Dogmatic thinking is ignorant

jtr1962

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I read your last post, Mercutio, in that "Something Random" thread, and I couldn't help but think how small a gulf really separates you from the dogmatic religious conservatives that you loath, at least as far a mind set goes. Did you not consider that the suddenly lowered esteem in which you now hold your coworker simply because of a "W" bumper sticker is no different than the type of thinking the person in your class exhibited towards the transsexual student simply because she was a transsexual? You're both wrong, and you're both ignorant, and sadly I don't think of you as an ignorant person at all except for this. Quite the contrary, actually, based on your wide range of interests, and general depth of knowledge and abilities. I'll even go so far as to call you a Renaissance man of sorts, although not quite in the same league as Tannin, but then Tannin's been at it for 15 or so more years than you have. In light of all that, I find your outright dismissal of anything conservative astonishing, to say the least, and rigid clinging to liberal dogma even more astonishing. There is nothing entirely right or entirely wrong about either type of thinking. What both philosophies have in common is that taken to their extremes, they both result in societies with little of the individual freedom you love. Conservatives, especially religious conservatives, will if left to their own devices create a society where anything not in the Bible/Torah/Koran is illegal (see Iran or Afghanistan pre-2001 for good examples). On the other hand, liberals will create a society where individuals are entirely controlled by the government, and most of their productive output is taken in the form of taxes to be used solely for the good of the "collective". Any actions or thought processes which interfere with this will be illegal, and the state will even pass laws prohibiting certain actions which are deemed "harmful" to either the individual or the collective. This may start with seemingly harmless laws like requiring seat belts, prohibiting sidewalk cycling, or requiring auto insurance. It will eventually progress to prohibiting any actions at all which interfere with the harmony of the collective (see "1984" for a good example of this). I wouldn't care to live in either type of society, nor would you I think.

There is both good and bad in all ideologies. It's a pity you can't see that. It is up to the thinking person to adopt the good while discarding the bad. Witness the People's Republic of China in the last twenty years for a good example of this. They knew that a collective economy wouldn't work as individuals will tend to be less productive when most of their output goes for the good of the "collective", so they adopted the best parts of a free market economy. However, they retained enough of their collective economy to ensure good medical care and education for all. They also retained most of their rigid control over information so as to prevent corrupt Western ideas of free sex and individualism from upsetting their traditional family structure. And then they controversially implemented a birth control policy to prevent overpopulation and famine from ruining their economy. These were in my opinion good compromises. They will eventually get the comforts and technology of Western nations without the crime, depravity, broken families, AIDS, or many other problems currently faced in places like the US. There's no arguing that the whole rights without responsibilities thing pushed by liberals has caused a whole host of problems we face now, including runaway lawsuit costs. By the same token the dogmatic clinging to a free market economy, and obsession with profit, of dogmatic conservatives has resulted in the US having the most unequal distribution of wealth of all first world nations, and failing to adopt alternative energy sources or modes of transportation. In many ways, we've let the extremists run the show-first the liberals in the 1960's, 70's and much of the 80's, and since then more and more the conservatives. We've adopted the worst parts of both philosophies rather than the best. I don't much care for the results. If New York City starts to go downhill again I'm quite likely to leave the US forever and become a citizen of the PRC. I may give up some of my free speech rights, but at least I know I'll get decent health care, be free from crime, and not be subject to a continual torrent of offensive, mindless commercialism and sexual images from the media. To me it's a more than equitable tradeoff.

Since you may be biased I'll try to explain what I see good and bad in both philosophies. Let's start with conservatism. I fully agree with you that religious conservatism is bad-very bad. I don't want our lawmakers prohibiting something that may be potentially highly beneficial like human cloning simply because it's "against God's will". This is completely asinine thinking. I also think treating married couples differently under the law in terms of taxation and benefits is wrong. This doesn't mean I think same-sex couples should be given the same benefits. Rather, I think nobody should get them. You earn a given amount of money-you pay the same taxes. You don't get insurance benefits from your employer for your spouse or family unless you pay extra. After all, why should a married person have the company pay more for their health insurance (to cover their family) than it does for a single person? This is unequal treatment. You don't get a tax deduction for your children or your spouse. I'm completely at odds with conservatives on the "special benefits" they love for married couples and children. It's wrong.

However, there are many good things about conservatism, especially fiscal conservatism. You don't spend more than you have for starters. Admittedly, current Republicans provide a horrible example of this even though this is allegedly a core part of their philosophy. Second, you don't tax at such high rates that people, especially those who are already wealthy, have a disincentive to work. Third, you don't give government benefits forever to those who won't lift a finger to help themselves. If you do, eventually the ranks of the "disabled" will increase to the point that it brings society down with it. After all, what incentive is there for someone to work when all of their neighbors are getting the same things for "free" from the government. The only problem is that it isn't really free-someone has to pay, and the more they pay the more they will resent it. Fourth, you don't make asinine laws to protect idiots from themselves. These laws only end up costing society money to enforce, and yet more money as people stop taking responsibility for their own actions. Sure, in the long run a few more people might die, but many more will learn to take responsibility for their actions. Witness the current state of driving as a good example of why we shouldn't protect people from themselves. Insurance, safety devices, and larger vehicles have insulated drivers from the financial and physical consequences of their driving, or are at least perceived to. As a result, driving habits are the worst I have ever seen, and despite the (false) perceptions of freedom from the consequences of their poor driving habits by most drivers we now have 50,000 killed plus 2 million injured each year. Ditto for drugs that let people continue to function without facing the consequences of the very unhealthy lifestyles that they're leading. Sooner or later the drugs will cause massive problems of their own.

Now we have the other side of coin-liberalism. Here again, I'll start with the bad. I've already covered high taxes, entitlements with no responsibility, excessive regulations to protect idiots from themselves, and isolating a person from the consequences of their actions. I'll start with social liberalism. This includes the ideas that anything which feels good is OK, and all "lifestyles" are equally valid. These ideas are harmful in small doses, very dangerous in the extreme. The first has resulted in the widespread use of sex solely for recreation. This in and of itself wouldn't necessarily be any more harmful than cycling for recreation except that human physiology didn't suddenly change with the free sex movement of the 1960s. People can still become pregnant, people can still get sexually transmitted diseases, people don't always use protection in the heat of passion, such protection always 100% effective, and sex can become very addictive. Since you're an intelligent person I won't even go into the negative aspects of all of these things other than to mention a few key words-unwanted children, AIDS, broken families, divorces. To add to the problem, the free sex movement has resulted in a societal obsession with sex that has prevented healthy interaction between males and females. Thanks to the prevalence of sex in the media, it is difficult to interact with a person of the opposite sex without there being sexual overtones, at least on a subconscious level. This has prevented real friendships from developing prior to the relationship becoming sexual. In part because of this, and also because of unrealistic sexual expectations thanks to the media, most marriages end in failure.

The second part is even worse, and not because homosexuals or transsexuals are "against God's will" (remember, I'm no more religious than you are). I'll preface this by admitting that I don't particularly understand how two people of the same sex could be physically attracted to each other, and on some level I find the whole idea somewhat repulsive. And I feel this way despite the fact that I come from a culture (Italian) where it is socially acceptable for men to kiss and hug. I consider it OK as well, but I don't understand sexual feelings between two members of the same sex. In fact, I really find it impossible to have sexual feelings towards most of the opposite sex as well. I'm very specific in what I like, so maybe that explains in part my revulsion at the whole idea. Anyway, while accepting homosexuals as just another orientation isn't necessarily that harmful, nor is even allowing them to marry, the real question is where does it end? Once homosexual couples start to seem "normal", you'll have those on the fringes wanting their own special rights. Maybe it'll start with three-way marriages. Next somebody might suddenly think that liking children is simply another orientation, and have laws against pedophilia taken off the books. After that, you'll start to have middle-aged men marrying five-year old child brides. And soon after somebody will want to legitimize a sexual relationship with, say, a horse. Don't think this alternative lifestyles thing will stop with homosexuals. It won't. And I don't think I need to spell out for you how harmful legitimizing the other types of behavior I mentioned would be.

Now on to what is good about liberalism. First and foremost is the idea of helping those who are down on their luck. I never took fault with this part of liberalism is theory. It is always good to try to help. The problem is in the details. How do you help a person without making them dependent? How much help do you give before those who pay their own way become resentful? How do you prevent fraud? How do you prevent administrative costs from eating up most of the money given towards the program? How do you determine who is eligible and who isn't? Finally, how much can the government realistically do before the tax burden has a negative effect on the economy? It was the fact that entitlements were/are taken to excess which is the real problem of liberalism, not the idea that the government can do something to help. FDR said it best when he called welfare a narcotic. In the end you have to have hard limits on entitlement programs, and the best safety net is simply a forced savings account which a person can draw on in hard times. Very small administrative costs, and a hard limit to how long you can draw from it.

Second is the idea that free enterprise should to some extent be regulated for the good of society as a whole. Left to its own devices, free enterprise will increase the gap between the rich and poor, and destroy natural resources in the interests of short-term profit. Therefore, some regulations to require livable wages are in order. Even more important are very strong environmental regulations which require businesses to leave things the way they found them (and that includes the air). Destroying the environment is in the long-term counterproductive to profits, and in fact to life in general. Equally important is the idea that some enterprises are so important to general public welfare that they should not be run by private enterprise. This includes, or should include, the generation of electricity, transportation, housing, food. These should be government run to strict quality standards, and should be sold to the public at cost, and not a penny more. Sadly, we don't do this. As a result, electricity, food, and especially housing are increasing in price far faster than wages are. And because of lack of strict standards, publicly-funded transportation has been a mixed bag.

I'm sure my lists on both ideologies are by no means exhaustive, but I hope I made my initial point-adhering rigidly to any one dogma is inherently ignorant. And, BTW, this took me over two hours to write.
 

JSF

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jtr1962, if it only took you 2 hours to express yourself as well as you have, you have a career in journalism if you want to seek it.

Joe
 

Stereodude

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jtr1962 said:
Witness the People's Republic of China in the last twenty years for a good example of this. They knew that a collective economy wouldn't work as individuals will tend to be less productive when most of their output goes for the good of the "collective", so they adopted the best parts of a free market economy. However, they retained enough of their collective economy to ensure good medical care and education for all. They also retained most of their rigid control over information so as to prevent corrupt Western ideas of free sex and individualism from upsetting their traditional family structure. And then they controversially implemented a birth control policy to prevent overpopulation and famine from ruining their economy. These were in my opinion good compromises. They will eventually get the comforts and technology of Western nations without the crime, depravity, broken families, AIDS, or many other problems currently faced in places like the US.
I take it from your comments that you've never been to China. I can assure you that sex is just as "free" in China as any place in the west. If you were to go to a KTV place you would see that. The traditional family structure is a sham. There is not a lot of spousal monogamy. It is fairly common for the men to fool around even when married. Their families aren't broken because the behavior is just accepted by the women.

The problems are there, they are just hidden.
 

mubs

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Well articulated, jtr. Without reference to any person, I will say that I've never understood the ultra-liberal or the ultra-conservative. For all the reasons you mentioned, and more. Your outlook is a mixture of both conservative and liberal thoughts, and I'm like that too.

With ref. to China: I know other cultures that could be described in terms similar to your description of China's culture, and I'd have to agree with Stereodude 100%. Things look rosy on the outside, but they can be pretty rotten inside. Eastern cultures are very good at hiding reality, accepting the situation as destiny, and "saving face".
 

e_dawg

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Okay, so it's pick on poor jtr day, isn't it? Well, I don't want it to come across like that, but I think it will anyways, so let me apologize for it in advance. :)

Ahem.

jtr1962 said:
Witness the People's Republic of China in the last twenty years for a good example of this. [...] they retained enough of their collective economy to ensure good medical care and education for all.

So long as you bribe the right officials and do not live in one of the thousands of villages and rural areas where they have very little access to what those in Beijing and Shanghai have. And as long as you don't mind propagandized education (although it's not like we don't have that over here either) and medical care that is a decade behind the western world.

They also retained most of their rigid control over information so as to prevent corrupt Western ideas of free sex and individualism from upsetting their traditional family structure.

They have control over much of the information, but free sex, individualism, and broken families (maybe not on the outside, but it sure ain't a happy life on the inside) aren't exactly hard to find over there. Try growing up as a kid/teen in China. The pressure the parents put on the kids would be considered traumatic and abusive in N. America.

And then they controversially implemented a birth control policy to prevent overpopulation and famine from ruining their economy. These were in my opinion good compromises.

True, they had to do something to avoid the overpopulation that is going to hurt India pretty bad, I believe, over the next few decades before they address the issue. But don't forget about all the female babies who were abandoned or killed because the parents wanted a son for various obvious reasons.

They will eventually get the comforts and technology of Western nations without the crime, depravity, broken families, AIDS, or many other problems currently faced in places like the US.

That's a good one. Seriously, go to Shenzen. I defy you not to get mugged while on vacation. And the rate of HIV infection is skyrocketing in China. While it's no Thailand, if they don't get a better handle on it, they might not be too far behind. And while the rate of divorce is much lower, that's not to say everybody's happy either. You get more people suffering in silence.

If New York City starts to go downhill again I'm quite likely to leave the US forever and become a citizen of the PRC. I may give up some of my free speech rights, but at least I know I'll get decent health care, be free from crime, and not be subject to a continual torrent of offensive, mindless commercialism and sexual images from the media. To me it's a more than equitable tradeoff.

I have seen a massive influx of immigrants from mainland China around Toronto over the past decade. Why would they forego many of the opportunities that comes with 8-12% annual GDP growth behind? They aren't coming over because they want to be worse off than they were in China. The grass is always greener on the other side, my friend.
 

Mercutio

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Joseph,

Suffice to say I disagree with some of your evaluations.

Your post deserves a long reply, one that you aren't going to get right now.

I've ttied to craft a reply that doesn't involve lots of ranting. I like to rant. However, I'm fully aware that everyone here is (from my perspective) basially right wing, so there's not much point.

I don't see myself as a zealot, rather as someone who holds the world to a different ideal than most people. As both an idealist and a cynic I desire the best and know that only the worst will come to pass.

And I'm tired of dealing with the others - the people who are pleased to see their rights ceded to corporations and religious whackjobs. I see the world in shades of grey, I'm willing to accept most anything, but after two decades of seeng the right try to destroy those things that *I* believe in, I'm willing to say in complete honesty, that those people who support them, regardless of their rationale, I people I believe are wrong, the blackest shade of grey, selfish, evil, whatever.

Sweeping generalization? Maybe. I don't care any more. At this point everyone on that side of the fence is guilty by association. If my personal failing is that I'll make excuses for feeding the guy who won't work for his food but not for the guy who won't feed him, well, I can live with that. The guy who won't feed him? I can't see how he lives with himself.
 

jtr1962

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I really didn't mean to pick on you, Mercutio, and I do hope you didn't feel that way. It was just something about the way you could just dismiss someone for such a seemingly superficial reason which set me off. For various reasons, I try not to be constrained by any one philosophy. I'll even go so far as to say that a more liberal ideology might be better at one point in time, and a more conservative one at another. You're obviously quite different, and to some extent I do in fact understand how you came to be where you are. While I don't desire to cede my rights, either, at least if there's no good reason, I'm more than willing to do so to a minor extent if it's for the good of society as a whole. For example, I see those people in NYC now who want to disrupt everything by demonstrating as selfish pricks. I don't see what they hope to accomplish other than turning those who may currently be neutral against them. There are plenty of other channels in a free society to redress grievences besides blocking traffic, trashing parks, and otherwise acting like a bunch of lawless hoodlums. Write to elected officials, go to the media, organize boycotts, or demonstrate in such a way so as not inconvenience others or destroy property. And it's not as if most of these groups don't already have a pretty large advocacy among our elected officials.

I'm not expecting that anything I wrote will change your mind. I respect that you hold the positions you do very strongly. I was merely hoping to open your eyes a bit as to how it is possible to take the best of various philosophies.

BTW, is anybody else having problems reaching the forum? I wasn't able to get through since about 7 PM last night. The problem seems intermittent for me usually-sometimes I get through, and then a few minutes later I won't.
 

jtr1962

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e_dawg,

I'm somewhat aware of all the things you mentioned, and of Chinese culture in general (90% of my high school friends were Asian-mostly Chinese, as was my gf). The drowning of baby girls is especially tragic, and is a byproduct of a culture where females are less highly valued than males. It is up to the government to do what it can to change those perceptions. In that regard, I think all the medals won by China's female athletes might open a few people's eyes over there as to the relative worth of females. I'll admit to being a bit surprised at the crime, but not about the other things.

I'm not saying I'm ready to move to the PRC tomorrow, but if conditions in the US start to go dramatically downhill one day it's a fall back plan. And I'll admit I might have problems blending in there since I'm Caucasian and don't speak any Chinese (I wanted to learn in college but my engineering courses took too much time). I would likely move to Beijing or one of the other large cities.

For various reasons, I tend to think a more liveable society is created by "hiding" problems sometimes, or at least the more minor ones. This isn't to say that those in charge shouldn't deal with them, but I don't see that people in a country like the US are that much happier with all their problems out in the open. While some problems are legitimate, I'm getting increasingly tired of hearing people complain about the most minor of things, and having politicians make laws against these things which restrict freedoms. NYC's sidewalk cycling law is a great example of this. Granted, sidewalk cyclists can be an annoyance, but rarely anything more, and by taking away the sidewalks you force cyclists to ride in often unsafe traffic conditions.

BTW, my parents stayed together despite an unhappy marriage. Financially it was better for all concerned. Separating may have avoided hearing arguments, but the poverty would have been even more stressful.
 

Mercutio

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jtr1962 said:
For example, I see those people in NYC now who want to disrupt everything by demonstrating as selfish pricks. I don't see what they hope to accomplish other than turning those who may currently be neutral against them.

Those people are heroes, and I'd gladly be one of them. They're standing up against something that is wrong, against the unctious motherfuckers who have used the EXCUSE of national tragedy to ram a whole dystopian agenda down our throats. There's a whole nation of basically unconcious people out there. People who watch "American Idol" and don't even want to think about the ways the world around them is changing. The heroes, the people who are out there in New York today, are screaming for the rest of the country to WAKE UP. It isn't like there are that many options left. After all the peaceful demonstrations and letter-writing campaigns, the sad fucking fact is that it hasn't happened. The press gives the current administration a pass based on a standing policy of denying access to those who ask tough questions. The opposition party can't be seen as too dissenting or they risk being labelled "unpartiotic" by a bunch of guys who'd think "God Bless America" is our national anthem and that unprovoked, unjust war is OK as long as we're inflicting our ideals on another culture.

Or maybe you haven't noticed that every time someone seems to be going badly for GWB or going well for his political rivals, Tom Ridge has a press conference where he raises the "National Security Threat Level" to Double-Secret Pineapple Bubble-Gum based on "credible and specific" evidence that can't be shared with the public, but that everything will be OK as long as we support Georgie and buy lots of Duct Tape?

I'm not expecting that anything I wrote will change your mind.

I'm glad you don't have those expectations.
 

jtr1962

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That's funny because from where I stand the press has been all over GWB from day one. Hardly a week doesn't go by that you don't have pundits criticizing his policies, his ability to lead, or even his (admittedly poor) manner of speaking. It's not like the general public isn't already well aware of the failings of the current administration. You can probably find more news articles written against the war on Iraq than for it. And I'm frankly sick and tired of hearing about abortion and how this administration is anti-women. To give these people a couple of clues, abortion is the law of the land, and if they lived their lives a little more responsibly there wouldn't be any great need for it save those times pregnancy complications necessitate aborting the fetus to save the mother's life. Next issue, please. Believe me, there's no shortage of anti-Bush rants on the media. While I may not agree with quite a few of his policies, he's hardly gotten a free pass.

Here's an a little excerpt from an article about these demonstrations:

A wide range of anti-Bush protest groups, many opposing the war in Iraq, marched through central Manhattan and vowed to defy a ban on rallying in Central Park, the city's largest open space, later in the day.


The demonstrators stretched for more than a mile and were watched closely by police in riot gear and on horseback. Police reported more than 50 arrests in the first few hours of the march. More than 350 protesters have been arrested in New York since Thursday.


The protesters carried signs reading "Osama Loves Bush," and "Bush Lies Who Dies?" and "Hate is not a Family Value."

Wow. :roll: They feel the need to disrupt people's live to bring them such important news. I could think of a bunch of things a heck of a lot more important than what these people are demonstrating against. High cost of living, illnesses from polluted air, the obesity epidemic, runaway medical entitlements, runaway lawsuit costs to name a few. These all affect a lot more people than Bush's Iraq policy or abortion. It's not like these themes haven't already been harped to death both by the media and elected officials. They're not telling me anything new here, and there not contributing to changing policy. Don't like the guy in office? Vote him out. Don't like any of the alternatives? Either don't vote or run yourself. For the most part these people are bunch of whiny, spoiled brats who use "the right to demonstrate" as an excuse to run amok. The heroes here are those going through secret government documents at extreme personal risk trying to find the real truths behind the way our corrupt system operates. Maybe one day a something will be made public that will bring down our entire power structure.

Those marching today were in fact granted a permit to march. They just couldn't come in and use the Great Lawn in Central Park because such a large crowd would have ruined all the hard work put into fixing it. It took literally years of careful care to get the park in the state it is in today. It can be enjoyed by the smaller crowds that come each day without harm, but this group insisted on bringing 150,000 people in to demonstrate. They were denied the permit because the demonstration would have denied the people of the city the right to use their park, paid for with their tax dollars, for years to come. Of course most of the demonstrators don't care about that-they came from out of town just to demonstrate so a ruined park doesn't affect them. All they care about is getting their "message" across and joining the "let's take a dump in NYC and then leave it there club". Well, too bad. Common sense ruled here, and even so these groups said they will defy the court order and come to Central Park anyway. And I hope the cops take whatever measures needed to stop them. The right of the people of the city of New York to use their park outweighs whatever free speech rights a group of people who for the most part don't live here and don't pay taxes here have. And they were given a venue, just not the one they wanted. You can't please everybody, and one person's rights end where they interfere with somebody else's rights.

And as for heroes, the real heroes are piles of ash. They are the workers who went in to rescue those trapped in the burning towers and never got out. If your demonstrators want to be heroes I'll give them a few pointers. Hate the government, and think everyone running is equally bad? Fine, I feel that way too, but I'm not going to get a sign and whine about it in public. Getting arrested for civil disobedience isn't heroic, it's stupid. I'll first try to effect change and make people aware of my grievances through normal channels. If what I want is really important enough to enough people I'll eventually build up a big following, and be able to raise lots of money. Maybe I'll run for office, maybe not. If the system is rotten to the core that may not work, so what to do? Build followers, stash arms, try to get those in the military on your side. It may take a generation or two before you successfully get rid of those in power. Be prepared to die for your cause, and tell your followers likewise. Be prepared to spend your life in prison or to get executed if you're unsuccessful. At least maybe the next generation may succeed, and if you're lucky you'll have some statues made of you. Don't have the stomach for this? Think that just holding a few stupid scenes and disrupting traffic will really change things? Well, ride back on the horse you came in on and stop f*cking around with my city. You're no hero, you're a spoiled, rich brat with too much time on your hands. The people at Tiananmen Square in 1989 were heroes, all 3000 or so of them who died that day. Did they change anything? Not in the short term, but maybe in the long term.

I'll also give these demonstrators another clue-maybe they have no luck pushing their agenda because nobody really cares about it. When what you're fighting for is only relevant to a very small group, you won't have much luck with it. The rest of the public really won't care. Get on with your life and grow up. You can't change the world into what you think it should be. Carve out your own little niche, change what you can, and be happy with what you do have. It's a lot better than what 90% of the rest of the planet has to live with on a daily basis.
 

jtr1962

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I just want to also add that I find the insistence of these protesters at getting their anti-Bush message across even more bizarre in light of the fact that they're in a city and state which will go overwhelmingly for Kerry come November. It's kind of like preaching to the choir.

And there are very valid security concerns here anyway. Had I been Mayor, I would have denied them the right to march, period, while the RNC was in town. I'm curious how you would feel, Merc, if you were so insistent on granting a group like this a right to demonstrate, and then someone in the group posing as a demonstrator detonated a suitcase nuke or released nerve gas, or perhaps a biological agent? Or is 100,000 dead just a simple abstraction to you? Whenever large numbers of people come into the city there's always the danger of something like this slipping through. By tellling the demonstrators to not come, you make the job of providing security that much less error prone. I know this isn't an ideal solution, and in many ways contradicts a free society, but it's part of the world we live in.

BTW, as far as the Iraq War goes, I feel 100% the way you do. And I feel someone besides just OBL was involved in the 9/11 attacks, but as of yet I have no proof. Furthermore, GWB isn't the real one pulling the strings, so why all the fuss? About the only thing he can be fully in charge of is the military. It's all the unelected heads of large corporations who are really in charge. I do hope you realize that.
 

Santilli

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HMMMM

Merc, you sound much too much like the intolerant, facist-liberals that run this state, and have controlled congress, for way too long. If you disagree, they have no tolerance for a differing position, or, are not willing to listen to your position. The later by the way, is what 'liberal' means, willing to examine, and look at new ideas.
I am a liberal, since I've watched the failure of many liberal policies end up in an over grown, greedy government that has grown outside all proportion. Clearly, regardless of who is president, the wasting of money continues at an incredible rate.

The irony for me is I don't see much difference between Bush and Clinton, except Bush isn't stupid enough to support people sworn to destroy our way of life, the Muslims in Bosnia.

Also, it's nice to know we usually have a reason other then Clinton's sex life with an intern for bombing a foreign country...

Merc, your unwillingness to discuss, or perhaps entertain the concept that their maybe another side to this many faceted approach, takes you out of a group I used to be glad I was a member of, liberals. You sound much like the conservatives of the early 60's that drove most of us into the liberal-revolutionary camp, yet the circle has completed, and the now "liberals" have become facists, unwilling to accept change, or another look at their 30 year war. Sad that liberals have become exactly that which they despise, unwilling to discuss, or face the failings of bad policies...
s
 

Santilli

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I guess the real problem is age, and the hardening of the brains' areteries in liberals, making them much like their fathers...
All those 'liberals' are now 45-60, and have become just as the prior generation, holding on to their failed ideas with a death grip...

s
 

Mercutio

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You know Greg, about the 500,000 time someone calls you a "traitor" for not agreeing with the appointed leader of this country, you start to think that maybe, just maybe, there really isn't enough common ground.

I'll stand by my earlier estimation. I think there's something wrong with anyone who supports the current administration.
 

sechs

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Hate to break it too you, but people tend to get more *conservative* as they age. They don't want things to change.
 

jtr1962

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Just curious Merc, but how would you feel about a McCain-Guiliani ticket? That's who I really wish was running instead of Bush-Cheney. Guiliani could deal with all the national security stuff, which he is best suited for by training and temperament. McCain could best deal with domestic issues, including the environment.

Greg's assessment of modern-day liberals is dead on-they don't even want to listen to any other viewpoint regardless of how badly their own programs have worked. You still have some NYC liberals who think the reason welfare hasn't worked out well here is because we haven't spent enough money on it! This in the most heavily taxed state in the union which spends the most per capita on welfare and Medicaid. I'm always open to trying new ideas to solve problems, but when it's obvious they're not working and/or can't work, it's time to just let go. Liberals have had some good ideas which I outlined, but in practice most of these ideas have failed to produce the promised results. In most fields when that happens you try something else. Not being willing to do so, or even to admit failure, is the very point of this whole thread. I don't think it's age-related, either. Radicals are radicals, regardless of age. They tend to be unwillling to tolerate differing viewpoints whether they're 15 or 115. If anything, I find that as I'm becoming older I'm open to ideas which I wouldn't have given a second thought to when I was 20 (with the exception of having children :wink: ). Maybe this comes from becoming increasingly practical-I really don't care where an idea comes from ideologically so long as it works. Whether or not the majority become more open-minded as they age is an open question.
 

jtr1962

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JSF said:
jtr1962, if it only took you 2 hours to express yourself as well as you have, you have a career in journalism if you want to seek it.
Thanks for the compliments-I've never entertained the thought of writing for a living since I'm an engineer and tinkerer by nature. However, contributing an occasional piece to the op-ed column certainly sounds interesting. I'll inquire as to what's involved next time I have something interesting to say.

Vlad The Impaler said:
A most interesting thread. JTR, I love your sig by the way!
The line quoted in my sig is probably my favorite line in the entire film, or at least the most memorable. First time I saw the movie, I thought Winston was going to be shot once they were done "cleansing" his mind, so I took it literally. The ending came as a bit of a surprise, so in retrospect the line symbolically refers to Winston's ideas of individual freedom-such ideas would be removed from both the language once Newspeak was fully adopted, and also from any historical references. I never read the book other than the appendix describing Newspeak. One of these days. If it's anything like the movie, then it's basically a blueprint for totalitarian society, and as such very relevant to the times we live in.
 

Santilli

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Hate to break it too you, but people tend to get more *conservative* as they age. They don't want things to change.

My point exactly. "liberals" have become as set in their ways as the very conservatives they despised, and for the same reasons, unwilling to try new ideas after thiers failed.

s
 

sechs

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Santilli said:
Hate to break it too you, but people tend to get more *conservative* as they age. They don't want things to change.

My point exactly. "liberals" have become as set in their ways as the very conservatives they despised, and for the same reasons, unwilling to try new ideas after thiers failed.

By this argument, all liberals are conservatives... so there are only conservatives! Genius!
 

Santilli

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Exactly, Sechs.

What has happened is the desire, or willingness to listen to new ideas has been destroyed. As Mubs links point out, when people are unable to converse, the result is religious like zealotry, much like what we have now.

I really can't get that worked up over the entire thing. You see, in the 1960's we marched becuase the government was breaking the Constitution, fighting a war without the consent of congress, and not fighting a war, but a conflict, with politics driving it. That's against the Constitution, as was, and is, all the Federal agencies created since the destruction of the 10th amendment by
Roosevelt. We had base beliefs, and those beliefs are based in the Constitution, and the driving forces behind it.

I don't see a lot of difference between Clinton and Bush. Not enough to really matter. The spending hasn't changed much. Much objections to Clinton are on the record, based on just shear stupidity, that are contrary to the intrests of this country. I don't think Bush's actions can be characterized as that. Oil drives our nation, and benefits just about everyone. We need it.

My objection to Clinton are based on inviting Haitians, with 95% aides, into the US. Also supporting the wrong side in Bosnia.
However, I liked what he did with conservation. I try and look at each act, and policy, and his past history, and evaluate it.

I am glad he's out of office.

I don't see so much underhanded skeleton stuff with Bush.

Still, the ability to view some sort of objective situation about political parties, and actions, is now lost in the liberal arena. Liberal means being willing to change, analyisis, and evaluate if your programs are working, and change them if they are not. This ability has been, or in some cases, was never, present, in liberals, hence the term, liberal-facist. A person that pretends to be liberal, but will cut your balls off if you say one word that opposes them. We have quite a few in this area... In other words, someone that has a belief system, and cannot discuss it.
So much alike the right wing conservative-religious zealots they despise, and for good reason, because they are a mirror image of those zealots.

s
 

sechs

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As a conservative, I have to say that your thoughts are too unconservative. Since all people are conservative, and you are clearly not, you must not be a person.

So we have another ape in our midsts?
 

Santilli

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I don't identify with either group, since I find both equally stifling, and conservative. Niether deserves to be considered liberal, in the true sense of the word, and conservatives always consider me some kind of turn coat
greeny. I'm sick of labels,...

If you want to use a label, Constitutionalist, Constructionist, Strict Constructionist, maybe, might be the closest, yet, I believe government has to expand to deal with large, world wide, corporations.

I've never believed in fighting containment wars, like Korea, Vietnam, etc., while we nearly start a nuclear war over Cuba.

I'm open to suggestions on dealing with a lack of oil, muslims who will die to destroy our way of life, and thinking, etc.

I don't see any real debate going on here about issues, just a fascination with name calling, and labeling, which is exactly what facists do.

No one has addressed the very strange situation in Kalifornia, where the liberal-facists actually seem to have had enough of mismanaging the state by the current legislature, and actually changed something.

How about we can't build power plants in the state, because it costs too much, or it's non-profitable, opening ourselves up to getting screwed by
other states, mainly Texas, shipping us power? How about that whole setup? The problem in our government is the same we have in this forum, the two sides are unwilling to get together and plan for the future, resulting in forseeable catastrophe not being averted, meanwhile they spend money and write laws that make everyone a criminal, resulting selective law enforcement(try driving on the freeway around here) while we are taxed at near socialist levels.

All the situations the founding fathers tried to avert, by limiting governmental power...


s
 

sechs

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ddrueding said:
Oh, oh......can I be a name-calling fascist? That sounds like fun!

No, no. Come be a conservative like everyone else. It's not dogmatic thinking! 8)
 

ddrueding

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See, before I wanted to be a crack-fiend. In High School I was president of the communist/socialist/anarchist parties...but this sounds like even more fun!
 
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