Is there a difference between the two? How do you define them? The terms themselves would imply that a centrist will sometimes be on the left, sometimes on the right depending on the issue, and a moderate could very well be always on the left or always on the right, but not operate in extremes.I feel like people who don't fully identify with either the right or the left become ostracized by both for "not picking sides" in the fight. When really, where we are at this point in our society, a voice that can and is willing to pull from both sides might be the only thing that can unite everyone back together (if anyone could at all).
4/3/2018 4:30:43 PM
Compared to how my party has been hijacked, I feel like I'm pretty moderate. I've never thought of myself as centrist though.[Edited on April 3, 2018 at 4:51 PM. Reason : adsfa]
4/3/2018 4:50:44 PM
Here are just two examples of how to get the left and right to equally hate you (these are my actual outlooks that I get crap for from both sides):GunsEveryone has a right to protect themselves, their families, and their property. And in many cases, a gun is the best way to do so. But a person should be trained, tested, and certified/licensed for operation in order to minimize lethal use by violent people.AbortionA fetus is not the same thing as a human life, but because it is a potential life, it is sacred and should not be harmed except under extreme circumstances (rape, incest, threat to the life of the mother, being born into beyond unlivable conditions, etc). Mother's life should always take precedent over the fetus. If we want to stop the number of abortions, do it through comprehensive sex education and availability of contraception...not by banning it altogether. Stop the pregnancy from happening in the first place.
4/3/2018 7:26:49 PM
You really find that those opinions get both sides to hate you!?! Do you mean that each of those opinions independently get people from both sides to tell you that you're somehow uninformed or evil, or both?I'm not sure I 100% agree with either of them, but you certainly framed them from a stance and perspective that I can respect. I mean, I guess the details matter but I don't see why anyone would look at those statements and give you too much shit... except maybe on TWW...
4/3/2018 8:31:03 PM
I feel like Americans, at least the ones with the loudest voices, are becoming more and more extreme. By not saying "All guns/abortions should be allowed/made illegal" means you can't belong to the club.Moderates don't shout, and don't get anyone to show up to vote for them in the primaries, so we end up having to choose between two extremes that everyone knows are no good.
4/3/2018 8:47:25 PM
I always thought 'moderate' was just a catchall term that non-political people use to pat themselves on the bag for sitting on the fence and taking no real stance on anything. Centrist, at least to me, is just a term people use to describe themselves (or a candidate) in relation to those on the far left/right sides of the political spectrum.
4/3/2018 9:06:49 PM
I have only just begun to pat myself on the bag!
4/3/2018 9:55:36 PM
^ ^you are a modsrate though.bdmazurs positions are sensible and seem like they would be the default for any informed person.i think the problem that gets these people into trouble is when they identify as a progressive or a conservative. for me, moderate views are respectable as long as you own it and don't try to straddle Both sides and call yourself a progressive. thats where it becomes the most offensive political position.[Edited on April 3, 2018 at 10:05 PM. Reason : slide home]
4/3/2018 10:05:00 PM
Who have been effective and succesfull moderate and/or centrist politicians? There are conservative Democrats and liberal Republicans who cross the party lines from time to time, but in the end they are always slaves to their party leadership (looking at you, McCain) for fear of losing any connection to power.Susan Collins maybe?^^^What would you call a self-proclaimed fiscal conservative/social liberal? (And don't bother saying Libertarian, because we all know that's a farce).
4/4/2018 3:44:01 AM
there is nothing sensible about saying that a fetus is sacred who has been effective succesfull moderate and/or centrist politicians? almost every democrat in office.
4/4/2018 8:40:12 AM
It’s all messaging. Somehow half the country was convinced an overtly religious center-right capitalist (Obama) was a far-left Marxist. It was baffling considering nearly all his actual policies were continuations of W..
4/4/2018 9:01:38 AM
^^^ I’m kinda at the point where I’ve accepted the reality that “fiscally conservative” is just a nonsense term (almost a dog whistle, tbh) to describe people who want to mind their own business and not pay for social services they don’t use or like.The GOP has trotted out that message for as long as I remember and they always end up spending tons and tons of money- just not on anything related to public services (education, health care, welfare, planned parenthood, etc). In all honesty, I used to claim that I was socially liberal and fiscally conservative, but I stopped doing it because it’s not really true. It’s funny, but libertarianism is the exact word that fits, and you’re right- it’s a bs ideology for the most part.It’s easy to conflate personal responsibility and living within ones means with ”conservative” government spending. Sure, individuals can tighten their belts and make prudent financial decisions, but running the government ALWAYS costs a ton of money, no matter what. It gets even harder on the federal level than the local one, so I don’t know why we pretend that it’s possible to have an effective government that acts like a financially savvy person who can take care of EVERYONE’s wants/needs.
4/4/2018 11:34:23 AM
^^Yes. Capitalists own the messaging (both media and political), and they've done an excellent job convincing everyone that center-right politics are the default. They've also created this obsession with "decorum", where passion is seen as psychotic behavior. And the most passionate candidates are the ones who are reasonably upset with this country and want it to change.And the funny thing is, most moderates actually want progressive solutions, they are just convinced that "reasonable" "incrementalists" are the only ones who can deliver them. But in actuality, the "incrementalists" are more concerned with preserving right-wing capitalism than helping people.It is 100% the messaging. If you call yourself a moderate, you're either not paying close enough attention, you're a sociopath, or you're flat-out brainwashed. The US is fucked up, and you should be upset about it.
4/4/2018 12:00:11 PM
I think my biggest struggle with politics today is the ever-growing belief that being educated is a bad thing. That the "intellectual elite" is somehow a bad group to belong to. I don't understand people who vote based on which candidate "connects" best with them instead of voting based on policy, experience, and leadership skills. I don't care how folksy or down to earth a candidate is, I want to be sure they will make the wisest decisions based on critical thinking and expertise.The attack on political "insiders" is also bogus. I agree with the sentiment that what we had wasn't working so let's try something new, but that takes creativity, insight, and strategy...but they also have to know how the government works in order to change it. Trump is terrible being President because he doesn't know (or care) where the limits of the office are or should be, and no one in his camp has the balls to tell him when he's crossed those lines.
4/4/2018 2:31:00 PM
Your problem seems to be with the far right, not the far left.I'm a little confused where you're getting at with all this, didn't you vote for Bernie in the primary? Who are the shouting left-wing extremists that caused you to identify as a moderate?
4/4/2018 3:38:23 PM
the bernie bro types who then voted trump/third party are pretty fucking annoying, but most of them aren't liberal or far left they're just morons
4/4/2018 3:47:27 PM
^
4/4/2018 4:45:01 PM
4/4/2018 5:19:22 PM
^^^I am a liberal, but a moderate one. I voted for Bernie in the general, too, but I don't see him as an extremist. The far left supported him but he's not what they made him out to be. The "down with Washington insiders!" voters were willing to ignore that he had been a politician for over 40 years, and somehow Hillary's camp had voters believing Bernie was so much of an outsider that he wouldn't be able to accomplish anything.My current problems with the far left come from the unwillingness to compromise or even try to understand why the other side feels the way they do. They energize the far right, just the other side of the same coin. They are as ridiculous as the tea party, but instead of using racist tactics, they feed off racial tensions for political points but haven't come up with any proposed solution for breaking the pattern.Of the issues that get the most twisted by extremism, Israel is probably the most personal one for me. I believe in Israel's right to exist and defend itself AND that there needs to be a free Palestinian state, AND Netanyahu's regime is the same nationalist and racist brand as Trump, and I would even say Netanyahu is worse. But the far right lashes out at anything remotely anti-Israel, and the far left lashes out at anything that implies there is a real 2-sided conflict and not a 1-sided ethnic cleansing. I feel both extremes reacting similarly to tax plans, health care, abortion, gun control...pretty much everything.Trump didn't divide America, his uprising is a symptom of it.
4/4/2018 5:33:28 PM
4/4/2018 6:48:22 PM
4/4/2018 11:43:52 PM
4/5/2018 1:28:44 AM
4/5/2018 11:20:41 AM
I don't know anyone in politics who "sits on the fence." Sometimes they vote one way, sometimes they vote another. That doesn't mean their indecisive.The biggest problem for someone closer to center who will cross the aisle on occasion is they get shunned by their party's leadership, and then have a much tougher time getting reelected without the national committees behind them. It all depends on the state, so Susan Collins should be able to keep her senate seat from Maine but would never get elected from somewhere like Alabama.
4/5/2018 1:47:37 PM
4/5/2018 6:30:39 PM
4/5/2018 7:15:38 PM
I think I saw something around 10% of Bernie's primary supporters went for Trump. But those people must not have been voting based on policies, only on personalities (and perceived status as "outsiders," when neither really were)
4/5/2018 7:43:16 PM
I think centrist implies a little more certainty about the range of possible ideologies than I'm comfortable with. I think you could be a "little of column A, little of column B" centrist and still be fairly extreme in your justifications. Moderates I think of as being more tactical; it doesn't say much about where a person falls on a given topic, it just says that they're willing to take a measured approach to solutions.I'm not concerned so much with where a person falls ideologically, but whether they're willing to have a conversation in a detached, analytical way. It seems like moralizing is more common among what we consider the left - or at least the left that I interact with. Urban progressives, I guess. I know right-wing folks like this too (evangelicals, straight up rednecks, etc), but I really just have no contact with that demographic outside of family on Facebook. It also seems like the left is often uncharitable to people they disagree with. There's a lot of accusations of dog whistling, 'free speech' being a code word for 'alt-right white nationalism', etc - it's just gotten sort of ridiculous. This isn't universal BTW - I know people that are pretty radical and far away from me ideologically, but it's still possible to cover interesting topics because we aren't playing a game of "who can call the other person evil first".
4/5/2018 9:26:56 PM
4/6/2018 9:01:24 AM
You mean HA Goodman and Cassandra Fairbanks aren’t progressives??[Edited on April 6, 2018 at 9:09 AM. Reason : In case that wasn’t clear, that was rhetorical. They’re MAGAs.]
4/6/2018 9:08:40 AM
4/6/2018 2:36:57 PM
4/6/2018 3:31:20 PM
4/7/2018 3:19:21 PM
4/8/2018 3:41:10 AM
4/9/2018 12:15:03 PM
4/9/2018 2:48:00 PM
Not interested in debating that argument (taxation is theft) - I'm using that particular argument because it's a moral argument. You might say it's hyper-individualistic (it is, and presupposes a certain set of moral axioms), but the point is that even if it holds up logically, it doesn't actually convince anyone. I'm looking at this meta-level, you're itching to get back to object-level.It's the same when you make arguments like, "well, if you really cared about people, then you'd agree with me on policy A, B, C". As you've seen, that doesn't work because we're working from different assumptions. Moral arguments are excellent for rallying the troops. They get fence-sitters or allies fired up - it makes people feel like they're fighting a great evil. Moral arguments are shit for convincing anyone that isn't already on board. Every now and then you can appeal to a person's emotional inclinations but it's pretty rare.Pragmatic and utilitarian arguments are a lot more effective when it comes to getting anyone to rethink presuppositions. You get them to rethink a position, just for fun. That's why it's possible to have detached conversations with political opponents and actually get something out of it. Moral assertions are binary - they either work, or they alienate. If I tell you that abortion is literally killing a baby (I don't believe that, but people make that argument all the time), you reject it outright. You probably have reasons, but you reject the moral appeal.
4/9/2018 4:47:07 PM
4/11/2018 3:54:34 AM
4/11/2018 12:43:16 PM
Arguing with a hardline libertarian on individual issues is honestly just a waste of time. You can't have a policy discussion with someone who thinks there should be no policies.It's like arguing abortion with someone who believes abortion is murder. You have to break down their foundation of belief to make any progress whatsoever.
4/11/2018 12:56:12 PM
the second one is easy, just ask them about abortion for rape or incest
4/11/2018 1:04:49 PM
Somewhere between 20-35% of Americans still think it should be illegal in those caseshttp://news.gallup.com/poll/1576/abortion.aspx
4/11/2018 1:11:49 PM
on a poll they don't care about, but when you follow up with questions about what they think about women they trip all over themselves
4/11/2018 1:14:52 PM
4/11/2018 1:15:45 PM
but libertarians are all on the spectrum, so...
4/11/2018 1:19:24 PM
4/11/2018 2:32:12 PM
4/11/2018 2:51:14 PM
lol, how do you people read that and take any time to respond to it?
4/11/2018 2:55:38 PM
^^I think the problem here is that you're trying to generalize poor people as if they're some monolithic group. Sure, many people born into poverty tend to stay there, but plenty of people move in and out of poverty at various points in their lives for a variety of simple and complicated reasons (sometimes due to poor choices, sometimes due to bad luck). And if you really think about it, the poor is just one subset of humanity. You'll run into the same types of problems when you trying to generalize groups of people based on race/ethnicity/religion/education/etc. That's pretty much why libertarianism extending past anything on a localized level is inherently incompatible with a national government. "Let me do me, and you do you" works in your neighborhood, at some work places, in a variety of social gatherings, but not on a scale much larger.[Edited on April 11, 2018 at 3:02 PM. Reason : .]
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