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Ron Paul connects war, black lawmakers, and food stamps

Right about now, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) probably wishes his father kept a much lower profile.
Republican presidential candidate, Congressman Ron Paul, grants press interviews after holding a rally outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Penn. on April 22, 2012.
Republican presidential candidate, Congressman Ron Paul, grants press interviews after holding a rally outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Penn. on April 22, 2012.
Right about now, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) probably wishes his father kept a much lower profile.

Former Republican Rep. Ron Paul, the father of potential presidential candidate Rand Paul and a former presidential candidate himself, said the Congressional Black Caucus does not support war because they want that money for food stamps. "I was always annoyed with it in Congress because we had an anti-war unofficial group, a few libertarian Republicans and generally the Black Caucus and others did not -- they are really against war because they want all of that money to go to food stamps for people here," Ron Paul told Lew Rockwell in early February during a discussion on sanctions.

I saw some paraphrases of this online, and I assumed the former congressman's comment couldn't have been quite as ridiculous as the tweets suggested. My assumption was wrong -- Paul really did argue Congressional Black Caucus members oppose war because they want money for food stamps.
 
As BuzzFeed report noted, Paul went on to complain that CBC members who were part of the unofficial "anti-war group" also disappointed him by supporting sanctions against countries like Iran. "They wanted to look tough," he said.
 
Obviously, the notion that Congressional Black Caucus members were only skeptical of wars because of food stamps is racially charged and ridiculous. It'd be an offensive comment from anyone, but the fact that it's coming from a longtime congressman and former presidential candidate only adds insult to injury.
 
And, of course, Ron Paul isn't just some random former lawmaker running around the country saying dumb things and appearing at fringe events. He's also Sen. Rand Paul's (R-Ky.) father.
 
In fact, Rand Paul spent much of his career in politics promoting his father's message, agenda, and national ambitions. The fact that there's been an ugly racial element to Ron Paul's message may very well lead to some awkward questions as the Kentucky senator moves closer to the presidential trail.
 
As we talked about yesterday, one assumes the senator will argue that he shouldn't be blamed for his father's off-the-wall ideas, and that defense might even be compelling under normal circumstances. But given that Rand Paul had a leading role in Ron Paul's operation, this isn't quite so easy.