So far you’ve claimed that some right-wing speakers have bodyguards when they give speeches on college campuses. How profound.
Your sarcasm is duly noted.
Facts are not usually described as profound. They are either true or false, but to the extent that they must be based in observation rather than insight means that profound is an adjective that ought not be normally applied to them.
Not profound, and not as melodramatic as SS guards either.
Just a trend that comes from the situation where the ideals of one’s political adversaries are deemed not worth reading.
Now your just defining the “leftist mode of thought” ex post facto to convince yourself that I fit some sort of stereotype.
I really try to make it not so much about you as about the ways that the left in general deal with the facts and opinions presented by those who are on the other end of the political spectrum.
I think that many of your tactics are examples of what I am talking about, yes, but I am trying not to make it personal. I know it doesn’t always work out that way, because we are all human after all, and if it is not sometimes personal, it is not really human either.
At any rate, I see you as engaging in a rather lowly school of argumentation as well: I call it the Marxist school (C.S. Lewis called it Bulverism, and used it to describe both Marxists and Freudians). Your first concern is not the argument itself, but trying to “explain” what motivates your opponent’s disagreement. If I say X, the Marxist says “you only believe that because you’re a bourgeois reactionary” thereby discrediting the opponent, both in his own mind and in the mind of the audience, if there is one, without addressing the point, because of course a bourgeois reactionary could not possibly be correct. They forget, of course, that that is an unproven assumption.
I think that this is something that you would need to provide a concrete example of as to exactly where I have been doing this. It is a very erudite and intellectual thing for you to say, but as a criticism, I am really unaware of how it applies to my basic argument here.
You would remind me of a perfectly typical college history professor I know if you weren’t so far right.
Well, first, I am not that far right. I realize that I am more conservative than liberal for sure, but I am older now too. My conservatism did not come naturally but what taught to me by at the College of Hard Knocks. My basic political message is all about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. These is really quite liberal.
Believing in limited government is not like believing in no government as the libertarians do, or believing that government is evil like the far right wing of the militia do. Being against abortion and understanding that marriage is between a man and a woman is about as far as my Catholic conservatism goes, and the vast preponderance of even liberals would have agreed with that even a generation ago.
The left defines themselves as being against this. Women’s “equality” requires that they do, or at least keep their values to themselves.
And as far as that goes, I have noted time after time here how men doing chores traditionally reserved for women in Northern Europe is a factor in them having a higher birth rate than the traditionalist Catholic and Orthodox south now has.
This not a far right message at all.
I stress the Catholic axiom that marital sex is the way to happiness, but I am never for making gay sex and extra marital sex illegal. Just the opposite in fact. PeopIe have the right to make their own choices to the maximum extent possible, even if they are the wrong ones.
I believe that a nation has an obligation to protect its borders, and I believe that rational immigration is a good thing.
In a hundred different ways, my own personal views are substantially different from those of many many people who are to the right of me.
These ideals really should not be considered to be far right ideals then, but unfortunately that is a trend in our society too that they now are considered just that.
And second, it is really unfortunate that the education system has become so much about leftist dogma that a college history professor with right wing ideas has become a rarity. The value of a history degree based on leftist indoctrination without any (name removed by moderator)ut from contrary points of view is lessened as a result.
This was not what a higher education was about even a generation ago.