According to done on the revisionist left, it must be progressive.So with these amusing definitions of “conservative” and “progressive”, is trying to outlaw abortion a “conservative” or “progressive” position?
According to done on the revisionist left, it must be progressive.So with these amusing definitions of “conservative” and “progressive”, is trying to outlaw abortion a “conservative” or “progressive” position?
Your insistence on idiosyncratic definitions of conservative/progressive aside, you at least are not out here trying to defend confederate symbols.Simple. I don’t want to see any relics of the Democrat Party left standing.
Not their flag. Not statues to their leaders. Not their images on a dime or a twenty.
If we are going to hold Americans accountable for slavery 155 years later, it is the political party that was responsible for it and the Confederacy.
If reparations should be paid, the Democrat Party should pay them. Republicans has nothing to do with it except defeat it. Then Republicans defeated Jim Crow.
The Confederate flag is a symbol of the Democrat Party. They should own it.
Push it? No. That’s not my goal. My goal is to push back against the revisionist history.Your insistence on idiosyncratic definitions of conservative/progressive aside, you at least are not out here trying to defend confederate symbols.
But if we are going to push on the “Dems did slavery/Jim Crowe” lets also be willing to admit that the South did slavery/Jim Crowe.
You have to be clear what you mean by nationalism.Nationalism is the way.
I can’t open it. State Reagan’s record on civil rights; not his pious platitudes. Remember how (when president!) he called the single most important and effective civil rights law, the Voting Right Act, “insulting” to southerns? I’m sorry for their hurt feelings!I do. Here’s an example of his greater record on civil rights.
Think of how many Americans are alive today who suffered racial discrimination! And, were those who were responsible for immoral and often illegal segregation ever held accountable?As far as I’m concerned, there are few Americans alive today responsible for segregation in the south.
His “pious platitudes” are far more reliable than some of the virtue signaling I’ve witnessed here.State Reagan’s record on civil rights; not his pious platitudes.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act was passed to end this practices. Again, as has been the case throughout most of our history, the illegal actions are typically (not always) from Democrats.Think of how many Americans are alive today who suffered racial discrimination! And, were those who were responsible for immoral and often illegal segregation ever held accountable?
Well, I posted what he said and did. Its hard to get around that.His “pious platitudes” are far more reliable than some of the virtue signaling I’ve witnessed here.
Nevermind. I’m done.Again, as has been the case throughout most of our history, the illegal actions are typically (not always) from Democrats.
Then you agree the application of the word conservative to slave holders and segregationists is equally revisionist, plain and simple?The word “progressive” in the context of 1850 does NOT apply to slave holders. This is historical revisionism plain and simple.
Good. I didn’t start that. I’ve heard it applied for my entire s adult life against conservatives.The need to project the current American right vs left dichotomy into the past as some sort of eternal struggle is absurd.
No. There were classical liberals. Their belief was as stated in the Declaration. If anyone today is willing to accept their view that individual rights are antecedent to government, that government doesn’t create rights or provide for them, I’m with them regardless of what they call themselves.By any rational use of the words, within the context of that time, the founding fathers were radical liberals
With this caveat: If it doesn’t protect inherent individual rights, it isn’t doing what’s best for its people.It means doing whatever is best for your nation’s people. It will differ according to the character and culture of the nation implementing it.
Complete and utter nonsense. Whoever is introducing a new state of affairs is the progressive. Whoever is fighting to maintain the traditional status quo is the conservative. Both can be good or evil from a Catholic lens (or even some other moral paradigm) depending on whether the old or new state of affairs is more compatible with the values of that catholic/other paradigm. American founding fathers were radical progressives and the abolitionists 100 years later were radical progressives. Period.I’ve seen people argue that the Founding Fathers were conservatives and the British progressives. Absolute nonsense.
Perhaps, but I tend to classify anyone willing to go to war for what they view as progress radical. And I don’t thing radical is a dirty word. Sometimes radical is precisely what’s required, like, for example, turning people’s tables over and driving them out of a temple with a whip. Pretty radical stuff.As Gentz showed (THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS COMPARED), the Americans were moderate progressives. The French, a few years later, were radical.