Warren Dew wrote:I have to point out that pretty much the entire Republican establishment has withdrawn support from Akin. Meanwhile, when Biden talks about putting people in chains, the Democrats close ranks and support him.

Warren Dew wrote:I have to point out that pretty much the entire Republican establishment has withdrawn support from Akin. Meanwhile, when Biden talks about putting people in chains, the Democrats close ranks and support him.
Akin's positions are not at all unusual for his party (i.e. have a look at the VP candidate); he just forgot to evade the question on a talk show. Be he's not at all unusual - perhaps you haven't noticed thta your party has gone batshit insane in recent years.Warren Dew wrote:I have to point out that pretty much the entire Republican establishment has withdrawn support from Akin. Meanwhile, when Biden talks about putting people in chains, the Democrats close ranks and support him.
And the GOP voters bought it.Coito ergo sum wrote:He is quite "unusual." http://washingtonexaminer.com/democrats ... DN-yN2PXOV
Which is why the Democrats spent $1.5 million to help him win the GOP primary...
Ha. Funny.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Ah, we've found a way to shut you up.Coito ergo sum wrote:You're right. I shouldn't respond in kind.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Well, this is just namecalling bullshit.
Yes, the GOP voters, as we know, are stupid. That's why they are able to puzzle out how to register to vote and obtain identification, whereas Democrats are "disproportionately disenfranchised" by the onerous requirement of having to fill out a form.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:And the GOP voters bought it.Coito ergo sum wrote:He is quite "unusual." http://washingtonexaminer.com/democrats ... DN-yN2PXOV
Which is why the Democrats spent $1.5 million to help him win the GOP primary...
Don't be so hard on yourself.Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, the GOP voters, as we know, are stupid.
Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, the GOP voters, as we know, are stupid.
it's o.k., it's been in the playbook of Democrat asshats for 60 years.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Don't be so hard on yourself.Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, the GOP voters, as we know, are stupid.
Typically, yes. He'd be characterized as a libertarian. Listen to what Gawdzilla has to say about those "libertardians" and "librarians." They're selfish, mean and want nothing more than to destroy the poor.Ian wrote:You think we'd belittle Mill because he was a champion of liberty?
It depends -- neither PARTY is freedom loving. There are segments and factions of each party which are freedom loving.Ian wrote: Ah... you must be going with the "But, but... Republicans are the FREEDOM-loving party!" logic.
Its called looking down upon worshipWe've had plenty of threads on here where Liberals castigate libertardians and "classical liberals" and the concept of liberty is not something most of the Liberals around here even take seriously. Even the idea of fundamental rights that the government can't invade (a concept Mill fully supported) is poo-pooed routinely by Liberals, especially our Left-leaning Brits, who often espouse the position that the government should be allowed to do what it wants as long as the majority votes for it and the US is "backwards" and silly for having a system where there are certain areas that the majority can't do things even by majority vote. Surely, you've seen those threads -- they're quite common.
Yes, but the term "Liberal" and "Conservative" in JS Mill's day didn't mean what they mean today. Today, the people that agree with Mill are "classical liberals" (of the Jeffersonian kind) and libertarians -- not Liberals. The Liberals today call classical liberals like Mill "conservative.Ian wrote:CES- I don't really agree with all of your last post, but I won't go point for point on it. To me, the quote was more important than who said it.
In other words, you wanted to take the quote out of context, and with a meaning that does not apply today, since today's "Liberals" do not agree with the liberalism Mill was espousing or referring to. Today's liberals would have been considered conservative at the time Mill wrote those words.Ian wrote:
The only thing I'll say about the context you're trying to bring is that he lived a couple centuries ago. I wasn't trying to have a discussion on Mr. Mill or the economics of his day.
There are plenty of conservatives in Massachusetts. They aren't the majority, but they are there.Ian wrote:
However, the quote is very much true of today's conservatives. Grab a dozen people at random from Kentucky and a dozen random people from Massachusets and tell me which group is more intelligent. Then let's see discuss how they vote.
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