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Liberals or Conservatives: Who?s Really Close-Minded?
Re: Liberals or Conservatives: Who?s Really Close-Minded?
The implication in this article is that Libs are always outspoken and Cons always shut down - which just isn't true. There are many scenarios where Libs shut down in the face of an outspoken Con.
The definition of Conservative is keeping the status quo, the tradition POV. The definition of Liberal is "favorable to progress or reform." It seems to go without saying that people are already familiar with the status quo and their own traditions, and that new ideas need more time to be explained - but I disagree that that always translates to the Con shutting up and the Lib being outspoken.
i don't know what your gif means but HOW DID EVERYTHING GO WITH YOUR SON????
I'm just starting to read the replies, but your comment here kind of supports the point. I have become more conservative than I am liberal, but your assessment of me as a conservative is wrong. I want to legalize gay marriage and pot, too. I am certainly not intolerant of gays, minorities, women or religious differences. And even here in a red state, I live in a "blue city" and find that I keep mum most of the time. But among my handful of friends who are vocal about their conservative politics, I assure you they, like me, are actually pro-choice, pro-gay marriage, and pro-tolerance of minorities, religions, etc. One of my family members who IS gay is also pretty much a Republican (no worries, she never would have voted for Santorum or Gingrich, not even holding her nose).
So, though I do respect you Heather, I do think you are demonstrating closed-mindedness about conservatives.
Zeus and Bubba
I agree with this. Especially the nature of the beast part. Civilizations tend to become more liberal over time so things tend to move from conservative to liberal.
So the author is right on this point, but I don't think the implied celebratory tone is really earned.
Yes! You were!
I can't argue with that. But what does that really mean to "take the party back?" I'm totally unelectable, lol. See earlier support of pot. Is it really that it's out of balance, or is it just that the "average conservative" is portrayed a certain way? As Y4M pointed out in a different thread, bias doesn't have to be inaccurate reporting of facts -- it is more about selective attention. NPR usually lets the dim-witted cons through the phone lines, just like Sean Hannity lets dim-witted liberals through.
And I love NPR. But you know what I'm talking about.
Zeus and Bubba
I think that the average conservative is portrayed in a certain way because that is by far the loudest section of the party, and many of the R politicans are completely pandering to them. The financial cons need to start drowning out the social cons, and need to really start demanding that politicans stop pandering to the social cons. Otherwise the social cons will just continue to get louder and louder.
Where have you been? I left for Lent and came back and you were gone.
Anything you can achieve through hard work, you could also just buy.
Yup. What she said. And Sabrina, sincerely...I am to understand that you oppose legalizing gay marriage because then it will be taught as acceptable in public school? And that such exposure might put your child at risk for acting on gay thoughts? Have YOU ever had gay temptations? I have not. No amount of exposure to gay people would make me want to "choose" to be gay, because I am only attracted to men (specifically, my husband), end of story. Isn't that the case for you? I have to break some news to you. Most teachers and counselors in public school don't need for gay marriage to be legal before they feel comfortable treating it as a legitimate orientation. God-willing, if a child is gay and is raised in an intolerant household, a kind teacher WILL tell them they are ok, they are worthy of respect, love and legal rights. The alternative to knowing these positive truths is darkness, guilt, depression, and risk of suicide. But at least they won't have buttsecks, amiright?
Zeus and Bubba
You realize that teachers can say that even if gay marriage isn't legal? And that just because it is, teachers won't necessarily all of the sudden be giving lessons on how to be gay or anything. Local school boards have a lot of say in what goes in the curriculum, and so long as you live in a place that doesn't think it is OK (or does) the marriage laws won't dictate everything that comes out of a teacher's mouth.
I think it's pretty horrible to only vote for something that is not a good fit for your family - why not just homeschool if you want your kids so incredibly sheltered and only hearing ONE viewpoint - which is to say yours (not even a Christian viewpoint is good enough, because many are more tolerant than you). You really think it's appropriate to force your viewpoint on others and their children? This could get into science, sex education, history, etc. Not to mention the fact that your children (and all those around you, if you get your way) are just going to enter the world that much more naive and inflexible. Good job.
I know, everyone votes values, blah blah... but I would never vote to make churches illegal just because I don't belong to one and think they do more harm than good.
Thank you for asking. His surgery was about three weeks ago and everything went well. Recovery was difficult and he was in a lot of pain, but the hardest part was keeping him inactive. My boys like to play together and play hard, so it was sort of torture keeping him away from my 3 yo. We actually had our last post-surgery follow-up this morning and everything looks like it healed perfectly. Praise God.
Now I'm just dealing with roseola with my 14 mo daughter. She had a fever between 103-105 for most of the week and the rash appeared yesterday afternoon.
Fun times. This hasn't been our finest medical month.
Oh, and I think my body is trying to ovulate despite the fact that I'm still nursing DD pretty hardcore. It's about that time. Ugh.
But we're all alive and kicking, so there's that, praise God!
/rant
Thanks again for asking
I'm glad to see you sorta back, and glad things seem to be going well.
I see what you did there. God definitely is great and worthy of praise in any language.
Thanks.
I agree with almost all of this, except this article does (inadvertently) prove one thing: why some people (me) are registered Independents.
At what point in history since the early 60's did position on social issues start dictating your party? It doesn't dictate my party (I'm a registered Independent) and I'd personally prefer we not return to an era where racism, homophobia, misogyny and intolerance of non-Christians were widely accepted and in many cases encouraged.
I'm also a "registered independent" meaning that I am not and never have been a member of any political party. And therefore social issues can't dictate anything about my non-party.
If you really want to know, in the mid-to-late 60s, the two major parties began to align themselves on modern issues in the way they are aligned today. There's a good section about it in Nixonland and some other books.
I'd personally prefer we not return to an era where racism, homophobia, misogyny and intolerance of non-Christians were widely accepted and in many cases encouraged.
What does that have to do with how Republicans or Democrats view social issues? You think some people aren't intolerant now? (*cough*Sabrina*cough*)
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Yes, political parties began aligning THEMSELVES to certain views. I get it, but that's not the same as saying it dictates which party with which one must identify oneself.
WRT your last paragraph- I didn't say no one is intolerant now. Come on.
Of course intolerance still exists, but you can't seriously be suggesting things weren't far worse in the 50' and early 60's than they are today.
Things were definitely worse (miscegenation was still illegal in many places). but I wasn't implying the 1950s were better in a broad sense. I actually don't believe any time in history was BETTER for most people in a broad sense. Just that the major parties not aligning along social issues in strict ways, as they did in the 1950s, was better. More fluidity was better in that department, IMO. Whose to say that just because you are fiscally conservative or for small government you also want to make abortions illegal or are against affirmative action in college admissions? Who decided THAT? As this thread proves, there are many fiscal conservatives who don't think those things should go together.
Of course, I think the argument can be made that until the 1960s, the parties didn't necessarily FOCUS on social issues, and therefore a politician's stance on something like interracial marriage just wasn't discussed or relevent to whether or not someone voted for him.
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THREAD CLOSED!!! Let me save this to my list SBP bad-a$$ replies.
Thanks. And I guess part of my point is that those that would have opposed legalizing divorce probably weren't looking to discriminate against a group of people.
At the risk of being called a bigot once again, I want to say that this is a great way to describe where I fall on this issue. I'm not pro-gay marriage but I'm not out there fighting to keep it illegal. I'm not sure if that even makes sense to the rest of you.
Let the church say Amen. *tosses $20 in SPB's collection plate*