Thursday, January 28, 2010

Dinner with Ron Paul



About a month ago, I was given the opportunity of my life. I was invited to New York City to be a guest at a dinner with Ron Paul, a republican congressman from Texas and a former presidential candidate. Mr. Paul is a longtime student of the Austrian School of Economics, and he was the most anti-war candidate on either side of the fence in the ’08 election. I independently worked on his presidential campaign—calling voters around caucus time, going door to door, collecting signatures, and even spray painting my old pickup truck with his website.


It was that now-broken-down pickup truck that caught the attention of Seth Lipsky of the New York Sun as he walked past my home in Maine. We became friends and on several occasions have met for breakfast in his home to discuss a wide array of markets-based topics - from the gold standard to the Federal Reserve.


In the middle of November of '09, Seth gave me a call to ask me what I was doing for dinner on December 14th; he had invited Ron Paul to New York to talk about HR 1207 and wanted me to be there. I accepted, and a month later, I found myself in a room surrounded by a stellar cast of journalists gathered to hear Dr. Paul (he is an O.B.G.Y.N) speak. Among them were James Grant of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer; Paul Gigot and Mary O’Grady of the Wall Street Journal, along with their former editor there, George Melloan; Adam Brodsky of the New York Post; Ira Stoll of thefutureofcapitalism.com; and John Stossel and Judge Andrew Napalitano of Fox News. John Stossel was one of the first to get me interested in libertarianism from his days on ABC's 20/20 and I read and watch Judge Napalitano nearly every day. The Senior Vice President of the Campaign for Liberty, Jesse Benton was accompanying Dr. Paul.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Thesis of sorts

My name is Gardner Waldeier and I am a jack of all trades from Maine. My purpose for setting up this blog is to look at how various topics - political, economic, ecological, etc. - relate the to libertarian/anarcho-capitalist Austrian School of Economics that I find so appealing.
Personal liberty, private property rights, and a non-interventionist foreign policy are the foundations of this school of economic thought; through this blog, my hope is to get more and more people interested in questioning their beliefs on these sometimes radical subjects.

My obsession with wild animals, nature, evolution and invasive species in particular when I was younger, led me to notice the parallels between the spontaneous order that takes place in nature and the way free markets work.

Thanks for reading. I hope to keep you engaged and strongly encourage any and all comments.
Gardner