Re: Obama XXIII: The Muslin Anti-Christ Wages War on the forces of Christianity!
I intended my four-quadrent analysis to be descriptive, a form of taxonomy, other people are reading additional implications where none were intended.
If you have a graph with an axis that runs left to right from radical to conservative, and an axis that runs bottom to top as liberal to totalitarian, then in the upper left we have the radical totalitarian Barack Obama (at least he comes out and says so directly! he's proud and unapologetic, and I'm fine with that.) In the upper right you would place Rick Santorum as a right-wing totalitarian (I don't know enough about him, I'll take your word for it). In the lower right, I'd place Mitt Romney, Chris Christie, Paul Ryan, as right-wing liberals or as liberal conservatives or however you want to say it, and in the lower left, I'd place Andrew Cuomo as a radical liberal or a left-wing liberal or however you want to say it.
In NY state, the politics currently are dominated by public-sector unions, which are so far to the right that they are beyond conservative, they are reactionary (NOT all public-sector unions, merely NY state public sector unions), and so in NY you need a radical to take them on if you are going to have any money left over to service the social-welfare programs that are essential to the liberal agenda.
I honestly think your taxonomy is seriously flawed. I think (I hope?) that everyone knows that liberalism and conservativism are not polar opposites; they can't be because they are not the poles of the spectrum. I appreciate that one of your primary points is that these two groups are not really opposites.
I would think that the poles of the spectrum would be totalitarianism (total control by the government) and anarchy. No one in today's US is anywhere near either of those poles, and anyone who thinks otherwise needs to read some more history, and engage in a little more world travel. Economically, American liberals are to the left of conservatives, and therefore close-ER (but not close) to totalitarianism, but progressivism tends to be about social issues, and I would argue that socially American conservatives are to the left of American liberals. If I were to try to scale Americans in four quadrants, I would use a social axis and a fiscal axis, and each would run from totalitarian to anarchist.
Of course, VERY few Americans would be anywhere near any of the corners. We would probably all be bundled into one relatively small area.
Oh, and I did not take offense per se, nor did I think you meant any about the totalitrian thing. I just think it showed how very flawed your reasoning was. I do think totalitarianism is bad, at this time in this place. Certainly many (possibly most prior to about 1900) philosophers have espoused it, but the assumptions made; that a monarch or some such honestly have the best interests of the people at heart, and so on are not realistic in a society as pluralistic as the one in which we live.
For example, allowing me as en employer to determine that any of my employees who want a certain medical procedure must pay for it 100 percent out of their own pockets because my religious views are that the procedure in question is immoral, works fine if the vast majority of people in my society agree with me. When that is not the case, this is a problem.
And yes, I realize, the same analogy can be drawn for plenty of "progressive" ideals.