What does Rand Paul believe? Does he really know anymore? Or have his efforts at pragmatic compromise left him just as confused as the rest of us about who he really is?
For a long time, many people have believed that Rand Paul can’t be too much different from his uncompromising father. Ron Paul has preached a purist message for decades, as a Republican congressman, a Libertarian Party presidential candidate and then as a Republican presidential candidate. No matter how politically unpopular it was, Ron Paul could be counted on to be consistent — every single time.
How much different could his son be? He called himself a libertarian and he’s said many of the right things about reducing the size of government and about the virtues of making governance as close to local as possible. But ever since he entered GOP politics, he’s been ever more willing to say and do things to court the Republican mainstream and the party powers. Libertarians are now looking at him and wondering whether the man they saw as the heir to his father’s movement is one of them or if he’s really one of the people they’ve spent decades fighting.

Objective reality has now become offensive in dysfunctional culture
Time to face facts: Most people don’t really want individual liberty
Why am I disappointed in others, when my secret sins lay hidden?
Certainty leaves us unwilling to change beliefs when we’re wrong
Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’
Faith is our only assurance that rebirth will come again in spring
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Uh, oh: For first time since ’45, U.S. job growth was zero last month