Blue Republicans for Ron Paul: Journalist Gets It

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robin-koerner/ron-paul-2012_b_1206689.html?flv=1
Ron Paul and his supporters are much exercised by the danger to America of both crony corporatism and top-down "solutions" that are designed and implemented by officials of the state. They would like to see a country whose direction is determined much less by either, and much more by the free market -- defined simply as the sum of voluntary actions and transactions of individuals.
Those working to make Ron Paul president are seeing success based on that very principle -- but applied to the campaign, rather than the nation.
Look at any other candidate's campaign, and you will see a relatively top-down organization, in which the foot soldiers fill various roles that the campaign managers and strategists decide should be filled. In this form of centralized planning, the upper echelons of the campaign employees serve as the politburo. Perhaps ironically, this is standard practice for democratic politics.
Paul's campaign is something entirely different: it is mostly -- almost completely, in fact -- a group of excited individuals who, in a small way, are social or political entrepreneurs: coming up with new ideas and working on whatever excites them the most, or whatever idea or effort they think is proving the most productive. These are autonomous individuals, organizing only spontaneously and among themselves to see through specific projects. The best ideas and the efforts of the hardest workers among them rise to the top in a veritable free market of innovation and implementation. Even the platforms they use to communicate and organize exist because one or a few passionate volunteers decided they'd be useful....