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Racism isn't as prevalent in the U.S. as it was back then... provided we're only talking about African-Americans. Islamophobia and homophobia are far more common in America nowadays, imo.
(Personally I think we need a term for prejudice against black people. Racism is a pretty broad term.)
that now has forced the official to resign.
Since white people are the majority, they'll have the upper hand on the inevitable racism.
Also, this thread has devolved into a discussion of racism. Great.
1) I am NOT against /all/ change.
I fully realize that the world was not perfect back in 1776. In fact, conservatives have been some of the staunchest supporters of change in the past! It's just nowadays, with progressives trying to change toward the left, that I'm in opposition. Given the chance Republicans have as many ideas for reform as Democrats, it's just that with a full democratic majority we're too busy trying to stop leftist change to enact rightwing change. The name conservative does not come from conserving what has been in the past, it comes from conservatively sized government.
2) I am NOT a racist!
I've seen multiple times people say when I bring up a point, "Oh yes he wants to rewind the clock, to where blacks are slaves and he's rich lol!" This IS NOT true! Wilson, however, WAS a racist. If you want a good history of past race issues in the US:
1854: The Republican party is founded as a response to the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Its goal to prevent the spread of slavery, one of its mottoes, "Free Soil."
1860: Southern Democrats, so unwilling to compromise their slavery, split from Northern Democrats to form their own party and run a pro-slavery candidate.
Abraham Lincoln runs on a platform of preventing the spread of slavery and wins, the first Republican to be elected President. The south is so afraid that he'll abolish slavery they secede from the Union, forming their own government. While modeled off the US, it promises to protect slavery in any territories it may acquire.
1865: The North wins the Civil War. The same year, Republicans push and ratify the thirteenth amendment, making slavery illegal.
1870: Hiram Revels, the first Black Senator ever elected, is a Republican.
1913: Woodrow Wilson is elected. He segregates the navy and fires many Africans in the White House.
1965: The Civil Rights Act, passed after a 44 hour Filibuster by Democratic Senator Robert Byrd, gets 80% of Republican votes and 64% of Democrat votes.
2008: Republicans dislike Obama for his policies.
Also, that's an example of when conservatives have pushed change.
3) I don't get in bed with fat-cat wall streeters.
Everyone says that the bailout was under bush, and the economy tanked under bush, but um not really. That would be the equivalent of me saying DADT was under Clinton. The CONGRESS is what makes the laws, and the democrats have controlled Congress since 2007. The first bailout was under Democrats. The economy tanked under Democrats. And need I say that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were both signed into law under Democrats? Democrat bailouts have actually been going on since the midnineties. First were the mexican, bonds, then the Southeast Asian Bonds, and the Russian bonds too. In fact, Goldman Sachs donated just under one million dollars to Obama's campaign in 08.
Now that I have those three things out of the way, what I believe in:
-I believe that the constitution is not a "living" document.
The founders intended the constitution to be the constant rule of law and to shape all of Congress's laws. Otherwise, they wouldn't have added an amendment section, could we interpret it as we saw fit.
-I believe that too much government stifles the economy rather than helping it.
There's some like six minute video about the Rahn Curve. It details how the economy grows best when the government is just present enough to ensure basic liberties but not to intrude and regulate much.
-I believe that private enterprise works better at nearly ANY job than government.
Part 2, nuff said.
-I believe that the government is firmly limited to its duties in the constitution, nothing more, due to the ninth and tenth amendments.
If I forgot anything I will likely post it later.
Okay, so I do participate in my share of racist jokes. But my despise of Obama is not because I'm racist. And those are just for fun. Like the British situation.
Anyway, I've made more points than just about my not-racism.
Umm, I didn't see something really possible to respond to.
Also, this thread has devolved into a discussion of racism. Great.
Um, there is still racism against black people. It's what I've spent a lot of this topic arguing about. Could you please elaborate what you mean by that?
...And this is why you shouldn't follow any particular party like a herd of sheep. Every party has good points. Every party has flaws. Make your decisions based on research and reason, not whether someone is conservative or democrat.
Also, yes, racism is not as widespread as it used to be, but it can be very prevalent depending on where you live. There are places where racism (even reverse racism) is not only practiced but encouraged. We still have a long way to go as a society.
Did you see the one I mentioned written on July 19, a day before her resignation? The one taken down from Fox's website? Shirley Sherrod resigned a day after that article was written.
I live in a middle-class neighborhood, too. I live near a place that's notorious for its gang violence. I'm not quite sure what you're getting at here. I've never felt at risk living where I do. I don't live in a gated community.
I'd call our government corrupt. :P
In the early 20th century, discrimination against the Irish was a problem. The Irish were on the lowest rung of society, almost there with black people. They were considered no better than apes.
Nowadays, there is no discrimination against people of Irish descent, nor against newcoming Irish immigrants. There aren't any instances of it, there aren't people complaining about it, there just isn't anything. Meanwhile, racism remains a problem for black people.
If white people could change their attitude towards the Irish, then it shows that race is a construct. Well, race IS a social construct - there's no scientific evidence that points towards there being different races. What I'm saying is that racism and discrimination can change. It's not something that has to go on forever; it'll only go on forever if we let it. Blaming it on "human nature" is a very easy way out; however, racism is something that is taught. We learn to discriminate. We see how people talk about people not like us and pick up on that. It's no surprise that many black people that left the US in the 1800s for France found that the French were way more accepting of them; the French had no stereotypes of them, and that they had darker skin compared to Frenchmen was treated as a curiosity but they were not judged for it. If we can learn racism, however, we can also unlearn it. There is a solution. It's difficult and long and hard and it requires lots of soul-searching, but it's possible.
You constantly argue that we should change things back to/keep things the way they were in 1776, without giving any reason why that would be a good thing, other than the fact that the Declaration of Independence was written then. It's only reasonable that we would infer from that that you are opposed to change in general; you never give any reason other than "1776 was awesome".
Which is retarded, because your apparently infallible document of law, the Constitution, was written in 1787.
Conservatives have never been staunch supporters of change. Anyone self-identifying as conservative and then advocating change is a moron who does shame to both the conservative and progressive ideologies.
You need to realise that Republican =/= conservative and Democrat =/= liberal, no matter how inconvenient that is to your arguments.
If you are opposed to leftist change but in favour of right-wing change, then you are a right-wing progressive. Also, you have not explained why right-wing economics are more favourable than left-wing economics (and yes, the left and right are economic positions, the political spectrum is totalitarianism/anarchism).
Finally, conservatism does indeed come from conserving things in the past, it's roots are in the Latin conservare, "to preserve". If you think otherwise, you need to re-educate yourself. Conservatives are in favour of conservatively-sized government because they are conservative, they are not conservatives because they are in favour of conservatively-sized government.
You have simply provided a catalogue list of liberal Republicans doing good things and conservative Democrats doing bad things.
Also, when we say that you want to bring back in slavery, racial segregation, etc., it's not because we think your racists, we are simply following through on your "keep things the way they were when the Consitution was written" stance to its logical conclusion.
I don't see what relevance this has to the fact that you are financially well-off.
So you believe that the amendment section (which enables the changing of Constitutional articles) is a sign that the Founding Fathers didn't want the Consitution to ever change?
And don't accuse me of misconstruing what you're saying when you respond, because I am asking a valid question based on a reasonable inference from the opinion you have just presented. If I have misunderstood your position, it is because you have not adequately explained it.
Of course too much government stifles the economy. This is obvious to everyone. No one is disagreeing with you.
Armed Forces?
Law Enforcement?
Emergency Services?
Water Supplies?
While private enterprise may provide a higher-quality service, it also doesn't give that service to people who can't pay for it, therefore the weakest and most vulnerable in society lose out.
Also, if you cannot give evidence in favour of your position in your own words, you have already failed at debating.
You think the government is an organisation with absolute power over something (you haven't said what it is a monopoly of) that is also unconcerned and indifferent?
So if the US was faced with a threat that could only be reasonably fought by the government but the government was not enabled to fight it because it was not covered in the constitution, then the government should sit back and do nothing and let the threat destroy the US?
Again, reasonable inference, feel free to correct misunderstanding.
You brought up racism in your first post, if you didn't want us to discuss racism, you shouldn't have dedicated your second point entirely to racial matters.
I was just going by what Dark Shocktail said about it.
That is true, TES, but it's impossible to really go farther to the right of the constitution without being anarchist, so "conservative" is basically the right end of the spectrum, not "Right-wing progressive."
Again, as I said below, conservatives will support social change, and occasional government change
(Amendment 20 as one example,)
but we like the position at which the founders placed our government, so any large movement on the spectrum is away from where we find our ideal government.
It's like the people talking about "the good ol' days of RBY, BW just aren't Pokemon," but with government. It is perfectly possible to believe that things were better back then.
As to why right-wing economics are favorable over left-wing, I pretty much explain this below, but the gist of it is that the government has no competition therefore it doesn't have to constantly be on edge, enhancing and providing its customers a better service. Private competition is what guarantees quality.
Well, do you really think I want to take a baseball bat to my computer and live without lights? No. I just want government back to the size it was in 1787. Not the entire world.
It doesn't. It has relevance to the fact that people say conservatives are siding with wall street fat cats and not with average Joes.
No, that isn't what I meant. Let's see if I can say this better: The founding fathers intended for us to interpret the constitution strictly. Had they believed that the constitution would be "a voice of its time" and require a loose interpretation, almost to the point of neglect (~30 seconds in), there would have been no need for a way to make amendments. Does that make sense?
Yeah, but I think it starts stifling a lot faster than you do, apparently.
Actually, had you watched that video, what was happening is the government collects taxes and ships out their service (Water system and the EMT were two examples used) using the taxpayers' money to the highest bidder. Everyone still gets equal service, taxes go down, and quality actually goes up!
It is a monopoly, in whatever it does. No other organization has the scope of power that it does; it has no competition. If it screws up, it has no fear of losing business or a competitor taking its place (Excluding, of course, election or armed revolution, one of which is nearly impossible nowadays, the other which doesn't really change that much between each party anyway.) Furthermore, government jobs are basically 100% secure, so the workers themselves hardly have to fear being fired. A lack of negative effects for failure can lead to laxness and indifference.
I'm pretty sure any type of threat to the US could be found under a category:
"To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;"
"To raise and support Armies,"
"To provide and maintain a Navy;"
"To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;"
"To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;"
"To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;"
and "To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings."
Not to mention "The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States."
I was just going by what Dark Shocktail said about it.
Yeah well it's a well circulated misconception that the tea party is largely race based and I wanted to combat it.
I am seriously getting sick of seeing that song posted every freaking time racism is brought up.