Special to L. Neil Smith's The Libertarian Enterprise
This could get complicated, so bear with me. First, I did 
THIS POST 
a few days back, and note that I didn't write it—It's mostly a 
reprint from John Craig's blog, 
HERE.
That's clear? Okay. Now, 
Vulture of 
Critique has reacted very cleverly and incisively to John's clever 
and incisive post which I cleverly and incisively reblogged, thus:
Why 
should I welcome you, Ron-Paul-Stormcrow?
 At length Gandalf spoke. 'Hail, Théoden son of Thengel! I 
have returned. For behold! the storm comes, and now all friends should 
gather together, lest each singly be destroyed.'
At length Gandalf spoke. 'Hail, Théoden son of Thengel! I 
have returned. For behold! the storm comes, and now all friends should 
gather together, lest each singly be destroyed.'
Slowly the old man rose to his feet, leaning heavily upon a short 
black staff with a handle of white bone; and now the strangers saw 
that, bent though he was, he was still tall and must in youth have been 
high and proud indeed.
'I greet you,' he said, 'and maybe you look for welcome. But truth 
to tell your welcome is doubtful here, Master Gandalf. You have ever 
been a herald of woe. Troubles follow you like crows, and ever the 
oftener the worse. I will not deceive you: when I heard that Shadowfax 
had come back riderless, I rejoiced at the return of the horse, but 
still more at the lack of the rider; and when Éomer brought the tidings 
that you had gone at last to your long home, I did not mourn. But news 
from afar is seldom sooth. Here you come again! And with you come evils 
worse than before, as might be expected. Why should I welcome you, 
Gandalf Stormcrow? Tell me that.' Slowly he sat down again in his 
chair.
—The Two Towers
Ex-Army has recently written:
http://ex-army.blogspot.tw/2013/08/over-at-just-not-said-john-craig-is.html
In the recent post on Westminster Abbey I mentioned that all 
English kings up through William the Conqueror (for instance, Ethelred 
the Unready and Edward the Confessor) were given descriptive titles 
rather than numbers after their names.
...
If only modern politicians had more descriptive names....
In the old days, such names consisted of one word. This could be 
limiting. It's a little hard capture Ron Paul without calling him 
something like Ron the Crotchety Old Foreteller of Doom—which is not 
exactly a prescription for a successful candidacy nowadays.
...and I am frustrated, because Ron Paul clearly should be named 
Stormcrow, but apparently my bandwidth is too limited to get a signal 
across the Pacific Ocean from my terminal in Asia to Ex-Army's web 
server (presumably) in the Western Hemisphere.
Ron Paul should be known as Stormcrow, because people hate him when 
he tells them bad news. I have been posting this as comment, but it is 
probably lost in the unreliable ocean of TCP-IP signals. In theory, one 
can have a reliable network as an abstraction layer on an unreliable 
network, but in practice, the Internet often just seems very unreliable.
(You 
can read the original HERE. 
I have "Vulture of Critique right over there on my blogroll, so you 
should visit it often. He's the other blogger who realized the value 
of Japanese anime illustrations to a right-wing blog.)
Reprinted from Mr. May's "Ex-Army blog" at
http://ex-army.blogspot.com/2013/08/why-should-i-welcome-you-ron-paul.html
Reprinted from Mr. May's "Ex-Army blog" at
http://ex-army.blogspot.com/2013/08/why-should-i-welcome-you-ron-paul.html