Re: Elections 2012 -- Carrion My Wayward Son!
On the "conservative" (common usage) side, I'm:
anti-union (especially public unions)
anti big government and high taxes
pro strong military
generally skeptical of social programs (especially those that are designed to mask the pain of a problem without solving it)
anti-universal health care (somebody has to do the rationing, and I distrust business less than government on this one)
pro-business but anti-bailout (let business owners keep the rewards for the risks they take and the hard work they do, and keep excessive regulation out of their way, but don't pour good taxpayer money after bad private investments)
anti affirmative action.
On the "liberal" side, I'm:
pro-choice
pro gun control (in cases where it actually aligns with common sense and has a prayer of actually doing some good)
pro civil rights (read: gay marriage)
pro financial regulation (let the government be the rules committee and referee but don't let them play the game or choose the winners)
pro marijuana (I've only ever seen one joint in my life and have no interest in drugs whatsoever, but live and let live)
pro using taxpayer funds to develop alternate energy as long as its something that's meaningful and sustainable (sorry, solar and wind).
Besides which, I don't see anything in my post #641 that advocates a liberal position. I perceive that post to be entirely factual - "lock step" is not a pejorative term; it's the reality of the situation. The guy I quoted is one of the arch-conservatives - if using his words is "parroting a liberal position" then I think the cats and dogs are finally living together.
If you figure it out, let me know - I certainly can't.If I had to assign a label to LynahFan it probably would be libertarian, although that doesn't quite exactly fit.
On the "conservative" (common usage) side, I'm:
anti-union (especially public unions)
anti big government and high taxes
pro strong military
generally skeptical of social programs (especially those that are designed to mask the pain of a problem without solving it)
anti-universal health care (somebody has to do the rationing, and I distrust business less than government on this one)
pro-business but anti-bailout (let business owners keep the rewards for the risks they take and the hard work they do, and keep excessive regulation out of their way, but don't pour good taxpayer money after bad private investments)
anti affirmative action.
On the "liberal" side, I'm:
pro-choice
pro gun control (in cases where it actually aligns with common sense and has a prayer of actually doing some good)
pro civil rights (read: gay marriage)
pro financial regulation (let the government be the rules committee and referee but don't let them play the game or choose the winners)
pro marijuana (I've only ever seen one joint in my life and have no interest in drugs whatsoever, but live and let live)
pro using taxpayer funds to develop alternate energy as long as its something that's meaningful and sustainable (sorry, solar and wind).
Besides which, I don't see anything in my post #641 that advocates a liberal position. I perceive that post to be entirely factual - "lock step" is not a pejorative term; it's the reality of the situation. The guy I quoted is one of the arch-conservatives - if using his words is "parroting a liberal position" then I think the cats and dogs are finally living together.