I am well-acquainted with the "Yes, in general, but that's not me" riposte.
As familiar as I am with the empty sleeve of "You're a liberal because I say you are." It's the last gasp of the sort of person I was talking about but didn't at the time believe described you.
I can tell you right now. Objective. Now, if you would like to indulge yourself in another liberal ploy of "subjective vs objective", by all means slash away!
I haven't used a ploy, liberal (because you say so) or other.
You didn't suggest that. You merely gave some ground in order to disarm and negate the posit.
No I gave you my thoughts on the subject. Your response wasn't reasonable or reasoned and you defend it here by insinuating I was less than honest. I never am. I don't have to fool anyone because the sort of person who wouldn't respect my part and difference isn't the sort of person whose opinion would matter to me.
Why it isnt' that way for anyone I'll never get.
Considering socialized medicine is fine with you, I have some trouble believing that.
Actually, what I've said repeatedly on the subject is that I believe we should abolish regulations that, to my mind, inhibit competition that could or should produce affordable healthcare. I'm fine with a plan that is government sponsored to cover those who remain outside of that if there's no other option that will get the job done. And if it was universal healthcare by socialized medicine or not, but millions go without under the not I'd take the thing I don't like to achieve a moral good that overwhelms my objection.
I have no idea. We shall, in the coming battle, find out. (Noted that you said "your right" rather than "our right.")
I'm not speaking for you in any context at this point. Reading more than that into it would be odd, considering I'm a gun owner myself and have never, not once in my over 22k posts here supported any legislation to curtail gun rights. In fact, I've spoken against it. I don't believe the solution to evil is to disarm those who aren't.
Not remotely. I've been clear about that for some time. Demonstrate how it's deceptive. I can teach a parrot to call out the word.
Liberals believe the best way to solve the healthcare problem is to turn it over to the government.
Which I don't. Thanks for making my point for me.
That's what they voted for and that's what they got. Government will neither allow competition nor remove regulations until sufficient political pressure is applied.
So, given I didn't vote for the President and I haven't called for government to take over medicine, there's no deception. You were wrong. Again.
Liberals do not oppose abortion. They equivocate about it.
I think we have to distinguish between different liberal camps. The larger one is pro choice and believes the matter rests between the woman and her conscience (or want thereof). Another opposes that particular while agreeing with a majority of social positions taken by the larger group. I know any number of people in my area who are against abortion but by and large support all sorts of other social programs. There's even a pro life movement within the Democratic party.
:chuckle: I know one when I see one.
I believe you believe that, but is it accurate? In my job I've run across many a witness who was sure of one thing or another only to be wrong about what they thought when the facts were pulled together. Unless what you see can be buttressed by an argument allowing others to see it, then all you're really saying is "I know what I know" whether you do or not.
Nicely done political ploy! :up: But I am not posturing. However, I appreciate the alert notice from someone who is.
Ah,he ever popular "I know you are but what am I?" gambit.
It's not a ploy. Let me know if you come up with an actual answer.
Let me see. The "tests" are objective because they agree with your vision of yourself.
No, but when every test you take (assuming you take more than one or two) comes back with the same result there's more reason to credit than oppose a perception in line with that and no real reason to believe other.
That would mean to me that you and the "test" perpetrator share the same biases. 'Bout sums it up, wouldn't you say?
Not without a rational justification for the assumption, no. And it shouldn't for you.
I didn't say "wrong", I said "biased." (Yet another example of liberal argument style.)
No, you didn't say either. Is that a typical right wing extremist tactic?
My response was to your, "I understand you've drunk the liberal kool-aid"
That is, as I see it your understanding doesn't stand up to the facts any more than it just did here.
Living in a garage doesn't make you a car
And making up/declaring someone else's understanding/source material doesn't make for an argument, Frank.
Some taxes are legitimate and necessary. They serve to fund necessary government services which are set forth in the Constitution. Anything else is theft.
What taxes do you consider outside of Constitutional authority?
:rotfl: Patronizing again?
It was an argument. You can call it anything else that suits you. If you can't respond on the point, respond on the person. That's an old, thin tactic, Frank.
I like the last line: "Liberalism is an elitist doctrine, not an egalitarian one."
Thought you might.
Demonstrate where I have. Quote me. Argue. Try that instead of the self satisfied, "I know what I know" nonsense.
:rotfl: That's the multi-cultural version of :darwinsm:.
I'm sure that means something to you. :idunno: Just mirroring your point.