RangerDave wrote:
Very little of the political, economic, and social news I read is from the demagogic left, and the little that is I balance with a sprinkling of demagogic nonsense from the right. The bias is actually that my sources are overly aligned with the establishment, instinctively skeptical of big changes in any direction, disdainful of sweeping passions, etc. In short, they're temperamentally conservative.
Paul Krugman and Tyler Cowen are part of the demagogic left. Indeed, Krugman is/was a member of Ezra Klein's Journo-list. Indeed, I believe that covers the majority of your regular sources since returning the Glade. Why would I assume you read beyond those sources when your arguments and positions mirror theirs?
RangerDave wrote:
If that's really what you believe, Khross, it just shows how little you understand me and the "standard liberal position". You've substituted a ridiculous caricature for reality.
Actually, I think this is where you're mistaken. I read the New York Times (biased left), DailyKOS (biased hard left), Marginal Revolution (biased left and economically suspect on macro issues), the Huffington Post (used as an aggregation too and biased left in commentary), listen to NPR News and Commentary Shows (all biased left, hence recent defunding), and quite a few other sources. I actually avoid Limbaugh, Beck, Hannity, Savage, and Boortz to the best of my ability. I do on occasion listen to Jerry Doyle. I don't think my understanding of the contemporary American liberal is a caricature anymore than Al Franken and similar individuals have made it so. More to the point, since these arguments about environment, inherent advantages, and disproportionate opportunity emerge regarding wealth on a regular basis; enter into the union/labour discussion regularly; inform pedagogical demagoguery; etc., I find it entirely reasonable to challenge that argument when you ostensibly turn to that line of reasoning
RangerDave wrote:
*shrug* I guess I'll take your word for it. Assuming that's true, it strikes me as a perfect example of technical precision being an impediment rather than an aid to understanding. If I made the same statement to 100 people, I'm quite certain 98 of them would understand my meaning, and the other two would apparently be an English professor and a guy who has a near-religious disdain for scuba gear.
Here's the thing, though - if I actually made that statement about scuba gear, common sense would enable you to realize that I wasn't actually arguing that lungs are irrelevant, but given your substitution of caricature for reality when it comes to liberals, you seem incapable of such common sense when you encounter a liberal argument.
I am quite capable of common sense when I encounter a liberal argument. I am also quite capable of actually looking at the policies and actions that liberals in the United States take. I think many posters here tend to forget that I believe the only difference between the Republicans and Democrats is the lies they tell to get elected. I've stated numerous times in the past (and several recently) that we live in a one party system. I believe that oligarchy is left of center. But, those statements are not anything new.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.