What makes a liberal liberal and a conservative conservative?
I'm not entirely sure what makes a person one or the other. You can be conservative and hate Bush. You can be liberal and in favor of the war on Iraq. You could be either one and be pro-life or pro-choice. Has anyone ever written anything on what makes you definitively conservative or liberal? Because both espouse change, just change in different directions.
Arnold had his speech saying "you might be a Republican if..." with many points I agreed with--and many I didn't. Plenty of times I've been called a liberal, and then astounded the people who gave me this label. So before I leap into all these great discussions, I'd like some feedback. You decide--am I a liberal or a conservative?
I am:
--registered independent
--in favor of our right to bear arms
--pro-choice
--pro separation of church and state as a means to protect both institutions
--a deeply spiritual person who values my freedom of religion
--a believer in stronger local and state governments with a less powerful federal government. The feds should handle military, minting coins/bills, foreign policy, and other matters that can't be handled by the states, as their first and strongest priority.
--a believer in the ideal of self sufficiency: people should do more for themselves and each other rather than asking the government or corporations to do it for them
--against the "No Child Left Behind" policy
--in favor of stronger third parties to give competition to the Dem/Repub parties
--a strong believer in personal privacy: no one has the right to videotape you or monitor your purchases or search your household without a warrant, etc
--pro marriage, for everyone who wants it, period. And if the government can't settle on that, perhaps the government should not be involved. It could be left up to churches, etc. Or perhaps decided by the states. But it's not my right (or yours) to tell someone who they can or can't wed. But then, a flat tax rate would fix all this trouble (see below).
--in favor of a flat tax rate (percentage) to eliminate loopholes for all who exploit them, and to eliminate debate on who should get breaks (married couples, corporations, whatever)
--in favor of a campaign finance reform policy that involves flat tax rates for corporations, and thus no direct financial incentives for them to support a candidate
--against the move to give official legal status to the immigrants who are here illegally (we then devalue the efforts made by the people who came here legally and worked hard for their citizenship while honoring our laws.)
I've never been able to figure out if I'd be considered liberal or conservative, so please, give me your comments! --LL