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Originally posted by ZindoDoone
reply to post by The Bald Champion
That right there is exactly why I switched from 30 years of being a Democrat to Republican and then to the Libertarians. The Republicans have started to act and legislate like those liberals noted in that piece.
Zindo
Originally posted by mrwupy
Conservatives are the ones who say you have the right to free speech.
Liberals will choke you to death for saying something their committee hasn't approved.
Egalitarianism (derived from the French word égal, meaning equal) is a political doctrine that holds that all people should be treated as equals and have the same political, economic, social, and civil rights.[1] Generally it applies to being held equal under the law and society at large. In actual practice, one may be considered an egalitarian in most areas listed above, even if not subscribing to equality in every possible area of individual difference.
Nationalism can refer to an ideology, a sentiment, a form of culture, or a social movement that focuses on the nation.
The idea of modernization comes from a view of societies as having a standard evolutionary pattern, as described in the social evolutionism theories. According to this, each society would evolve inexorably from barbarism to ever greater levels of development and civilization.
Originally posted by Divinorumus
It's not a "right" if such a right requires someone else to do something for you to make it a right for you. I.E. "welfare" is not a right if someone else is made to pay for it, and a "job" is not a right if someone else must create and offer that job to you. Anyhow, I'm not sure what "civil rights" even mean. If it requires or demands someone else do something for YOU, it's not a right. When someone else does something for another, that's a priviledge, not a right. A "right" should not demand something be done by or enslave another to make it so, that would be taking away freedom from another.
Originally posted by The Bald Champion
I understand the tenet - but with that logic how about gays getting married?
Originally posted by Divinorumus
Originally posted by The Bald Champion
I understand the tenet - but with that logic how about gays getting married?
Any two willing people should be able to form a union. Doing so does not place a demand upon me or another or society that isn't already there. The screw up in this particular issue is someone made it a "gay" issue. It should be a "freedom" issue for ALL! If they would only dropped the "gay" slant on this "union" issue, I'm sure it would pass. I would even get behind that cause and approach. There are many advantages of a "union" that we ALL could benefit from, not just "bed buddies."
Originally posted by The Bald Champion
YES I am serious...
Did conservatives ( not Republicans ) stand for or against civil right for AA citizens?
or
Did liberals ( not Democrats ) stand for or against civil rights?
The person was making the assertion that LIBERALS were against the civil rights movement in the 60's.
I make the assertion that the civil rights movement was a LIBERAL movement.
MLK was a republican yes.
Originally posted by semperfortis
Just in support of what mrwupy has said; we should remember that not everything is always as it appears.
California is predominantly a Liberal-Democrat stronghold, yet they passed Prop 8 with a large margin.
There is little doubt that many Liberals voted in favor of Prop 8 and banning Gay Marriage.
Sometimes it is just the issues that define the voters and not the other way around.