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Thom - complete agreement; the labels and attitudes change to fit the times, which is one of the things I was trying to convey.
Joel - I think it was the Daily Show where, in sophomorically mocking a W policy, they showed a photo from the 60's in which black protesters in the South were being attacked with a blast from a firehose. Funny thing is that the guys wielding the firehose were, in all likelihood, Democrats. JP |
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Anything "anti-moralility" seems to be a quick sell with the simple-minded lib's. Now were is that thread on the legal-prostitutes in Germany? There is a fine example; 'you want to keep your benifits? . ..spread your legs and open . ..' |
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As bitter a pill as it is for you to swallow, Lincoln was a liberal. He was a Republican, but he was a liberal. Uh-oh, liberal and republican in the same sentence! Quick, get the NeoCon defillibrator kit... CLEAR... (*zap*) Damn, nothing... |
Puh'lease
Lincoln wanted to keep the union together! . . .as it had been. . . . "wanted things to stay the way they were." A liberal would say 'yeah, lets do something different . .. let's make our own rules . .. split-off from the free north. . . we're soo smart . . this slavery thing may be new to us, but is kinda cool . .. lets keep it. |
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I had no idea this whole thing is about health benefits!!! Now I'm really against gay marriage! - Skip |
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Ending slavery was a Free Soil Party, then Republican party movement, but not a 'conservative' one. Likewise for the early suffrage movement. Interestingly the term 'conservative' was first used in a political sense by the French :eek: |
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And if you think that most people take marriage as a Sacrament, you are really out to lunch. If they did, we would not have so many divorces. And if we try to return to the idea of marriage as a Sacrament, is that something only Christians can do, as the word Sacrament is commonly defined as purely a Christian rite? I do think that if death benefits, hospital visitation rights, medical benefits were not tied to the term "marriage", we would be better off. As it is, two Catholic Sisters, nuns, living together for years could not legally visit each other in hospital as they are not "immediate family". Sent from a remote site sitting next to Island911 with JP's scepter in hand. |
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And anyway, what brings all this "history," JP? Do you have a guilt problem about how you guys are truly look more fascist each day, but hope to mitigate it by leading us along some pathetic decades' old trip down memory lane about what once made up a neocon. Who the hell cares? What counts is what makes up a neocon NOW. BTW, friend: I ain't liberal. How's that rock your economically-founded conservative party nostalgia? Oh, and "scared." Interesting word. How do I sound scared? Scared of whom? If I were you, I'd be scared my party's falling apart after the latest Schiavo/DeLay fiasco. How many neocons want DeLay's head for that first, and his ethics afterward? Reverse psychology tells me you're scared. You know what, if your party was worth a damn these days, it'd stick to whatever you're peddling about conservatism being founded on economic principles. That way we'd move our "fear" of you people being in our bedrooms, textbooks and overall private lives, to the hope you can enlighten us to a stronger dollar. Anyway, go ahead and spread the word of what used to be known as a neocon. Live the fantasy that it makes you people look less invasive and revolting than you already are. |
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The text books have been under assault by the left for a long time now. If anything, "we" are trying to keep "you" from revising them or change the revision that's recently taken place. If anything, the Left is feared for being in "our" text books. How else are "we" trying to control your private life? I simply don't buy what your telling me about "our" motives. - Skip |
Oh, and anyone want to defend partial birth abortion? The lefties love that little barbaric procedure, right???:confused:
Or, is it just another way the conservatives are trying to "control" your body? - Skip |
Skip - thank you for your typical right of nowhere addage. Oh, anyone here want to defend "contrived and cliched" responses?
Or is it just another way to say, "I've got nothing to say." Here's an idea. I'll give you the right to take away partial birth abortions. In return, let's tax your house of worship. |
Huh? That's a funny response. Considering, I was responding to your "contrived and clichéd" statements about the rights objectives! And, no need to get personal.
Besides, wouldn't be more appropriate to give me partial birth and then I give you something like "morning after", for cases of rape in incest? - Skip |
No deal, Skip. Partial birth for tax dollars. If you want to mix church and state, you have to pay the state just like anyone else. No free rides.
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PLEASE, PLEASE tell me exactly what being against pulling a baby by the feet from the mothers womb and then stabbing the baby in the back of the neck to kill it has to do with the church, religion or tax $???? - Skip edit: If someone stabbed their dog in the neck to kill it they would go to prison. |
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fint
A person in critical care near death does not get anyone but immediate family. I know, I have been asked. Maybe it's different where you are. Nice play on words, sisters or Sisters. Yes, they do let sisters in. |
dd the fact that you've let our media spin the Schiavo resolutions into a Republican-only effort alone disqualifies you on the issue of who is doing what, and more importantly, why.
Ditto DeLay. The MSM is just seething for a head on a stake, and this follows the time-honored pattern of him first having "ethical issues" to face, followed by increasing howling from the usual suspects. Ignore, if you must, the fact that these events have been matters of public record for months. But the Republicans have the "attack machine". Right. Please start another thread about the Schiavo and DeLay "fiascos" setting forth in detail the events you believe are damning to conservatives. I'll address them there. But please be very specific about your allegations. I don't care whether you're conservative, liberal or whatever label you need or avoid. You're mistaken and/or misinformed on a number of fronts, which you only further display by saying that neocons are "most closely identified" with the RR. Really? By whom? The same parties telling you that the Schiavo issue was Republican? The same parties telling you that Republicans distributed a "talking points" memo to Republican Senators? The same parties that lead you to believe that I have or should have "guilt". You're not good at psychology, so leave the reverse psychology alone, friend. The title of this thread is about what a neocon is, and Joel initiated it by referencing its origins. Discussion of that information is a red herring? If you think learning the history of where it began to inform what it's become is some sort of distraction, you just keep living in the absolute present, and believe what they tell you tomorrow. B/c neocons will be more evil tomorrow, even more insiduous and you can be even more righteous. And a neocon will continue to mean whatever it needs to mean in order to demonize whoever needs to be non-specifically smeared while preventing factual disputation. Your choice of language bespeaks fear, yes. steve - can you not keep two ideas in parallel in your head simultaneously? That marriage, for example, can be a Sacrament and a civil function, and the fact that you need a license from a civil authority does nothing to dilute the Sacrament itself? It is creeping secularism writ large to conclude that b/c governmental authority requires a license, the Sacrament is somehow demeaned or less sacred. The fact that there is a lot of divorce doesn't demean the Sacrament, it demeans those who cannot keep it. Again, the times change and many people "modernize" their views in light of the contemporary ethical laxity, but the Sacrament does not change. This is at the crux of the issue -- mores change (generally for the looser) but the Sacraments are immutable. If you aspire to traditional religious ideas, why must you change to accommodate the fads? I am using the term Sacrosanct in the sense of the sacred Sacraments of the Church, but I think it can be carefully expanded to analogous rites in other religions. JP |
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Now that I re-read, I may not have been clear... My point was, how is PBAbortion strictly a "religious" or separation of church & state issue. Do non-religious people find this practice acceptable? - Skip |
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