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by spacemanmatt 4234 days ago
That's not quite accurate. Republicans are all about their personal liberty, at the cost of yours and mine. It's not that surprising that some Republicans favor cutting the NSA's water, it's just bitterly ironic.
1 comments

Don't confuse Republicans with conservatives: the latter, which generally are for personal liberty for all, are just a subset of the former.

Spend some time in conservative circles and you'll learn that there's not a lot of love for the GOP leadership. Conservatives (both fiscal and social flavors; they too are not just one and the same) vote Republican for the same reason many on the Left vote Democrat: not that they're thrilled with the candidates, but rather they consider them the lesser of two evils.

My point? That just as its unfair and ignorant to paint everyone on the Left as a socialist, you can't simply paint everyone on the right with the same broad brush.

Outside of the US it's reasonable to 'paint' the political Left as socialists, mostly because they actually are. Other countries have actual functioning Leftist parties, America has far-Right and extraordinarily far-Right. (Although, I'll grant you that it might not seem that way from inside the US political 'bubble'.)
This is common rhetoric from America's own left but it isn't entirely accurate, and is largely offset by the fact that American use of the term Liberalism differs vastly with the rest of the world and history. Actual socialist parties have waned to a barely marginal existence in most European countries, and often have at most a "tea party" like relationship to more center-left social-democratic parties. America's Democratic Party is closer to a European Social Democrat party than a centrist European Liberal Democrat party, as America's use of the word Liberal is far to the left of European use of the term. Many European countries have sizable centrist 'classical liberal' parties that would actually be considered 'to the right' of American liberals, oddly enough.

So no, America is not really a right and far right country, it's more a polity of extreme Conservative and progressive ideologies lorded over by two centrist parties with a heavily authoritarian commonality between them. What the U.S. entirely lacks is an anti-authoritarian centrist Liberalism akin to that in Europe.

To illustrate, if we were to align US parties to those parties in the UK, you'd likely get the following: the conservative Republicans (US) align to the conservative Tories (US), the far right Tea Party aligns to the far right UKIP (UK), the progressive Democrats (US) align to the social democratic Labor party (UK), and then the UK's centrist Liberal Democrats do not align to any recognizable political organization in the US. The UK Lib Dems at best might loosely align to a combination of US civil libertarians and classical liberals, both of which belong more or less to the politically homeless. Some might say those fall under the Democrat tent, and yet the most vocal proponent of civil liberties in the US government right now is conservative Rand Paul, so go figure.

To come full circle, a US equivalent of the UK LibDems, were it to exist, would likely be the most vocal opposition to the NSA.

Appropriate username btw :)

Labour aren't really social democratic any more - they've basically isolated themselves from the Labour Movement and are fully committed to US-style Corporatist capitalism. In that regard, I agree, they're roughly equivalent to the US Democratic party and doesn't really represent a leftist movement.

The Lib Dems are ineffective, where's the US comparison to the SNP, the Greens, the SSP, actual parties of the left?

Right you are, and I'm pretty sure in any European (or other developed) country wherever you find a social democratic party you'll also find a contingent of disenchanted social democrats complaining about how their social democratic party isn't social democratic enough. It could be argued that social democracy naturally lends itself towards corporatism by its very nature. I'm not sure why you say 'US-style Corporatist capitalism' though.. the UK and the rest of Europe were practicing it long before America. Heck, Thatcher predates Reagan too, if that's the angle you had in mind.

I think it's too soon to judge whether the Lib Dems are ineffective.. they're still a young party and are growing faster than either the Tories or Labor (correct me if I'm wrong there). The current system does not favor their existence, so electoral reform is their main priority. The same should be true for all third party movements in the US, as the current system is mathematically predisposed towards two party outcomes. It's not that just hard left parties are missing from the American party system, but rather any partisan organization outside of the two major parties.

To be a social conservative is to necessarily want a return to the world in which women and minorities knew their place.
[Citation Needed]

To be sure, a thorough examination of social conservative thought will be fascinating reading.