Going into Super Tuesday, Ron Paul hadn’t won a state yet, and his big hope was that he might win North Dakota. That’s right. North Dakota was his best shot.
Super Tuesday has come and gone. The other three GOP candidates all won at least a state. Even Newt Gingrich took a state, with a win in his home state of Georgia. But Paul is still waiting for a win, because Santorum took North Dakota. Is there anybody sane left who honestly thinks Paul has any chance?
For months, I’ve been hearing from my Ron Paul-supporting friends that he was “our last hope” and that if he didn’t win this year, we were doomed as a nation. Although that naive belief that Paul can win has died gradually among many of the people I know, they’re still left to face the reality of their own dire predictions. If you meant what you said — that Ron Paul was really your last hope for change through the electoral system — are you ready to join me in giving up on that system? Are you ready to start lookin at alternatives?
As some people have realized that Paul can’t win, their story has started changing a bit. Now they tell me the objective isn’t necessarily to win, but to win enough delegates to influence the Republican platform for the fall. Really? You’re telling me that you’ve poured all this money, time and work into an effort to influence a document that will promptly be forgotten — by the nominee and everyone else? Really?
‘Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood… Make big plans’
I don’t know how to be popular, and that hurts in a social world
Your motivations tell me more about you than your actions do
Just give us fake, happy smiles; who wants to hear your feelings?
Forgiveness has more power than political agenda in hateful tragedy
God watches humanity’s struggle and says, ‘You’re doing it wrong’
Why do people who say they love each other cause mutual harm?
I’m more afraid of sanctimonious smart people than of stupid people
She took an easy way to escape risk, but she’s left to deal with empty life