As an unaffiliated voter, I feel _____.
5/5/2012 4:08:25 PM
horny
5/5/2012 4:55:36 PM
fucked
5/5/2012 10:34:46 PM
it depends on which aspect is more importantlike when I was more economically conservative than I am now, I still preferred the Dems because the fundies largely threw their lot in with the other side
5/5/2012 11:12:46 PM
5/6/2012 9:45:59 AM
I like the platform overall of the Republican Liberty Caucus, but I know they have had issues in some states because of their stances on homosexual rights, thoughts on military involvement (limited foreign entanglement), being against the failures of the drug war, and other issues.I went to the RLC national convention 2 years back in DC, and I was amazed by the number of unaffiliated voters... met a couple of registered Democrats there too. Generally a lot of people that are more fiscally conservative (need for more efficient government) and pro-liberty. I guess the term that a lot of people might use is "classic liberal"...Anyway, its just unfortunate that the Republican Party overall seems to pander and be focused on these "religious" type issues that often lead to more government control (pushing beliefs on others through some form of law or regulation). I am hopefully that it will change, but to me, seems like it keeps going further towards the religious right. As an unaffiliated voter, I often feel "angry" and "let down" by the vast pandering towards the extreme religious elements.[Edited on May 6, 2012 at 11:06 AM. Reason : ]
5/6/2012 11:05:48 AM
5/6/2012 11:44:25 AM
The weird thing about the entire current dumbification of the Republican party is that when taken as a part of the entire population, religion is losing its influence. The number of people who won't affiliate with a religion has plummeted.This is against a natural gradient from religious people and areas having more children. So the rate of people becoming convinced to abandon religion is quite significant.It's just that somehow the core have become more touchy and more influential in politics. Sure, it's likely because of demographics, where people aging makes them more geezer-ish. As this is the baby boomer generation, it strikes me as somewhat ironic, since they had at times gone as far as striking from college for a year to protest police state like actions.
5/6/2012 12:27:10 PM
^ Very true... the strange thing is that as people that are religious has declined, the # of evangelical or born-again Christians has actually increased from two other studies I looked at last year.I am a firm believer in that religion should not impact policy making. Using logic and using sound reasoning (rational) rather than using religious dogma to base your decisions off of. Emotions are another thing that can get in the way, but that is likely another thread topic in itself.[Edited on May 6, 2012 at 12:44 PM. Reason : grammar ninjas]
5/6/2012 12:40:13 PM
Well there are religious states. Honestly, it depends on the background of the people and history itself. The people have to be convinced through experience that religious governance isn't a good idea. The people of Iran understand this very well, and many Muslim nations are very prickly about religion in government because they've seen what it does.The United States, on the other hand, had secularism as one of its founding pillars, but it's important to frame this correctly. The secularism that our founding fathers promoted was pro-religion, which was about freedom of religion. Why the fuck would this be important to them? It's because they saw abuses by an amalgamated church-state entity in the name of the religion.Religion is very open to interpretation, and it doesn't matter what your creed is, it can be bent and twisted to accomplish any agenda. It blows my mind that people completely forget this concept of unscrupulous individuals using piousness to impose on other people who don't believe the interpretation.Religious interpretation has always always always been used to serve selfish political purposes. Historians actually have examples of different societies that fell or held on dependent on what the religion promoted. Actually, this is a huge part of history. If religion said that divinity came from nature, it was hard to use that rule over people. If religion said that divinity came from the mandate of heaven that the king possessed, then it made for a convenient tool of the ruling class.You would think that this narrative would be the exception to the rule but it's basically all of society (or at least how it used to be). I mean, holy crap look at Shintoism. It has the sophistication of a hunter-gather pagan religion and basically says "yeah, emperor is god". Japan had to go through some pretty deep shit until they could agree on a quiet consensus that that was all bull crap. It also helped that Japan had competing religion, and today it's about equally Shinto, Buddhist, and Christian. Polytheism isn't the word for this, because they are mutually exclusive. Because the religion doesn't make any intellectual sense, they're all just de-facto atheists with a hodgepodge of traditions.I would challenge any of the conservatives in NC to enshrine actual Christianity into the constitution. We are not dealing with Christianity, we're dealing with "interpretations" of Christianity ostensibly but in reality it's just cultural traditionalism. Amendment I is vastly more Victorian that it is Christian. It has basically no Christian in it. It is exactly as Christian as King George III was.Why the FUCK don't conservatives get this?[Edited on May 6, 2012 at 1:33 PM. Reason : ]
5/6/2012 1:29:46 PM
Well ^^ is the same thing that's been happening in politics for the past 40ish years. Each side is becoming more polarized and more defined as time goes on. There is no middle left. As religion becomes such an influential player in American politics, it makes sense that viewpoints would become more polarized along with political ideologies as the ties between each become clearer. Believers in religion flock to one side and politics follows the people. And political secularists flock to the other side in an attempt to use reason instead of faith in policy-making.Ultimately, this will be bad for both politics and religion. Religion will suffer because people will become more aware of how it's used for controlling people and fall out with their faith. Politics will suffer because so many stupid people are trying to legislate with verse from the Bible. Lose-lose situation for everyone who's not in power.[Edited on May 6, 2012 at 1:42 PM. Reason : ]
5/6/2012 1:39:37 PM
Chris Hedges on this topic:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA_bBrB_TLYhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=im01ndvWnUE&feature=relmfu
5/6/2012 1:48:51 PM
@ImStoned, I was actually going to bring that up as well. A couple good articles I have read about the polarization of politics via the process of gerrymandering.I mentioned this in another thread, but the founding fathers and people that came over here had fought religious oppression overseas (maybe not directly, but enough of an impact to influence their ideas). To be succinct, freedom of religion, not freedom to insert religion. The founding fathers got this.@Mrfrog, I agree with you, well said.
5/6/2012 2:19:43 PM
Schwarzenegger wrote a pretty interesting op ed on this recently http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-oe-schwarzenegger-gop-needs-to-be-more-inclusiv-20120506,0,178448.story[Edited on May 7, 2012 at 5:11 AM. Reason : ]
5/7/2012 5:07:15 AM
5/7/2012 8:46:53 AM
Good luck. You're gonna need it since the religious people make up half of the party.
5/7/2012 2:39:54 PM
much better IMO to stick with the Dems
5/7/2012 2:47:28 PM
The fact that "fiscal liberalism" is an actual thing bewilders me. In countries like Canada, where social programs are more prevalent than in the U.S., they still focus on balancing the budget. This new era where deficits allegedly don't matter will be relatively short-lived.The real leaders of the GOP are not fundamentalist Christians. Dick Cheney never gave a fuck about Jesus and he never will. He cares about money and power.Religiously-motivated political factions in the United States are driven by delusion, but they are highly motivated and they will vote Republican, assuming the Republican supports federal enforcement of "traditional values" and the slaughter of non-whites outside of "Christendom". On the other hand, minorities and poor people have been effectively duped by the Democratic party, so they are the loyal constituency on the other side. The end result is two parties working for the same corporations, working tirelessly to maintain an illusion of choice.Anyone that campaigns on an anti-corporatist platform should be recognized as a departure from the mainstream and should be supported if possible. It's correct to acknowledge sinister nature of the GOP. It's incorrect to conclude that your support is better placed in the DNC.
5/7/2012 3:08:04 PM
5/7/2012 3:18:57 PM
There are some indications that the Republican party can be commandeered. Ron Paul has won the majority of delegates in multiple states now, which gives Ron Paul supporters control over the RNC in that state, essentially. I'm not in the business of saying what is and isn't possible. If libertarian-esque people can get power within the GOP, that's a good thing for both parties because it's going to mean drifting away from social conservatism and support for the military industrial complex.The GOP establishment is resisting this movement, but there's only so much they can do when droves of Ron Paul supporters come out and aim to take over the process. Ron Paul will probably not win in 2012, but the libertarian movement isn't going anywhere.
5/7/2012 3:26:14 PM
The GOP establishment is not interested in popular support, and they're heavily financed by billionaires like Sheldon Adelson, who profit and steer the direction into pro-war stances and military intervention. They each have more money than the rest of the party members combined. The party is so damned corrupt, that they would easily suppress democratic (majority) support of a libertarian candidate in the off chance that they actually won or brokered the RNC. And that's to say nothing of the droves of mouth-breathing religious folk who are politically active, and policy ignorant who will vote for the farthest right-wing politician available.Honestly, it would be easier to reverse the earth's orbit than to change the Republican party. And sadly, the Democratic party is not far behind.I know you know this.
5/7/2012 3:34:46 PM
5/7/2012 5:13:19 PM
5/7/2012 5:29:37 PM
5/7/2012 5:43:43 PM
Both the GOP and DNC (overall) are not poster boys or champions of anything to be honest. I get sick of politics, but since it impacts my finances, spending, and way of life, I have to comment on it from time to time.
5/7/2012 5:59:53 PM
Surely you didn't write a paper on the vast, shadowy implications of Citizens United?Here's an exercise: think of the ways that a law prohibiting "political speech"/"broadcast electioneering" could be abused when the wrong people get in office. The enforcement of such a law is totally arbitrary. Ideally, it'd be used on commercials produced by corporations supporting their favorite candidate. In the future, it could just as easily be used to justify shutting down Youtube accounts.
5/7/2012 6:02:36 PM
What matters more? How it COULD be used for corruption or how the current system IS corrupted? You're using a strawman. I'm not debating hypotheticals, I'm debating current realities.
5/7/2012 6:10:59 PM
What matters more to me is how it will be abused. Good intentions, road to hell, etc.Banning political commercials, aside from being a violation of free speech, will not curb corporate influence enough to offset potential abuses. Not when Monsanto basically controls the ADA. Not when pharmaceutical giants control the FDA. Not when the private prison industry guides drug policy.You're correct that corporate influence on the political process is out of control, but prohibiting commercials is not going to change that. The primary battle is against corporate lobbying. I've concluded that it's impossible to beat corporate lobbies, so the next best thing is to strip the federal government of the power that corporate lobbyists seek to control.
5/7/2012 6:23:14 PM
power doesn't exist in a vacuum.you can try to dismantle the government, but you're just going to dismantle the only democratic structure that could potentially limit the concentration of power and influence.
5/7/2012 6:40:51 PM
I'm not interested in dismantling all government right now, just the federal government. The U.S. federal government has proven itself to be completely untrustworthy and corrupt to the core.I do support some federal candidates, but only the ones that I feel will deliberately take away power from the federal government. A more decentralized system would follow, not unlike the collapse of the USSR. Some states and regions would be complete shitholes. Other places would be awesome - populations would shift as a result. Latin American and South American countries could be rid of drug cartels and the people there wouldn't have to fear for their lives every day.
5/7/2012 6:49:25 PM
is there a reason why you don't view corporate power with the same critical eye as you do government? that's a serious question. you seem perfectly capable of speaking about decentralized power when it comes to government, but you always skirt the issue of outside actors (corporations) coming in to absorb the vacated power.Ron Paul does this, too, and it irritates the hell out of me. I'd be much more willing to listen to him if he proposed an alternative, but he never does.
5/7/2012 6:54:57 PM
related to my prior points randomly....This is a good series overall, but in this video is the role of the mandate of heaven in China.So basically, create a religious / moral supremacy argument for your side in a conflict and you can make history. Only problem is that it backfires when you hold orgies. Could anything sum up the Republican party better?
5/8/2012 12:36:27 AM
5/8/2012 1:06:44 PM
would still like a response
5/8/2012 2:46:39 PM
I typed something up at home and apparently didn't click "Post Reply!"I view corporations and government with a skeptical eye, but they have different natures. Corporations exist to make a profit. If they don't make a profit, they can't gather capital, and they can't get power.Government doesn't care about making a profit. The government only has to be perceived as legitimate to hold onto power. As long as that perception remains, the government can tax and has an unlimited source of revenue. Ideally, the government uses the money to pay for protections and services that benefit the population. Usually, people will go along with this. It's during this golden period that government amasses weaponry, usually with the stated purpose of "national defense", but with the actual purpose of state preservation. The development and manufacturing of these weapons are not profitable by any means (bullets and bombs destroy and get destroyed), but since the government doesn't care about profit, that isn't a problem. These weapons are used for large, national-scale heists. If, at any point, the perception of legitimacy fades, the weapons are turned on the citizens that paid for them, as we've seen here in the U.S. and countless times in human history.It's only through taxation that wars can be waged. The larger the taxable population is, the more weapons can be built and the more wars can be waged. This is the purpose of empires. They're an ever-expanding state focused on self-preservation.I focus on decentralization because I don't believe that government has to be bad. I don't want a society with no justice, no education, no bridges, etc. But, what I want even less is a government so massive that it can assemble a military capable of wrecking everything.[Edited on May 8, 2012 at 3:05 PM. Reason : ]
5/8/2012 3:04:39 PM
If we let corporations obtain as much profit as they wanted, they would buy armies too. History proves that. The difference is that a corporate military would have even less compassion than a government military.
5/8/2012 3:41:47 PM
5/8/2012 4:12:17 PM
it's not about governments being compassionate. but at least a government has to answer to voters (in theory, anyway). private interests are, by definition, antithetical to the concept of democracy.[Edited on May 8, 2012 at 4:19 PM. Reason : ]
5/8/2012 4:18:33 PM
Individual interests are private interests. There are those that will benefit from democracy and those that will suffer, just as there are the mugged and the muggers.
5/8/2012 4:26:59 PM
ummmm...okaaay? So what exactly are you advocating for? Every man for himself?
5/8/2012 9:40:19 PM
5/9/2012 1:30:45 AM
And why did they buy an army? To secure a way to make even more money. Do companies need to buy an army to make more money or can they just buy a few representatives?
5/9/2012 12:37:57 PM
5/9/2012 1:02:58 PM
okay. so you're cool with unchecked corporate power.
5/9/2012 1:43:31 PM
I don't think there is such a thing as unchecked power. As I said, corporations are limited by profit. Greed is countered by risk. Our problems come about when risk is removed from the market.
5/9/2012 2:59:53 PM
5/9/2012 3:36:07 PM
5/9/2012 4:13:56 PM
5/9/2012 4:15:43 PM
you might want to look into United Fruit Company, or hell...even those old west virginia coal companies who literally owned the entire town.Anyway, your answers, just like Ron Paul's, skirt critical examination of what your policies would entail, and always romanticize the idea of anarchy by assuming that the market is somehow an incorruptible construct.[Edited on May 9, 2012 at 4:54 PM. Reason : ]
5/9/2012 4:47:30 PM
Tech was a bad example, you right. But there ARE industries that do have to engage in fairly small risk to make money.I agree that monopolies are often aided by government policies. But I disagree that there is no such thing as a natural monopoly. What would have happened if Microsoft had been allowed to buy up all the start-ups in the 90s without the government stepping in? They could have done it too. If there were no federal government stronger than them, what's to stop them from going on and buying out every single one of their competitors before they get large enough to compete? Or employing an army of hackers and spies to steal their information even more cheaply and get it to market faster?I don't know how you can say monopolies wouldn't exist. What about the later 1800s in the United States? Almost every single large-scale industry was dominated by an industry tycoon. It was detrimental to consumers, workers, and everyone but the industry capitalists. This was a time before massive government intervention in the economy. They only got broken up when the federal government established the power to do so. Monopolies are most readily formed when there is government complacency.
5/9/2012 4:52:50 PM