DMFParadox
Posts: 1405
Joined: 9/11/2007 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: BoiJen So I'm listening to certain Republican "goals"and some I can really jive with. Balance the budget, limit government power, maintain rights under the Constitution....all of this I can really go for. What I don't get is how Republicans (because Democrats the I can tolerate listening to don't go spouting this stuff) can say they hope to limit government influence and control by deregulating the business sector but at the same turn scream about limiting individuals' rights by being invasive about people's personal business (who they marry, how they fuck, parental planning, etc). I mean, if governmental involvement is required by a societal situation, would impacting major influencing bodies like businesses take less money and less invasive efforts from the government than trying to control what every individual does in their own lives? Is this like a big picture problem? I just don't understand the reasoning behind it. I don't want to debate who's right or wrong, I want insight into the logical process that brings Republicans, as a whole, to this conclusion. boi I can certainly agree. Someone who truly believes in free market values should apply the same logic to sexuality and abortion, one would think. But the thing about Republicans is that they are trying to represent 'traditional' values. Which is where the cognitive dissonance appears. On the one hand, DEREGULATE! On the other, Be PATRIOTS! Let us in your homes to find the terrorists and sexual deviants! Meh.
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bloody hell, get me some aspirin and a whiskey straight "The role of gender in society is the most complicated thing I’ve ever spent a lot of time learning about, and I’ve spent a lot of time learning about quantum mechanics." - Randall Munroe
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