Interesting that someone who thinks his great accomplishment is posting on a football board thinks that one is what one does. Oh, the joke in that comment.sycasey said:You can talk about it theoretically though. Like, in theory it would be good to have an era of one kind of liberalism and then one of a complementary kind of conservatism as Jeff describes.dajo9 said:I believe that you are what you do. It's no good to say the party with a "conservative" political platform hasn't been acting conservatively. Every self described conservative I know voted for Reagan, GWB, Romney, and some Trump. All these self-described conservative politicians have supported huge deficits and have had huge support from conservatives. Conservatism means huge fiscal deficits. You are what you do.JeffBear07 said:Sycasey has me correct, though I would also argue that at least some of the building blocks for the current Republican party started coming into being around the time of Gingrich in the 90's. That doesn't mean individual conservatives such as yourself changed your underlying principles, but the Republican party itself was already starting to move away from pure conservative policy well before Trump.calbear93 said:I honestly don't know what the current Republican Party's purpose is other than to shelter Trump from his own idiocy. I am talking about at least the platform of the Republican party in more recent history, irrespective of whether they have been carrying those out.sycasey said:I think his argument is less that conservative fiscal policy is against the long-term interest of the country and more that current Republican Party policy is against it (which, as you note, is often not very fiscally conservative).calbear93 said:I think where I disagree with you, as you may understand, is your your implication (or maybe it was just my incorrect inference) that those who promote conservative fiscal policy (if that even exists anymore) do not care about long-term interest of the country. In fact, I think those who are promoting conservative fiscal policy do care. It is easy and expedient to say, let's just spend and spend on the backs of the future generation. That seems to be the easy thing to do.JeffBear07 said:I don't see things so black and white as you, nor do a great number of people who smarter and more observant than me. Just because the two parties haven't taken steps to the degree or at the speed that you believe or wish they had doesn't automatically mean that they don't actually want to get to a point of betterment. I've laid out my reasons for why I believe that Democrats don't go as far as they can or should in helping the underserved which don't have anything to do with not actually wanting to help. For that matter, there are plenty of Republicans even today who would probably go much further in helping people as well if they weren't so cowed into walking in lockstep with party leadership (again, thank Gingrich for introducing that concept 20-odd years ago).Matthew Patel said:That there are 6 people who think that the Democratic Party is a force for good just goes to show how stupid those 6 people are. calbear93 has it right. Both parties are bad.JeffBear07 said:
3) Democrats come into power: attempt to fix the broken effects of both previous GOP leadership and longstanding structural flaws (e.g., Obama going out of his way to seek out compromise with the GOP in his first two years, implementing the ACA, setting new clean energy standards)
Minority groups understand this better than anyone.
Personally, I actually think that we need both "liberal" and "conservative" policy as part of a revolving cycle. Liberals, such as you might call them, usher in changes to the social or economic order based on new understanding of how they affect people's lives. Conservatives, such as you might call them, then act as a control on more progressive policies from overwhelming the average person (because the average person is naturally hesitant when it comes to any substantive change no matter its benefits) while allowing that average person to adjust and become self-sustaining within the new societal paradigm. Both parts have their value in a smooth-functioning society. The problem, of course, with the current Republican and conservative movement is that they've given up any semblance of applying conservatism for the common good, relying on fear and emotions to get their way instead of grounded and data-based policy proposals. Bringing this back to the topic of this thread, I feel we are seeing that same reliance on fear and emotions to warp impressions of the supposed crime wave in the U.S. and specifically at the protests that have been going on since George Floyd.
But yes, in America in practice we now have a "conservative" party that refuses to advance the ball at all, and then a "liberal" party that is kind of trying to do both things at once and is less effective than they should be as a result.
But moving on to Sycasey, a more liberal but actual believer, I disagree that the liberal movement is trying to move the ball in anything other than social battles. While these rich folks may talk like they want an economic evolution to help the common man, their damn self interest and their source of funding will always get in the way. They will talk about 5% increase in taxes as if that will solve the income disparity but create enough loopholes and shelters to protect their friends. I personally think it's all bull*****