Participatory Spirituality for the 21st Century
Continuing this thread from Gaia IPS (Google docs link here), here’s what a new Harris Poll revealed about Republicans:
67 percent believe that Obama is a socialist.
57 percent believe that Obama is a Muslim.
45 percent agree with the Birthers in their belief that Obama was "not born in the United States and so is not eligible to be president."
38 percent say that Obama is "doing many of the things that Hitler did."
24 percent say that Obama "may be the Antichrist."
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If anything the Democrats should learn something from Republicans about lying well, not badly.
So there should be no honesty and transparency in politics? Isn't this one reason Obama was elected, with the hope that this sort of thing would change? Should not the political "line" of development evolve toward such qualities? And if not, why not? Why should politics be the only line that stays in the gutter?
theurj said:
If anything the Democrats should learn something from Republicans about lying well, not badly.
So there should be no honesty and transparency in politics? Isn't this one reason Obama was elected, with the hope that this sort of thing would change? Should not the political "line" of development evolve toward such qualities? And if not, why not? Why should politics be the only line that stays in the gutter?
If you’re going to do something, do it well. That’s all I’m saying, instead of doing it anyway and then pretending like you didn’t want to. I’m all for movements toward transparency and real discourse in politics, but if that kind of talk is used to hide other motivations or intentions then it’s simply another form of lying, even more insidious because it’s also a form of self-lying.
Again because the left has idealized its position(like you are when you contrast transparency with the gutter), it is often unconscious of its power/aggressive motivation, which get glossed over in a naive rhetoric and before you know it you get very intelligent people like Sartre supporting violent dictatorships in the name of freedom or communism. The left in the 20th century, especially between 1930-1980 has a very scary tendency to side with violent revolutions which use liberal “ideology” to hide power. A handful of the people on Xibabla’s nice list did just this.
Further I don’t think politics is best viewed as a line of development, but more as a cultural development along with a systems fit. Those two aspects have a lot of inertia in them, and require a very complex approach to enact change, something Obama is learning the hard way.
I can’t think of as many conservatives, though a few on your list I don’t consider great thinkers (Marcuse, Diderot) but that’s just a personal opinion. Then again I’m no expert of the conservative tradition. Here a list including thinkers who are complex (neither left nor right) but both traditions have claimed as their own. Another reason why this simple two category view is woefully inadequate.
Edward Burke, Adam Smith, Henry Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Winston Churchill, Ludwig von Mises & Friedrich von Hayek, Hannah Arendt, José Ortega y Gasset, and in some ways: John Sturat Mill, Alexis de Tocqueville, and Charles Taylor.
I find it hilarious that I’m defending the conservative tradition, but you all are so one-sided, it’s like someone poking at you for a response.
xibalba,
I have read Diderot and enjoyed him; just don’t think he’s a great thinker. Also I never said Sartre wasn’t a great thinker or his work valuable. And no, it wasn’t simply his problem; it was very fashionable during that time for liberals to support such violence. You seem to think I don’t appreciate the thinkers you keep mentioning, don’t know why since I never said any such thing.
Xibalba: The John stuart Mills, etc.. are too much victorian england to be taken seriously in our contemporary world.
Are you serious? Too Victorian England? Thats what you got?
If you have anything more to say then name dropping and random asides, along with a negative attitude, I’ll be happy to respond, otherwise don’t really have much to add to what I said before.
Best
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