Author Topic: Rand Paul Attacked Over Secret Society Connection, 'Aqua Buddha' Controversy  (Read 447 times)

SAMSON123

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This guy is another candidate with Bones falling out of his closet
   
      
Rand Paul Attacked Over Secret Society Connection, 'Aqua Buddha' Controversy In Conway Ad (VIDEO)



The Huffington Post   |  Elyse Siegel Posted: 10-17-10 11:40 AM

With the election for Kentucky's open U.S. Senate seat just weeks away, Democrat Jack Conway is out with a new campaign ad taking aim at Republican rival Rand Paul over controversy surrounding his affiliation with a secret society during his college years at Baylor University.

"Why was Rand Paul a member of a secret society that called the Holy Bible 'a hoax' -- that was banned form mocking Christianity and Christ?" asks a narrator in the 30-second spot. "Why did Rand Paul once tie a woman up? Tell her to bow down before a false idol and say his God was 'Aqua Buddha?"

A profile on Paul published by GQ earlier in the election season first called attention to the Tea Party-backed hopeful's connection to the "NoZe Brotherhood." The following excerpt lends context to the questions raised by Conway's camp in the ad:

    The strangest episode of Paul's time at Baylor occurred one afternoon in 1983 (although memories about all of these events are understandably a bit hazy, so the date might be slightly off), when he and a NoZe brother paid a visit to a female student who was one of Paul's teammates on the Baylor swim team. According to this woman, who requested anonymity because of her current job as a clinical psychologist, "He and Randy came to my house, they knocked on my door, and then they blindfolded me, tied me up, and put me in their car. They took me to their apartment and tried to force me to take bong hits. They'd been smoking pot." After the woman refused to smoke with them, Paul and his friend put her back in their car and drove to the countryside outside of Waco, where they stopped near a creek. "They told me their god was 'Aqua Buddha' and that I needed to bow down and worship him," the woman recalls. "They blindfolded me and made me bow down to 'Aqua Buddha' in the creek. I had to say, 'I worship you Aqua Buddha, I worship you.' At Baylor, there were people actively going around trying to save you and we had to go to chapel, so worshiping idols was a big no-no."

Following the release of the profile, Paul was quick to come out and deny the jaw-dropping account.

"No, I never was I involved with kidnapping, no I was never involved with forcibly drugging people," he said during an appearance on Fox News. "Do we live in an era where people can come forward anonymously and accuse you of things and then all of a sudden I am supposed to spend the rest of the campaign defending myself against anonymous accusers who say I kidnapped them? The story just borders on ridiculous."

The alleged female victim at the center of the controversy ultimately came forward and said she was a willing participant in the seemingly strange activity. She told the Washington Post, "There was an implicit degree of cooperation in the whole thing. I felt like I was being hazed."

Last week, Politico released a report offering further insight into NoZe and what Paul's ties to the group could mean for his campaign:

    Issues of the newsletter published by Paul's secret society, the NoZe Brotherhood, during his time at Baylor reveal a more specific political problem for the Kentucky Republican: The group's work often had a specifically anti-Christian tone, as it made fun of the Baptist college's faith-based orientation.

As for the new ad out from Conway aiming to capitalize on the controversy, Paul campaign manager Jesse Benton called the spot "shameful and despicable" and suggested the Democratic candidate "stepped way over the line" with the attack.

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SAMSON123

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I actually agree with this idiotic Rand on this issue... BTW How come they are not trashing him like Paladino on this issue???

      
Rand Paul: I Don't Want Washington Deciding 'Two Mommies Is An Appropriate Family Situation'

The Huffington Post   |  Elyse Siegel Posted: 10-16-10 01:25 AM
In arguing for why the U.S. Department of Education is unnecessary and should be abolished on Thursday, Kentucky Republican Senate candidate Rand Paul cited concerns he has about the issue of gay marriage to make his case.

"I would rather have the local school districts decide things," explained Paul at a debate against Democratic rival Jack Conway in the Bluegrass State. "I don't like the idea of Suzie has two mommies being an appropriate family situation to talk about to kindergartners. That's what happens when it gets to the federal level."

The Tea Party-backed contender said he'd prefer that "local school boards, teachers, parents" and residents be the ones making such decisions.

Challenging Paul, Conway fired back and underscored his belief that federal funding of schools is crucial.

"The cost of education is going up," explained the Democratic hopeful. "This is no time to run from our students. We need to become a more educated society to prepare for the jobs of tomorrow."

Via ThinkProgress comes video of Paul's remarks.

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SAMSON123

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Rand Paul's 'NoZe Brotherhood' Secret Society Blasted Christianity: Report


The Huffington Post   |  Nick Wing First Posted: 10-13-10 12:22 PM   |   Updated: 10-13-10 12:49 PM


Be careful what you do in college, because you never know when you'll run for Senate. It's the kind of warning that parents give their kids all the time, but one that Rand Paul may not have taken to heart, considering recent reports that the Kentucky GOP Senate candidate's college secret society was actually one that was banished from campus because of it's anti-Christian views.

Politico reports on the controversial history of the Baylor University organization:

    The NoZe Brotherhood, as the group was called, was formally banned by Baylor two years before Paul arrived on the grounds of "sacrilege," the university president said at the time. "They had 'made fun of not only the Baptist religion, but Christianity and Christ,' " President Herbert Reynolds told the student newspaper, The Lariat.

According to Politico's report on the material put out by NoZe in it's publication, The Rope, most of the writing was anti-religious satire that often mocked the university's Christian roots.

Politico dug up one article, entitled "Fishy Bibles," that claimed an 83-year-old Californian man was actually the true wordsmith behind the bible. The falsely proclaimed author of the religious text, the piece claimed, was the result of that man providing the name of a friend, Mr. Jesus Gonzales.

It's not the first time that supposed college-era indiscretions have plagued Paul. In August, GQ reported that Paul had kidnapped a woman in a marijuana-induced prank and forced her to "bow down and worship" their god, "Aqua Buddha." Paul denied the charge, and the woman has since admitted that she willingly took part in the stunt.

GQ also covered NoZe at the time, which it described as a group that "especially enjoyed tweaking the school's religiosity." John Green, one of Paul's former brothers, then told GQ that the group "aspired to blasphemy."

Jesse Benton, a spokesman for the Paul campaign, responded to the latest dispatch on the candidate's college years.

"So now the Democrats are shopping stories about 30-year-old college articles that aren't even attributed to Rand?" he said, according to Politico. "They must see how badly Jack Conway's liberal agenda of Obamacare, Government bailouts and tax hikes are playing in Kentucky and are getting truly desperate."

As for the attribution part, Benton appears to be mostly correct.

Paul's former brother, John Green, who Politico got a hold of for this piece, reportedly said, "I don't remember him participating much in writing."

Yet the nature of the group is certainly not likely to mesh well with the voters of Kentucky and the platform that Pau
l has chosen to run on. The Tea Party-backed Rand Paul has adopted a hardline stance against abortion and same-sex marriage, and has done so while actively touting his Christian faith.
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