Originally posted by lazs2
I am not surprised that a libertarian appeals to liberty loving soldiers tho. war or no. ron paul is about one hell of a lot more than the war... any war...
lazs
Yea.
Many servicemembers, officers in particular, take their oath to support and defend the constitution from all enemies foreign
and domestic very seriously. From a constitutionalist point of view, that pretty much makes Ron Paul the only candidate they can support without violating their oath... That said, if Ron Paul changed his stance on the war but kept everything else the same, I think he'd still get the support of constitutionalists because a president is constitutionally permitted to direct foreign policy. The fact that he is against the war simply means he's a bit of an isolationist. If he were for the war, one would assume he'd go about continuing it by following the constitutional guidelines on such matters. Of course, the lack of a unified group to formally declare war against would be a bit of a barrier to that sort of position, but I'm sure he'd find some way to do it.
So his position on the war is nearly irrelevant IMHO to constitutionalists and even many libertarians. The important thing to them is "how" a president goes about conducting a war. "Why" is a question left to the policy makers, and in the constitution, the "why" is left to the president with concurrence from congress. If congress funds it, they effectively concur. Pretty simple I think.