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-   -   Ron Paul's Predictions (http://www.politicalchat.org/showthread.php?t=3497)

bhunter 01-19-2012 03:45 PM

Ron Paul's Predictions
 
Here are some predictions that Ron Paul made in 2002. Though I'm not a Paul fan, I found it amazing how accurate he was.

Quote:

During the next decade, the American people will become poorer and less free while they become more dependent on the government for economic security.” See: A long, steep drop in American’s standard of living.

“Agitation for more class warfare will succeed in dividing us domestically.” Although Paul has been sympathetic to the Occupy Wall St. protestors, one could argue they are doing this trick in spades.

“The United States, with Tony Blair as head cheerleader, will attack Iraq without property authority and a major war, the largest since World War II, will result.”

“Erosion of civil liberties here at home will continue as our government continues to respond to political fear… by making generous use of the powers obtained with the Patriot Act.” The National Defense Authorization Act, everybody!

To paraphrase Paul, government will grow to record levels, satisfying both left and right as liberals gain an expansion of the welfare state and conservatives see more security spending.

A broad oil boycott hasn’t happened yet - and it’s unclear who is going to be imposing the boycott - but if Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for US sanctions boycotting Iranian oil, oil prices would skyrocket and you could count this one, too.

A few that are about halfway there:

Paul says some “moderate Arab allies” will be overthrown by “Islamic fundamentalists.” While revolutions have come, they have not come at the hands of Islamic fundamentalists in most cases. Time will tell what governments emerge, but for this he’s perhaps half right.

China will “align itself with the Arab nations” through arm sales and political support, Paul argues. Generally the US and China end up on opposite sides of Middle East issues - particularly Libya, for example - but Paul makes this connection seem that it will be much more forward than it currently is.

“The Karzai government will fail and the United States will be forced to leave Afghanistan.” While the US is on the way out, you can’t say the Karzai government has actually “failed” - it still stands, though many critics would say it is so riven with corruption as to be largely ineffective.

“An international dollar crisis will dramatically boost interest rates in the US. Price inflation with a major economic downturn will decimate US goverment finances and exploding deficits and uncontrolled spending.” Those higher interest rates may be coming, but for now the US isn’t in a dollar crisis and interest rates are at historic lows. However, deficits have grown.

“Gold will be seen as an alternative to paper money as it returns to its historic role as money.” Gold prices have soared but it isn’t anywhere near returning to its “historic role.”
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Electio...All+Stories%29

David Newman 01-19-2012 03:50 PM

All he had to do is look at some trend lines since 1980 and make an assumption that things would continue.

David Newman 01-19-2012 03:52 PM

Although, I'm not seeing the inflation....

bhunter 01-19-2012 03:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Newman (Post 86392)
All he had to do is look at some trend lines since 1980 and make an assumption that things would continue.

Good point. Just like tomorrow's weather will be likely similar to today's. You and your economist nose needs to stick around. Yep, "amazing" was the wrong word.

Charles 01-19-2012 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Newman (Post 86393)
Although, I'm not seeing the inflation....

I'm seeing it in food, fuel, and insurance...the things I need. Things I don't need, like a lousy teevee set, seem to be dropping.

Now whether this is a result of inflation, supply and demand, or a weak dollar is a moot point in my estimation.

Chas

Charles 01-19-2012 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bhunter (Post 86394)
Good point. Just like tomorrow's weather will be likely similar to today's. You and your economist nose needs to stick around. Yep, "amazing" was the wrong word.

Perhaps it's not that Paul is so smart, it's that everyone else is so stupid.

Chas

BlueStreak 01-19-2012 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Newman (Post 86392)
All he had to do is look at some trend lines since 1980 and make an assumption that things would continue.

+1.

Dave

BlueStreak 01-19-2012 05:46 PM

“Agitation for more class warfare will succeed in dividing us domestically.” Although Paul has been sympathetic to the Occupy Wall St. protestors, one could argue they are doing this trick in spades.

So long as there is greed and envy in this world, which there always has been and always will be----------Class Warfare will exist.

Anyone who thinks the struggle between the haves and have nots is a twentieth century invention is a damn fool.

Dave

BlueStreak 01-19-2012 05:48 PM

The rest of it seems pretty accurate.

Dave

finnbow 01-19-2012 06:11 PM

I think most any sentient being could predict most of those (this leaves out the likes of Palin, Perry, Bachmann ...), but few, if any, politicians have the temerity to say it. These things don't sit well with the "exceptionalism" crowd.


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