rolling explaining conservatism

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overheard in the office (old school hardass military dude): "athletes need to learn that people don't want to hear them talk about politics"

these people just live in a totally different world, they just believe what they want to believe

brimstead, Friday, 20 October 2017 16:42 (six years ago) link

Big hat enthusiast (R, male) attacks political opponent (D, female) for her big hat.

Christopher Futterwacken (Dan Peterson), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:05 (six years ago) link

she's an empty barrel . . . ?

At the end of the briefing, he said that he would take questions only from those members of the press who had a personal connection to a fallen soldier, followed by those who knew a Gold Star family.

reggie (qualmsley), Friday, 20 October 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link

POO: empty barrel v. basket of deplorables

what is this 1950?

officer sonny bonds, lytton pd (mayor jingleberries), Friday, 20 October 2017 19:12 (six years ago) link

Uranium deal to Russia, with Clinton help and Obama Administration knowledge, is the biggest story that Fake Media doesn't want to follow!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 19, 2017

reggie (qualmsley), Friday, 20 October 2017 20:35 (six years ago) link

It’s easy to throw rocks at somebody simply because they have money. And that’s what I’m trying to address. We don’t need to create this class warfare of, "You have, and I don’t, therefore I’m going to punish you, and use the government as the punishment tool." We’re better as a country than that. And we want a country that creates innovation and creates hope, so that somebody growing up in poverty can be successful, could be wealthy, if they invent an idea and they take it all the way to success. Why do we have to continue to divide our country along these lines? It’s a mystery to me.

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 23 October 2017 23:35 (six years ago) link

lol at this from sykes:

This brings us to the politicians. Richard Nixon, who embraced the most aggressive versions of the Southern Strategy, was not a conservative of this school, but I do think that there was a temptation among the political class to use both cultural and racial issues to substitute for other issues. Conservatives too often gave in to that temptation. Even those who did not turned a blind eye to the grievances among folks whose vote they needed.

Fast-forward to 2016. Trump deftly exploited those grievances, and continues to do so. Rather than talk about health care, he attacks the NFL. It’s very much the old pattern.But: This doesn’t mean that people whose views were shaped by Hayek, von Mises, or Friedman are therefore responsible for the alt-right.

notice how sykes slyly fast fowards the conversation from the early 1970s to 2016 and then for some reason doesn't see a connection between the alt-right and the Republican Party of those 40+ years that he skipped over.

Currently (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 20:23 (six years ago) link

this sykes guy, he is trickyyyyy

Currently (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 20:24 (six years ago) link

He doesn't even mention a certain legislator whose name rhymes with Schmnwich.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 20:54 (six years ago) link

if you're a connoisseur of pure grade 200 proof derp, do yourself a favor

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/howie_carr/2017/10/carr_hillary_clinton_fbi_colluded_to_ambush_donald_trump

reggie (qualmsley), Friday, 27 October 2017 21:28 (six years ago) link

Trump likely already knew about Uranium 1 when he took office, and the day before Mueller began his investigations, he met with Trump (we know that they met). It's likely that Trump told Mueller that they knew about U1 and his involvement with it. Trump made a deal to let Mueller off the hook if he helped him drain the swamp. Next week will likely see Trump exonerated in regards to "muh Russia" and prosecutions at those who tried to undermine his presidency using the dossier to illegally wiretap his campaign.

Admiral Rogers of the NSA was the one that informed Trump of the fact that he was being wiretapped (they moved their campaign transition HQ out of Trump Tower after this meeting). And Admiral Rogers still has his job. It's highly likely that the NSA has been providing Trump with the necessary dirt to go after the scumbags within our government, and he's using that get people to rat out and turn state's evidence/witness with what's to come.

Trump is already tweeting things that indicate what's going to happen next week. And sure as shit isn't going to be about him colluding with Putin.

reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 28 October 2017 14:38 (six years ago) link

"The KGB funded the takedown of Nixon. Hillary laundered all the money. She and Mr. Putin are colluding to make Mr. Trump look bad, a deal brokered by Paul Manafort, I mean, Robert Mueller, in exchange for uranium sales and Trump Tower Moscow. Tax cuts."

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 30 October 2017 13:44 (six years ago) link

DO SOMETHING!

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 30 October 2017 17:40 (six years ago) link

The real collusion scandal, as we've said several times before, has EVERYTHING to do with the CLINTON CAMPAIGN, Fusion GPS, and Russia. There's CLEAR EVIDENCE of the CLINTON CAMPAIGN colluding with Russian intelligence, to spread disinformation, and smear the President.

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 30 October 2017 20:27 (six years ago) link

I believe that individuals are happiest and most fulfilled when they form their own opinions, assume responsibility for their own actions, and spend the fruits of their own labor as they see fit. I believe that a collection of individuals making their own decisions within the confines of a clear and concise set of laws that they have determined for themselves will advance society much more effectively than will a collection of experts who are confident in their knowledge of what is best for everyone else. This is why I support conservatives, who favor a smaller, less powerful government.

that's from the Mercer memo after he bravely sold his shares in Breitbart to his daughters.

you can quibble with his assumptions, and the hypocrisy of his own actions with respect to his stated beliefs, but to me this seems to get to the core of what conservatives think that they believe, the story they tell themselves. their story always seem to leave out the absolutism that drives these goals. e.g. they want people to assume total financial responsibility for their own actions and the consequences of "bad luck" like cancer or getting laid off after your employer is bought out, so fuck any safety net

Karl Malone, Thursday, 2 November 2017 18:27 (six years ago) link

They also want people to take full financial responsibility for whether that they are trust fund babies rolling dough or the children of poverty and broke as a joke on the day they turn 18.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 2 November 2017 18:36 (six years ago) link

that they

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 2 November 2017 18:36 (six years ago) link

hillary would have been worse

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 7 November 2017 16:04 (six years ago) link

I have read the US Constitution and it makes me sooooo mad I want to spit.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 7 November 2017 17:37 (six years ago) link

They should be looking at the Democrats. They should be looking at Podesta and all of that dishonesty. They should be looking at a lot of things. And a lot of people are disappointed in the Justice Department, including me.

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 14 November 2017 02:03 (six years ago) link

we should tax student loans as income, so we can cut rates on the *job creators* even more. after all, if your parents can't afford to pay for college, then you don't really deserve to go

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 21 November 2017 15:39 (six years ago) link

Basically, it exists to allow viewers to start their days confident that someone in the world is dumber than they are.

For three hours they sort of present an endless parade of liberal hypocrisy and celebrity stupidity, pitted against very ostentatious displays of patriotism and country music singers.

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/trumpcast/2017/11/justin_peters_on_fox_news_hosts_and_why_the_network_won_t_change_on_trumpcast.html

reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 25 November 2017 12:56 (six years ago) link

man you'd have to be a total loser to be spending several hours every day collecting examples so you can obsess about the hypocrisy and cultural/moral faults of the other side

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 25 November 2017 19:01 (six years ago) link

Is that your attempt at a sick burn on qualmsley

El Tomboto, Saturday, 25 November 2017 19:14 (six years ago) link

it doesn't take that long, adam

reggie (qualmsley), Sunday, 26 November 2017 05:11 (six years ago) link

roll over for the trump / koch / mercer / mcconnell / ryan tax cuts. prosperity trickles down

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 29 November 2017 03:27 (six years ago) link

For Republicans, cutting taxes is not the means to a policy end. It is the policy. That's it. Cut taxes because cutting taxes is inherently good and right. It's not "Cut taxes to stimulate economic growth." The second half of that sentence gets tacked on to appeal to the Beltway media and certain mushy centrist intellectual types. The goal is not economic growth. The start and the end of the process for the right is cutting taxes.

http://www.ginandtacos.com/2017/11/28/postmodern-policymaking/

reggie (qualmsley), Thursday, 30 November 2017 11:36 (six years ago) link

The threat of authoritarian socialism collapsed with the Soviet Union thirty years ago. The end of the Cold War led to a period of rapid democratization and increased respect for liberal rights around the world. Meanwhile, the soft-socialist liberal democracies undertook “neo-liberal” reforms, which have left strongly egalitarian countries, such as Denmark and Sweden, no less committed than the United States to open, lightly regulated markets.

Libertarian thought was thus released by History from its defensive anti-socialist mandate. But libertarianism just is classical liberalism ideologically fortified against socialism with a theory of rights that morally criminalizes redistribution. Giving up on it would have meant reverting to an updated version of classical liberalism that accepts the legitimacy of taxes and government transfers. That wasn’t in the cards because fortified libertarian rights theory had already taken on a life of its own as a positive ideal. People had built their identities around it, and they weren’t about to declare total victory in 1991, decamp from the bunker of neo-Lockean property rights theory, and stop bitching about the violence and theft embodied in city streets and Medicare.

Fervent advocates of “small government” never saw themselves as vessels for a counter-ideology engineered to hold the line against the socialist onslaught in defense of actually existing, liberal-democratic capitalism. That’s why the end of the Cold War seemed more like a victorious battle than the end of hostilities. The forces of liberal capitalist freedom had held their ground, but there was still a great deal of ground left to take. Libertopia was still a long way off. The welfare state remained ubiquitous, picking our pockets, too socialist to bear.

https://niskanencenter.org/blog/libertarian-democracy-skepticism-infected-american-right/

reggie (qualmsley), Friday, 1 December 2017 00:23 (six years ago) link

Okay, please excuse my ignorance but why is this so bad? Yes it gets rid of the individual mandate, but they are increasing the subsidies which should help prevent soaring costs. People who make more than 200k, have a tax increase, people who make 45-199 get a tax cut. Tax loop holes are decreased. Corporate taxes are cut. Corporations don't pay taxes anyway so who cares if they're cut? If we close the loop holes that allow them to get out of paying taxes maybe we might get some revenue ... Everyone complained about how expensive Obamacare was and how it would end everything. We are still here.

reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 2 December 2017 18:31 (six years ago) link

“I think that estimate makes a lot of sense. [. . .] I do believe the Treasury when they say that this is going to unleash a lot of economic growth, which will accrue more revenues,” Ryan told reporters.

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 12 December 2017 17:34 (six years ago) link

1, Feed your ego, no matter what it costs
2, Republican good, Democrats bad
3, Do the polar opposite of Barack Obama

reggie (qualmsley), Sunday, 17 December 2017 00:24 (six years ago) link

really the only conservative principle is 'i don't have to give a shit about you and you can't force me'... which is otm

sleepingbag, Sunday, 17 December 2017 05:34 (six years ago) link

That’s completely untrue. Conservatives want to preserve old heirarchies and traditions and are afraid of the instability that comes from social change. The Republican Party is something distinct from conservatism as an ideological tendency.

treeship 2, Sunday, 17 December 2017 05:57 (six years ago) link

afraid of the instability that comes from social change

ok.. so then what is the argument for getting rid of traditions, if you're a part of a community who is well served by them? who's to say that hierarchies are unnatural or wrong if they keep occurring and people keep acquiescing to them? & overall, why change society? why not just worry about one's self? say i personally see no benefit (and in fact many potential losses) from changing society... therefore i won't, unless someone else attempts to force me to.

sleepingbag, Sunday, 17 December 2017 23:13 (six years ago) link

Why does ilx have a thread pretending to think it can explain conservatism

remember the lmao (darraghmac), Sunday, 17 December 2017 23:50 (six years ago) link

xp yeah. there is a long history of conservative charity, communitarianism, and even anticapitalism (see Strasser for an extreme example). not to mention ecology, which has paleoconservative roots too. even some paleos today contend that a social-democratic safety net was necessary to keep the patriarchal nuclear family together, and deregulation/privatization caused the "crisis of single mothers" we see today.

conservatives had a deep belief in collective structures like the church, historically speaking, and the individualist, right-libertarian splinter was an unusual development, though it is very influential by now obviously.

epigone, Sunday, 17 December 2017 23:58 (six years ago) link

The Republican Party is something distinct from conservatism as an ideological tendency.

Yeah and the contemporary Democratic Party is distinct both from historical liberalism, and from its own past iterations.

But most people are not thinking about Edmund Burke (or whatever) or Andrew Jackson when we use these terms.

Right now there's a bunch of people whose politics are reflexively anti-tax and anti-government. Overwhelmingly, these people are reluctant (at best) to agree that society needs to change its treatment of people of color, women, and those of other sexual orientations.

They are also generally resistant to seeing a role for government in healing the sick, feeding the hungry, uplifting the downtrodden, or protecting the environment. Also they seem to like guns a lot. Plus flags and troops and cops.

That group of views is not necessarily logically bound together, but we keep seeing that people with a few of these views often seem to have them all.

If "conservative" is the wrong word for those people, I am eager to hear another term proposed. How about "heartless mousefuckerz?"

Darth be not proud (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 18 December 2017 01:20 (six years ago) link

Why does ilx have a thread pretending to think it can explain conservatism


We started this because people kept being dense on the US politics threads to the tune of “Why do they do this shit?” and trying to circumscribe possible reasons (like Krugman did this past week (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/13/opinion/scam-i-am-why-is-the-gop-rushing-this-tax-abomination.html)), as if conservatism is a thing that can be understood using the models of thinking you learned as a curious undergrad with a yen to develop discerning tastes while keeping an open mind

El Tomboto, Monday, 18 December 2017 02:05 (six years ago) link

why do you have to bring animal collective into this

j., Monday, 18 December 2017 03:26 (six years ago) link

A peace bone got found in the GOP wing

El Tomboto, Monday, 18 December 2017 03:42 (six years ago) link

I appreciate the explanation tb

But that's an explanation of why this chatter was removed from other threads

I'm kinda asking why ilx is pretending- pantomime, showtrial or whatever you call the performative aspect at play here- to either be able or to even want to describe anything other than strawman oppositional stances itt

remember the lmao (darraghmac), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:03 (six years ago) link

This thread got me to read Ronald Dworkin!

No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:06 (six years ago) link

who's pretending? tax cuts will save us all

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:11 (six years ago) link

A lot of this thread might be performative, strawmanning, or sarcastic, but some of us have a reasonable degree of experience with real conservatism and can use this as a repository of our collective knowledge. I used to argue for the war in Iraq FFS.

El Tomboto, Monday, 18 December 2017 04:19 (six years ago) link

i live in texas, i grew up around whites, family reunions on my dad's side were with ranch-owning aggies. i know about conservatives.

Men's Scarehouse - "You're gonna like the way you're shook." (m bison), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:21 (six years ago) link

Xp

So did hillary clinton

infinity (∞), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:25 (six years ago) link


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