 12:07 AM
YouTube - Ron Paul Speaks At ASU.wmv (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNIqTuLxfsA)

Knightskye
12-05-2009, 12:48 AM
Interesting beginning to the video. :D

I'm still waiting for it to load. All of the sudden, Firefox doesn't load pages so quick for me. It's not my internet. Yesterday, I tested Internet Explorer and the pages loaded fine, and even videos loaded quicker.

bobbyw24
12-05-2009, 06:07 AM
by Dianna M. Náñez - Dec. 5, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

The very ideas that clashed with Republican and Democratic leaders when Congressman Ron Paul ran as a GOP presidential candidate won cheers from the more than 1,000 people listening to him speak at Arizona State University on Friday.

Young Americans for Liberty, a group that originated as a national network of college students supporting Paul's 2008 presidential bid, invited the Texas congressman to speak at ASU.

Paul said he accepted the invitation because he enjoys addressing a young generation of voters and because of his fondness for Arizona, where he said the "Ron Paul Revolution" originated. The grass-roots movement used non-traditional tactics, plastering homemade banners and signs on freeways and street lamps, to promote Paul's campaign to a wider audience when the candidate struggled to compete with Republican and Democrat nominees.

During Friday's speech, Paul acknowledged the trouble he had legitimizing his campaign. "We send our kids over to die to protect democracy, but at the same time it's hard to compete (politically) in our own country," he said.

That barrier is crumbling, though, and support for his ideas is building, he said, as a growing number of voters are frustrated with the major parties' handling of the economy and military combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"Our views are getting attention now because there is an obvious failure of the financial (system) . . . and our foreign policy," said Paul, who has advocated dismantling the U.S. Federal Reserve. "It's time . . . to bring our troops home and mind our own business. The public's with us in auditing the Federal Reserve."

Lambasting Democrats, Paul said he would be accused of being "coldhearted" for not supporting their social-welfare programs.

"Why in the world would we allow our government . . . to redistribute the wealth?" he argued. "Just think if everybody took care of themselves and everybody helped their family."

Without missing a beat, he took a swing at Republicans, too.

"Another group," he told the crowd, thinks you can't be trusted to make your own decisions. "You might end up smoking, drinking or gambling," he said. "You might have to tolerate people. They might have religious values that are different . . . sexual (orientations) that are different.

"But we'll let them do it!" Paul shouted, as the crowd yelled in support. "The solution . . . is freedom of the individual . . . and respect and confidence that does work."

While Paul sounded like he was giving a campaign speech, in an interview with The Arizona Republic, he refused to commit himself to a 2012 presidential run. But he acknowledged the buzz his undeclared run is getting as the Republican Party struggles with an ideological split and the Democrat administration is being blamed for a slow economic recovery.

If the U.S continued to suffer financially, he said, he would "have a hard time not speaking out about it" come election time.

A 2012 Ron Paul ticket is exactly what the hundreds of young and older Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians and independentsin Friday's audience are hoping for.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/2009/12/05/20091205ronpaulrally1205.html

Texan4Life
12-05-2009, 07:36 AM
LOL at 4:38 you hear "fuck fox news!"

AdamT
12-05-2009, 02:20 PM
I was there, huge crowd. Kokesh gave a speech too and had the crowd pretty pumped up. Jordan Page played.