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Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
bradleybadly wrote:I think everyone knows my position on this so I won't get involved in the discussion except for this opening remark. I could definitely be wrong on this, but my instincts tell me I'm right. My belief is that liberals could not only win on gay marriage but a whole bunch of issues if they didn't do the name calling thing. What I mean when I say that is the use of words like greedy, sexist, bigot, racist, and homophobe. These are the most common names thrown out by the left towards the right or anyone who doesn't support their beliefs.
Each person can vote for 2 options.
thegreekdog wrote:I don't know what option my stance on this fits into, so I didn't vote. However, I believe the current/recent use of these terms is used by liberals against all people who don't agree with their particular agenda (whether those types of people are conservative or not) to marginalize the opponents' arguments.
As I've said in a number of other threads, here's my example - when someone who supports healthcare (for example, a senator) goes on television and points to a white person at an anti-universal health insurance rally with a sign reading "Obama is Osama" and says, "That person is racist" and then goes on to liken everyone who disagrees with universal health insurance racist or bigoted. This happens on a regular basis on many news networks. I happen to think it is a political tactic that can be very effective. It makes people who are not racist and not bigoted think twice about disagreeing with universal health insurance (or any other issue) to avoid being labelled a racist or bigot.
bradleybadly wrote:I think everyone knows my position on this so I won't get involved in the discussion except for this opening remark. I could definitely be wrong on this, but my instincts tell me I'm right. My belief is that liberals could not only win on gay marriage but a whole bunch of issues if they didn't do the name calling thing. What I mean when I say that is the use of words like greedy, sexist, bigot, racist, and homophobe. These are the most common names thrown out by the left towards the right or anyone who doesn't support their beliefs.
Each person can vote for 2 options.
thegreekdog wrote:I don't know what option my stance on this fits into, so I didn't vote. However, I believe the current/recent use of these terms is used by liberals against all people who don't agree with their particular agenda (whether those types of people are conservative or not) to marginalize the opponents' arguments.
thegreekdog wrote:As I've said in a number of other threads, here's my example - when someone who supports healthcare (for example, a senator) goes on television and points to a white person at an anti-universal health insurance rally with a sign reading "Obama is Osama" and says, "That person is racist" and then goes on to liken everyone who disagrees with universal health insurance racist or bigoted. This happens on a regular basis on many news networks. I happen to think it is a political tactic that can be very effective. It makes people who are not racist and not bigoted think twice about disagreeing with universal health insurance (or any other issue) to avoid being labelled a racist or bigot.
Woodruff wrote:
You're right in that it happens far too often, though it has the opposite affect for me. I figure if it's clearly not a bigoted/homophobic/whatever policy yet they've got to resort to that argument, then they clearly don't have any REAL argument, so I should be voting in the opposite way to whatever that group wants.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:
You're right in that it happens far too often, though it has the opposite affect for me. I figure if it's clearly not a bigoted/homophobic/whatever policy yet they've got to resort to that argument, then they clearly don't have any REAL argument, so I should be voting in the opposite way to whatever that group wants.
Then you are letting others dictate your actions.
Why not ignore the idiots and actually listen to those who DO have something real to say? Whether you go along with something because of "idiocy" or go against something because of it, you are still giving your power to idiots.
That said, it is pretty tempting to feel that way...
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:
You're right in that it happens far too often, though it has the opposite affect for me. I figure if it's clearly not a bigoted/homophobic/whatever policy yet they've got to resort to that argument, then they clearly don't have any REAL argument, so I should be voting in the opposite way to whatever that group wants.
Then you are letting others dictate your actions.
Why not ignore the idiots and actually listen to those who DO have something real to say? Whether you go along with something because of "idiocy" or go against something because of it, you are still giving your power to idiots.
thegreekdog wrote:This difference between the conservative labelling (for example, labelling war protestors as unpatriotic) versus liberal labelling (for example, labelling anti-universal health insurance people) is that when conservatives label people there is a general and consistent outcry amongst the major media outlets. When liberals label people there is at best silence and at worst (and in many cases) complete agreement (per MSNBC and CNN coverages).
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
bradleybadly wrote:I think everyone knows my position on this so I won't get involved in the discussion except for this opening remark. I could definitely be wrong on this, but my instincts tell me I'm right. My belief is that liberals could not only win on gay marriage but a whole bunch of issues if they didn't do the name calling thing. What I mean when I say that is the use of words like greedy, sexist, bigot, racist, and homophobe. These are the most common names thrown out by the left towards the right or anyone who doesn't support their beliefs.
Each person can vote for 2 options.
bradleybadly wrote:bump
PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:This difference between the conservative labelling (for example, labelling war protestors as unpatriotic) versus liberal labelling (for example, labelling anti-universal health insurance people) is that when conservatives label people there is a general and consistent outcry amongst the major media outlets. When liberals label people there is at best silence and at worst (and in many cases) complete agreement (per MSNBC and CNN coverages).
This is an old argument, but the only reason you have this perception is because what you are calling "liberal" is really more "middle of the road". Truly liberal discussion does not even make the major media sources. Even on most of NPR stays away from truly liberal stuff, though they do try to include some truly liberal programs like Democracy now, alternative radio, and (for the homosexual/transgender view) Purple Rabbit, etc. The most ardent conservatives, by contrast, are included. The media do exclude some of the most extreme far right -- the KKK types and such (though they cover even them on occasion), but most people don't even know the liberal equivalents or lump all liberals into those groups (if you are an environmentalist, you are an Earth First!er, etc.)
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:This difference between the conservative labelling (for example, labelling war protestors as unpatriotic) versus liberal labelling (for example, labelling anti-universal health insurance people) is that when conservatives label people there is a general and consistent outcry amongst the major media outlets. When liberals label people there is at best silence and at worst (and in many cases) complete agreement (per MSNBC and CNN coverages).
This is an old argument, but the only reason you have this perception is because what you are calling "liberal" is really more "middle of the road". Truly liberal discussion does not even make the major media sources. Even on most of NPR stays away from truly liberal stuff, though they do try to include some truly liberal programs like Democracy now, alternative radio, and (for the homosexual/transgender view) Purple Rabbit, etc. The most ardent conservatives, by contrast, are included. The media do exclude some of the most extreme far right -- the KKK types and such (though they cover even them on occasion), but most people don't even know the liberal equivalents or lump all liberals into those groups (if you are an environmentalist, you are an Earth First!er, etc.)
It's only middle of the road because (1) you agree with it or (2) the media agrees with it and thus presents it as middle of the road.
thegreekdog wrote:Player... I indicated two groups of "protestors."
The first - anti-war protestors. Liberal fringe? Of course not. Identifies with liberals? Of course. The media attention towards this group is positive.
The second - anti-universal health insurance. Conservative fringe? No way. Identifies with conservatives? Yes. The media attention towards this group is completely negative.
It's a very simple concept to understand. I'm not talking about Earth Firsters or the KKK. I'm talking about normal Americans who believe in one thing (peace in Iraq) or the other (no universal health insurance). You're arguing something completely different. Either you're not picking up what I'm throwing down or you're completely ignoring it because I'm right (and thus you have nothing to argue about).
PLAYER57832 wrote: Because a lot of anti-war protestors and dissenters are very much from the FAR left fringe. You just don't hear about them... at all, unless you work hard to do so.
By contrast, many of those presented in the media as against universal health coverage are very much from the FAR right.-- those who assert that Obama is a communist, a terrorist, etc. You actually do hear of those views in the regular media. You just don't hear the far left.
thegreekdog wrote:On the "far right" thing. I don't think it's unreasonable for me to be frustrated with the government owning large swathes of the economy (from banks to car makers). I don't think it's unreasonable for me to be frustrated with continuous and virtually unlimited spending (on both sides of the aisle). There are a lot of people frustrated with these things. Would you label them conservatives? Would you label them fringe conservatives? Do you think these people are held in esteem by major media outlets or are they, instead, labelled as fringe groups or tools of the Republican Party?
Woodruff wrote:bradleybadly wrote:bump
So I guess this means you weren't planning to fix the options so that they were meaningful or relevant.
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.