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#52 Oct 19 2011 at 7:41 PM Rating: Excellent
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catwho wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
Yeah, I know. Those liberals even try to butt into personal matters, like making those pesky women get ultrasounds before they have an abortion!


You're correct. The liberals would do things like mandate you have an abortion if you've had more than your quota of children that the state can afford to care for. That's so much better!

They'll even force you to marry gay people!


Rick Santorum's plan is to force all the Democratic single mothers to get married so they can stop sucking the government teat and vote Republican.
Well, yeah. Women are kind of troublesome when they have opinions and autonomy and shit

Edited, Oct 19th 2011 8:42pm by Sweetums
#53 Oct 20 2011 at 2:18 AM Rating: Good
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#54 Oct 20 2011 at 7:03 AM Rating: Excellent
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Sweetums wrote:
Women are kind of troublesome when they have opinions and autonomy and shit
That's why we leave them in the kitchen.
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#55 Oct 20 2011 at 9:51 AM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
Yeah, I know. Those liberals even try to butt into personal matters, like making those pesky women get ultrasounds before they have an abortion!


You're correct. The liberals would do things like mandate you have an abortion if you've had more than your quota of children that the state can afford to care for. That's so much better!

What "liberals" do you speak of here?
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#56 Oct 20 2011 at 11:20 AM Rating: Excellent
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That's a fascinating if bizarre strawman there.
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#57 Oct 20 2011 at 2:16 PM Rating: Default
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catwho wrote:
And yet it's Republicans that want to control the most social aspect of our lives, our sex lives.


Interesting how you define "control" to be "stop government involvement in". Explain to me how *not* paying for something with government dollars is controlling that thing? Because to me, it's the exact opposite.
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#58 Oct 20 2011 at 2:29 PM Rating: Decent
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Debalic wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
Yeah, I know. Those liberals even try to butt into personal matters, like making those pesky women get ultrasounds before they have an abortion!


You're correct. The liberals would do things like mandate you have an abortion if you've had more than your quota of children that the state can afford to care for. That's so much better!

What "liberals" do you speak of here?


What do you think that "liberal" means in the modern political context? What do liberals fight for? What political principles are they operating under? Do you even have a clue? You use the word "liberal" and assume it means "person fighting for liberty", then you assume everything done by liberals must be about liberty. And when bad things result, you assume it can't have been because of the actions of liberals, because by definition that just can't be true!


It's an amazing bit of circular logic going on. Modern liberal movements are based on the political philosophy of social liberalism. That philosophy believes that using the government to create positive outcomes is more important than preventing government from infringing on the individual lives of the people. This manifests in the use of large government programs to provide needed benefits for the people and a willingness to take from individuals within the population to pay for those things. When you say "tax the rich more to pay for benefits for the poor" in any form, you are acting on that philosophy.


The problem is that said philosophy allows for any amount of this. The same exact principles gave us the Soviet Union, and Communist China, and Cuba, and North Korea, and Cambodia, and a dozen other absolutely horribly authoritarian regimes over the last century. The reason is that once you've accepted that the government is the means by which prosperity of the people is to be obtained, then you can justify any act by that government because it's always by definition acting in the best interests of the people.

How many times have people on this forum argued that the government *is* the people? Think about what you're doing mentally when you do that. You're arguing that you can't blame government for its actions because it is us. I could list off dozens more examples of the kinds of dangerous thinking that results from this. But the larger point is that most of the worst examples of authoritarian regimes in the last century have grown from that social liberalist political philosophy. But when they do occur, liberals work hard to distance themselves from them. Just as many of you are doing in this thread right now.


If you support raising taxes on the rich to pay for benefits for the poor, you support authoritarian government. If you believe in free health care, you support authoritarian government. If you support welfare, you support authoritarian government. Being a liberal in the modern context *is* about supporting authoritarian government. You just assume it'll only be just as authoritarian as it needs to be to do the things that *you* want. And when governments go beyond that point, you condemn them and say that they weren't really "liberal". They were something else. It wasn't the people giving government too much power over them that lead to oppressive authoritarianism, it must have been some other evil thing unrelated to that!


I just find it amusing and scary how easily so many people rationalize that away.

EDIT: The "3" in example is silent.

Edited, Oct 20th 2011 2:10pm by gbaji
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#59 Oct 20 2011 at 2:32 PM Rating: Decent
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Uglysasquatch wrote:
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It has been a hallmark of right leaning governments, so it's a pretty obvious association to make. Tough on crime talk almost always comes out of the right.
Tough on crime is great. Building more prisons isn't. I'd rather see that money get invested in hiring and fielding more police officers. An increased presence from more police officers tends to lower crime rates, almost universally.

And let's revamp this young offenders crap. Someone hits 20+ offences under the age of 17 and they need to fall under stiffer penalties.



Pretty much my thoughts on it. Hell in most cases just the cops being out and about curbs crime (especially here in Canada, We have a greater respect for law and order not like the Liberty and Justice mindsets of the USA.)
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#60 Oct 20 2011 at 4:21 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
catwho wrote:
And yet it's Republicans that want to control the most social aspect of our lives, our sex lives.


Interesting how you define "control" to be "stop government involvement in". Explain to me how *not* paying for something with government dollars is controlling that thing? Because to me, it's the exact opposite.
Texas doesn't fund abortions, hon.

Doesn't stop them from making women have medically unnecessary ultrasounds.




Edited, Oct 20th 2011 5:22pm by Sweetums
#61 Oct 20 2011 at 4:47 PM Rating: Decent
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Sweetums wrote:
gbaji wrote:
catwho wrote:
And yet it's Republicans that want to control the most social aspect of our lives, our sex lives.


Interesting how you define "control" to be "stop government involvement in". Explain to me how *not* paying for something with government dollars is controlling that thing? Because to me, it's the exact opposite.
Texas doesn't fund abortions, hon.

Doesn't stop them from making women have medically unnecessary ultrasounds.


Rick Santorum is a member of the Texas state legislature now?
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#62 Oct 20 2011 at 4:54 PM Rating: Excellent
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Why, does he also go around given women ultrasounds they don't need? That's kinda creepy.
#63 Oct 20 2011 at 4:59 PM Rating: Good
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Allegory wrote:
Why, does he also go around given women ultrasounds they don't need? That's kinda creepy.


Smiley: lolSmiley: lolSmiley: lol
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#64 Oct 20 2011 at 5:01 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
gbaji wrote:
catwho wrote:
And yet it's Republicans that want to control the most social aspect of our lives, our sex lives.


Interesting how you define "control" to be "stop government involvement in". Explain to me how *not* paying for something with government dollars is controlling that thing? Because to me, it's the exact opposite.
Texas doesn't fund abortions, hon.

Doesn't stop them from making women have medically unnecessary ultrasounds.


Rick Santorum is a member of the Texas state legislature now?
I figured you'd be able to understand that it was directed towards an earlier comment, but I guess I was mistaken. Weren't you the one who was arguing that gay marriage was too expensive, anyway? If it were about cost, abortions are cheaper than welfare and marriage Smiley: wink

Remember, "a modern liberal is someone who believes that the government has a responsibility to directly involve itself in some aspect of society in order to make society better!" I guess Perry is the new liberal poster child.


Edited, Oct 20th 2011 6:02pm by Sweetums
#65 Oct 20 2011 at 5:02 PM Rating: Good
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Allegory wrote:
Why, does he also go around given women ultrasounds they don't need? That's kinda creepy.


Dunno. I just found it odd that Sweetums responded to my post (which was in response to a link about Santorum opposing federal funding for gay marriages and contraceptives), with something about ultrasounds in Texas.
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#66 Oct 20 2011 at 5:04 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Allegory wrote:
Why, does he also go around given women ultrasounds they don't need? That's kinda creepy.


Dunno. I just found it odd that Sweetums responded to my post (which was in response to a link about Santorum opposing federal funding for gay marriages and contraceptives), with something about ultrasounds in Texas.
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#67 Oct 20 2011 at 5:12 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Dunno. I just found it odd that Sweetums responded to my post (which was in response to a link about Santorum opposing federal funding for gay marriages and contraceptives), with something about ultrasounds in Texas.

I haven't been following the thread so I can't say whether her comment follows or not. I'm not sure if it's been news for the rest of the country, so I'd thought I'd at least fill you in on the context that Texas has recently been embroiled in a fight over a law requiring women to have ultrasounds and doctor describe the heartbeat of fetuses in order for them to receive an abortion.
#68 Oct 20 2011 at 5:35 PM Rating: Decent
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Sweetums wrote:
I figured you'd be able to understand that it was directed towards an earlier comment, but I guess I was mistaken.


Oh, I figured it out. I was just curious why you quoted an unrelated section of the conversation instead of the "earlier comment".

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Weren't you the one who was arguing that gay marriage was too expensive, anyway? If it were about cost, abortions are cheaper than welfare and marriage Smiley: wink


Abortion is a poor case to bring up though. It's one that isn't about cost. At least I'm not aware of any conservative who opposes abortion on a cost issue. For those who oppose abortion, it's about a moral question of when life begins and when a right to life should be applied.

This obviously gets further complicated when the issue of state funding for abortion comes up, because then you've got both the moral argument *and* the cost argument.


But for the record, IMO it's unfair to compare one cost against another. The conservative response is that we shouldn't be paying welfare in the first place and then the comparison doesn't exist. You are responsible for your own choices. Pushing the cost of those choices on others is unfair to the rest of us.

Quote:
Remember, "a modern liberal is someone who believes that the government has a responsibility to directly involve itself in some aspect of society in order to make society better!" I guess Perry is the new liberal poster child.


Not sure what specifically you're referring to, but I'd agree that at least a few things Perry has done are not well in line with conservative political principles. To be fair though, most politicians are going to have some things in their past like this though. Principles are goals. You can't always obtain them. Politics often requires compromise. But I don't think the fact that you can find examples of conservative politicians compromising on some issues magically means that we (or I) should just abandon the principles themselves.


Surely, you don't expect people to abandon their opposition to say detainees in Gitmo just because Obama failed to do anything about it. Yet that's basically the argument you seem to be making with regard to conservatives. Because politicians aren't perfect, we should give up? That seems somewhat self defeating, doesn't it?

Edited, Oct 20th 2011 4:37pm by gbaji
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#69 Oct 20 2011 at 5:57 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
What do you think that "liberal" means in the modern political context?
With how you and varusthief spew it every post and a half, I figured it was just some attempt at a hipster insult.
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#70 Oct 20 2011 at 6:16 PM Rating: Excellent
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Nobody rocks a No True Scotsman quite like gbaji.
#71 Oct 20 2011 at 7:34 PM Rating: Default
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Eske Esquire wrote:
Nobody rocks a No True Scotsman quite like gbaji.


The No True Scotsman fallacy does not preclude identifying commonalities among a group of people and showing how they are connected (in this case via political principle). It deals with arbitrarily attaching properties to labels and then insisting that something is or isn't a member of the labeled group based on the properties so attached.

I don't care what label is used. That's part of the point I'm making here. People assume that "conservative" means something specific and are then surprised when conservatives don't do what they assume. This should cause those people to re-assess what they think "conservative" means, right?

And that's pretty much what I'm saying. My use of "liberal" is also a label. But the point I'm making about it is a correlation between a political principle and political outcomes (social liberalism leading to authoritarian governments). You can focus on the labels if you want, but the specific label isn't important to my point. My point is that a political philosophy which rests on the principles I've outlined will act in certain ways and will tend to result in specific outcomes.

We can label that anything if it makes you unhappy. I don't care. I care about the pattern of behavior and the principles which derive them.
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#72 Oct 20 2011 at 8:03 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
But the point I'm making about it is a correlation between a political principle and political outcomes (social liberalism leading to authoritarian governments).

Well, unless you meant negative correlation, you've got that wrong. Fiscal liberalism and social conservatism lead to more authoritarian governments.
#73 Oct 20 2011 at 8:23 PM Rating: Good
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Canada is authoritarian?
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#74 Oct 20 2011 at 8:38 PM Rating: Good
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Fiscal liberalism kinda requires the gov't to, you know, act in a fiscally liberal manner. China can pretend to be communist all they want, but in reality they aren't even remotely so. And it's not because they are socially conservative, it's because they are an authoritarian regime that focuses total social, political and economic power in a small number of individuals, which is fundamentally incompatible with communism.
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#75 Oct 20 2011 at 8:43 PM Rating: Good
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I think my government teacher last year put it in good terms (this is obviously a broad oversimplification):

Conservatives want government involvement in their personal lives (Laws against gay marriage, abortion, etc.) but to stay the **** out the economy.

Liberals want government involvement in the economy, but to stay the **** out of people's personal lives.

Obviously that's just the social and fiscal aspects of both parties, but I've found it mostly holds true.

The way she put it, government involvement in both social and fiscal aspects was Populist, while no government involvement in either was Libertarian. That was a fun exercise, seeing where everyone fell on the spectrum.
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#76 Oct 20 2011 at 8:46 PM Rating: Decent
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Allegory wrote:
gbaji wrote:
But the point I'm making about it is a correlation between a political principle and political outcomes (social liberalism leading to authoritarian governments).

Well, unless you meant negative correlation, you've got that wrong. Fiscal liberalism and social conservatism lead to more authoritarian governments.


You're caught up on the labels. What do those things mean?


Do you get that the point I'm trying to get across here is that "social conservative" doesn't really mean what most people assume it does? Most people assume that it means "social policies supported by conservatives". But then when they point to the policies themselves, in most cases they *aren't* things that are really connected with conservative political positions. They really mean "religious/ethically based social policies" which is not the same thing.

The policies actually associated with being conservative are about smaller government. Hence, when Santorum opposes funding for contraceptives, he may have some moral angle in mind as well, but he's operating in a way that limits government, not that increases its power. The policies which are intersections of religious and conservative are the ones which do both, but those don't lead to authoritarian government.


I guess I just can't accept how you can separate fiscal liberalism and social liberalism (or whatever labels you want to use). One leads to the other. Liberals make social rules in support of their fiscal polices. And those are just as authoritarian. When they fund things that they like, that's increasing the authoritarian nature of government. Subsidizing green energy? That's authoritarian, right? Yet, it also certainly is designed to influence social behavior, right? The whole point is to get people to buy a different product than they would other wise. How the hell is that not "social" policy?


And it's absolutely authoritarian. When you are using the power of the government to attempt to get people to change their behavior and choices you are imposing a socially authoritarian rule. I just can't figure out where the mental block on this concept comes from. To me, one cannot be separated from the other. This is doubly strange given that a high percentage of liberal fiscal policy is dedicated to and justified by the intended social effects. We want people to use public transportation instead of cars, so we tax and regulate cars more while subsidizing mass transit. There are a host of examples I could give of liberal fiscal policies which have direct social goals as well.


Hell. The whole CRA thing. Let's help poor people own homes! Is that fiscal liberalism or social liberalism? Aren't they really just one and the same? I would argue that the justification for the lefts fiscal policy *is* social (actually I did earlier). Is anyone arguing that it's not? We welfare, and social security, and medicare/caid, and public education, and a whole hell of a lot of other stuff for purely fiscal reasons? I think they're all about social changes that we want to create, and the overwhelming majority of that stuff comes from the political left, not the political right.


I think that some of you are making the mistake of assuming that "authoritarian" just means when government is making people do things you don't like. That's a bad definition to use though.

Edited, Oct 20th 2011 7:46pm by gbaji
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