Mercnbeth
Posts: 11766
Status: offline
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quote:
In discussing the "intolerance" of "liberalism" all you can come up with is motorcycle helmets, smoking issues, and Senator Joe Lieberman from Ct? Cloudboy, Maybe that identifies the difference in us. I don't believe there are any small or unimportant freedoms. Any attack or infringement on personal rights should be seen as a bad thing, even if I personal wear a helmet and don't smoke. Identifying all Republicans as Nazis is a bad even if I don't have a RNC membership card. Joe Lieberman is a very good current example of how one issue or intolerance of a person, in this case George Bush, is a great way to make the Democratic party irrelevant in a national election. It points out locally, or in a small sampling such as a primary, the single issue campaign can work. A 20% margin for Lieberman's independent campaign shows the result of the impact of the "silent majority". Of course public school illiteracy is more important than MC helmets. It the relationship that I see in the small issues relating to it that you don't. Liberal intolerance for allowing people to fail in the public schools is a major factor in the fact that in some schools all the students fail. Take LA for example. The fact that 30% of the graduating students achieved acceptable standards in English is seen as an improvement and success! I can't wait to have to hire some of them - NOT. What you also missed is that I see this as a BAD thing. The WMD issue regarding Iraq is not important in 2006. If anything Saddam funded and supported those who initiated the 9/11 attack. I don't believe in assigning stupidity to people who have risen to a position of power. If he didn't hid or export his WMD prior to our very un-secret invasion he would have just be stupid. If you wanted to attack anything regarding my stance it should have been applying the prejudicial attitude I apparently have regarding Muslims as an example of intolerance. In answering my own attack I could have used the old "some of my best friends are Muslims" reply, but lying isn't my forte. Instead I'd say it's the representation that the international Muslim leadership portrays that I hate. I blame them for their radical interpretation of the Koran's words which influence a very frustrated and angry membership. If their was a counterpart in the Muslim world that was as adamant for peace as the Iranian president and religious leaders are adamant for destruction, the balanced view would quickly change my position. But now, when every person who took part in 9/11 was Muslim, when the bombing in Spain was proudly acknowledged by Muslims, when the London bombing was bragged about as being the start of a European front to the Muslim ambition of it become the worlds only religion; I feel my prejudice is based upon in representation of how the Muslim community is comfortable being portrayed. It wasn't a rant, it was a question with some factual issues pointed out to make the point. There was no counterpoint claiming I was wrong only pointing out how the other side was just as bad. Well, that's great! It looks like our votes will be determined once again by NOT voting for someone else. That is disappointing. I really want to vote FOR someone. For the record, I don't see one party, Republican or Democrat, any closer to reality.
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