C
Crossbones
Guest
Oh, I think the comparison is s fair. If someone posts a contrary view on either site, they are insulted. For Pete’s sakes, all I did was say here were a few things I think Obama did right and I get abused with a lot of posters following that with the big thumbs up smileys. I don’t care, but the comparison is fair and people like ringil and mulligan2 see through it. There are posters like you that are reasonable and you can have a fruitful discussion with, but probably the majority aren’t.I have some comments on your analysis of Catholic voters here on CAF as well as that of the Bush presidency:
I would not compare the utter contempt toward Obama on the part of CAF posters here to the liberals on secular forums. We hold Obama’s policies in utter contempt which we view to be almost completely contrary to Catholic teaching. We also do not trust him on religious freedom due in part to the nature of Obamacare, HHS mandate, etc. Our contempt for Obama is based on this, among other things. I think it is natural for Catholics to be very upset by Obama’s policies - including his abortion policy. What is saddening to me is why some Catholics here actually support Obama (let alone are not upset at his policies).
Regarding compassionate conservatism, I think that was more of a campaign slogan than anything else. But if you want to look at Bush’s record, note that he was a big spending - ushering in new entitlements. I would tend to believe that such spending was done in the name of “compassionate conservatism.” So much for fiscal responsibility. I am sympathetic with your views on foreign policy, and would tend to agree that we have been perhaps too willing to put troops on the ground with no real timeline for withdrawal, nor a definition of what victory is. Thus, we get involved in a country like Afghanistan in 2001 and 13 years later we are still there. 13 years. That is what bothers me - not necessarily the involvement itself, but the length of the involvement. Its kind of like the corollary to the liberal big spending entitlements: once they are created, they never end. One thing that I think conservatives forget is that an activist foreign policy and a huge armed forces requires a huge, monolithic, activist federal government. Ironically it is the wars fought in our country’s history that have done so much to increase the size of government: wars that conservatives have always supported (for the most part).
Ishii
Maybe President GW Bush’s compassionate conservatism was a campaign slogan, but did it have to be? Many of my Latino friends felt quite betrayed by President Bush - that he could have ushered in reasonable immigration reform but didn’t. The fact that Republican candidates have faired so poorly with this important voting bloc in the last two presidential elections seems to point to this. Probably a majority of these voters agree with Republicans on abortion, but they aren’t voting for Republicans because of other issues. And I agree, President GW Bush was not fiscally responsible.- another strike against the Republicans.
I’m glad we agree on aspects of foreign policy. I hope that the Republicans can find the leadership needed to articulate and follow a more reasonable foreign policy when they come back to power. I wish somebody would ask Vice President Cheney and Senator McCain to not appear on the Sunday news programs and let a new generation of Republicans create a new face and separation from some of the failed ideas of the past.