Ron Paul
Ron Paul was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States on August 20th, 1935 and is the Politician. At the age of 89, Ron Paul biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Ronald Ernest Paul (born August 20, 1935) is an American writer, scientist, and former Texas legislator who served as the Texas representative for Texas's 22nd congressional district from 1976 to 1985, as well as in Texas's 14th congressional district from 1997 to 2013.
He has attempted the presidency of the United States on three occasions: as the Libertarian Party nominee in 1988 and as a candidate in the Republican primary primaries of 2008 and 2012.
Paul is a critic of the federal government's fiscal policies, particularly the establishment of the Federal Reserve and the tax policy, as well as the military–industrial complex and the War on Drugs.
He has also been a vocal opponent of mass surveillance laws such as the USA PATRIOT Act and NSA surveillance programs.
Paul served as the first chairman of the conservative PAC Citizens for a Sound Economy from 1963 to 1968 and has been described as the "intellectual godfather" of the Tea Party movement.
When his son, Rand Paul, was elected to the Senate from Kentucky in 2010, he became the first Senator in history to serve simultaneously with their children in the Senate.
Paul is a Senior Fellow of the Mises Institute, and he has written a number of books and defended the Austrian School's economic theories, including Murray Rothbard and Ludwig von Mises during his political careers. Paul decided on July 12, 2011 that he would not seek another term in Congress in order to refocus on his presidential campaign.
On May 14, 2012, Paul said he would not be running in any other presidential primaries, but that he will also compete for delegates in states where the primary elections have already been held.
Paul received 190 delegate votes at the 2012 Republican National Convention.
Paul resigned from Congress in January 2013, but he is still active on college campuses, giving speeches promoting his libertarian ideology.
In the 2016 presidential election, Paul received one electoral vote from a Texas faithless elector, making him the youngest candidate to earn an electoral vote after John Hospers, as well as the second registered Libertarian presidential candidate in history to receive an Electoral College vote.
Personal life
Since 1957, Paul has been married to Carol (Carolyn) Wells. Wells invited Paul to her 16th birthday party in 1952, and they met in 1952. They had five children, Ronald, Lori, Randal, Robert, and Joy, who had been baptized Episcopalian. Randal (Rand), Paul's son, is the state senator from Kentucky's junior class senator. Paul was born as a Lutheran and later became a Baptist. Carol Paul has published Ron Paul Family Cookbook, a collection of recipes she and her colleagues contributed to, which was sold in part to help Ron Paul's political campaign. Ron Paul Uprising, a 2012 documentary about his life and work.
Paul and his wife now live in Lake Jackson, Texas. He loves riding his bike and walking every day.
Paul was hospitalized on September 25, 2020, after he appeared to slur his words while speaking at a livestream function. On his Twitter account, Paul added a photograph of himself in a hospital bed as well as the statement, "I am doing fine." Thank you for your concern.
Lori Pyeatt, Paul's daughter, died in April 2021, despite Paul's absence from his daily show, the Ron Paul Liberty Report, Paul's co-host Daniel McAdams' absence.
Early life, education, and medicine were all involved.
Ronald Ernest Paul was born in Pittsburgh, the son of Howard Casper Paul (1904–1997), who operated a small dairy business, and Margaret Paul (née Dumont; 1908–2001). His paternal grandfather immigrated from Germany, and his paternal grandmother, a devout Christian, was a first-generation German American.
He was the 200-meter dash state champion as a freshman at Dormont High School. Paul matriculated at Gettysburg College, where he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He earned his B.S. degree. In 1957, a bachelor's degree in Biology was awarded.
Paul earned a Doctor of Medicine degree from Duke University's School of Medicine in 1961 and completed his medical internship at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, as well as his stay in obstetrics and gynecology at Magee Women's Hospital in Pittsburgh. Paul served as a flight surgeon in the United States Air Force from 1963 to 1965, and then in the United States Air National Guard from 1965 to 1968. Paul and his wife then migrated to Texas, where he began a private practice in Obstetrics and gynecology. Selena Quintanilla, a well-known Tejano singer, was one of his children who helped deliver him.
Early congressional career (1976–1985)
As a medical student in the 1960s, Paul was influenced by Friedrich Hayek's The Road to Serfdom, which prompted him to read other publications by Ludwig von Mises and Ayn Rand. He knew economists Hans Sennholz and Murray Rothbard well, and owes a lot of interest in economics to them.
On August 15, 1971, Senator Richard Nixon "closed the window" by ending American involvement in the Bretton Woods System, thus ending the US dollar's loose association with gold.
In 1974, incumbent Robert R. Casey defeated him in the 22nd district. After a runoff, President Gerald Ford voted Casey to the Federal Maritime Commission in April 1976, and Paul won a special election in April 1976 to fill the vacant seat. Paul lost by fewer than 300 votes (0.2%) in the next regular election, but he defeated Gammage in 1978 rematch, and was reelected in 1980 and 1982. Paul's fame among local mothers was underestimated: "I had a lot of trouble down in Brazoria County, where he worked, because he'd delivered half the babies in the county." Only two obstetricians were in the county, and the other was his partner."
Paul served in Congress three different times: first from 1976 to 1977, after he secured a special election, then from 1985 to 2013, and finally from 1997 to 2013.
Paul served on the House Banking Committee, where he criticized inflation and condemned banking mismanagement that resulted in the savings and loan crisis. Paul argued for a return to the gold standard used by the United States from 1873 to 1933, and Senator Jesse Helms convinced the Senate to investigate the subject. In 1980, he protested the revival of registration for the military draft, assassinating President Jimmy Carter and the majority of his fellow Republican members of Congress.
During his first term, Paul founded the Foundation for Rational Economics and Education (FREE), a non-profit think tank dedicated to advancing the principles of limited government and free-market economics. Paul became the first chairman of Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE), a conservative political group founded by Charles and David Koch in 1984 "to fight for less government, lower taxes, and less regulation." In 2002, CSE launched a Tea Party demonstration against higher taxes. Citizens for a Sound Economy in 2004 evolved into two new businesses, with Citizens for a Sound Economy being renamed as FreedomWorks, and Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation becoming Americans for Prosperity. From 2009 to 2015, the two groups will be key players in the Tea Party movement.
Although serving four terms in the House of Representatives, Paul suggested term-limit legislation several times. In 1984, he resigned from the House in order to run for the Senate, citing "specific interests" overshadowing the fear that the Founders had for general welfare... For one who reveres true liberty and vehemently condemns the state's ability to come to Washington for a period of time and not leave a true cynic," he says. Paul lost the Republican primary to Phil Gramm, who had changed parties from Democrat to Republican in the previous year. Henry Grover, a conservative former state legislator who had lost the 1972 gubernatorial general election to Democrat Dolph Briscoe, Jr., was another contender in the senatorial primary.
Former state legislator Tom DeLay assumed Paul's position on his resignation from the House of Representatives, who would later become House Majority Leader.
Later congressional career (1997–2013)
After a difficult campaign in 1996, Paul was re-elected to Congress. In the primary, the Republican National Committee endorsed incumbent Greg Laughlin; Paul won with help from baseball pitcher, constituent, and friend Nolan Ryan, as well as conservative commentator Pat Buchanan (both of whom attended presidential campaigns that year). Despite Morris' outrage over controversial remarks in several newsletters that Paul published, Paul barely defeated Democratic attorney Charles "Lefty" Morris in the fall election.
Paul defeated Loy Sneary, a Democratic Bay City, Texas, rice farmer, and former Matagorda County judge in 1998 and 2000. He defeated Friendswood city councilman Chris Peden, who received over 70% of the vote and ran unopposed in the general election in 2008. Paul defeated three opponents in the 2010 Republican primary by 82%.
Paul announced on July 12, 2011, that he did not seek re-election to the House of Commons in order to run in the 2012 presidential race.
Of the 620 bills that Paul sponsored through December 2011, only one had been signed into law over a span of more than 22 years in Congress, with a lifetime success rate of less than 0.3%. Paul's sole act allowed for the selling of a federal customhouse to a local historic preservation group. In 2009, the number 2121 was a prime minister (today).
He helped eliminate funding for national identification numbers, federal teacher certification, International Criminal Court jurisdiction over the United States military, American participation in any United Nations global tax, and citizen monitoring of peaceful First Amendment activities.
Paul was one of eighteen Republicans in the House of Representatives to co-sponsor a motion by Bob Barr that sought to launch an impeachment investigation into President Bill Clinton in November 1997. There were no allegations or allegations made in the resolution. This was an early attempt to impeach Clinton, despite the fact that the Clinton–Lewinsky affair was raging. The emergence of the affair in 1998 would result in a more serious attempt to impeach Clinton. Paul voted in favor of legislation that was passed to open an impeachment investigation on October 8, 1998. Paul voted in favour of all four articles of impeachment against Clinton on December 19, 1998 (only two of which received the necessary majority of votes). Two days before, Paul said he would vote for impeach based on Clinton's military operations in the Middle East, specifically the 1998 bombing of Iraq and Operation Infinite Reach, not necessarily the Lewinsky affair, which he characterized as less serious than presidents' "constitutionality."
Paul served as honorary chairman of, and is a member of the Republican Liberty Caucus, a political action committee that aims to elect "liberty-minded, limited-government candidates." He is the founding member of the Congressional Rural Caucus, which addresses agricultural and rural issues, as well as the 140-member National Wildlife Refuge Caucus.
Paul served on the following committees and subcommittees.
Paul became the chairman of the Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology beginning in January 2011 with the 112th Congress and a resulting Republican majority in the House.
Paul's legislative career came to an end on January 3, 2013 with the swearing in of the 113th Congress.
Post-congressional career
Paul founded the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity in April 2013, a foreign policy think tank that aims to promote his non-interventionist views. The Institute is part of the larger foundation for Rational Economics and Education. He began to teach Ron Paul Curriculum, a homeschool online curriculum developed by Gary North and taught from a "free market and Christian" perspective in the same month.
Paul debuffed the NSA surveillance service and praised Edward Snowden for "delivering the truth about what our government is doing in secrecy" in June 2013.
Paul first appeared in Stansberry & Associates Investment Research's infomercials in April 2015, alerting of a forthcoming financial meltdown as a result of the imminent demise of the world's currencies. Paul foresees a market downturn in March 2017.
Paul was a critic of Donald Trump's proposal to increase the number of military forces in Afghanistan. In August 2017, Trump said that Americans don't see Afghanistan as a threat to their personal safety, and that being tough in foreign policy only costs Trump some of his funding base. In April 2018, Paul ordered that American troops be pulled back from Syria due to the fact that ISIS' threat has been eradicated. He continues to voice his dissatisfaction with foreign policy, as well as the events surrounding America and Iran.
Paul founded the Ron Paul Channel, an Internet broadcast, in 2013. "Turn Off Your Television" was its catchphrase. On the truth, "turn on the truth." Ron Paul ended all links with the Ron Paul Channel in order to launch The Ron Paul Liberty Report, which he co-hosts with Daniel McAdams.
Paul endorsed his son, Senator Rand Paul, in the 2016 Republican primary and campaigned for him in Iowa. Paul had said that no Republican or Democratic nominee came close to supporting libertarian views after his son was disqualified. Paul expressed disappointment in former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson's Libertarian Party nomination for President, and told independent voters that Green Party nominee Jill Stein was a more effective candidate for those who "lean toward progressivism and liberalism," while emphasizing that he was not endorsing her.
In the 2016 presidential election, Paul was the second Libertarian Party member to vote since John Hospers in 1972.
Paul referred to Hawaii Senator Tulsi Gabbard as "the most smart" and "the very best" option of the Democratic candidates in the 2020 Democratic primary, mainly because of her foreign policy positions, saying that "We probably wouldn't agree with too much on economics.