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General Havoc
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#26

Post by General Havoc »

Derek Thunder wrote:The furious typing in this thread, if harnessed, would be sufficient to power most of the United States. At any rate, as I don't have the e-fortitude to tackle these posts, I will take on a few points.
The Housing bubble and its consequent credit crash had nothing whatsoever to do with Deregulation, nor, incidentally, is Deregulation the soul of the concept of 'Small Government'.
This is not the case. Part of the reason that the housing bubble took off was the removal of rules on what banks must do with mortgages. Before, banks would simply hold mortgages; after banking deregulation spearheaded by McCain adviser and 'classical conservative' Lindsey Graham, banks could repackage, chop up, and sell mortgages to investment firms for a profit as a securitized loan. A lack of transparency requirements made it so that these investment firms had no idea where the money was coming from - it could be coming from safe, fixed-rate mortgages, or it could be coming from sub-prime or alt-A mortgages. Because there was a huge incentive to get more mortgages to sell, banks offered more and more to people who would not normally be able to purchase a house and who often times do not have solid financial advisers or legal counsel. Combined with a self-perpetuating speculation market that tempted ordinary Americans into flipping houses for short-term profit, a collapse was imminent. Of course, when the collapse did come, those who had lit the fuse had mostly cashed out.
Hrm... that's an interesting assessment there, though not the way I've read it. As I said, I believe deregulation was certainly a factor in it, but I was under the impression that it was the core of the issue. Banks had (to my understanding) been securitizing mortgages long before the deregulation legislation in question was implemented, or at least that was my understanding. Most of what I've read attributed




His decision is not based upon his belief that the Private Sector can better manage health care. He thinks people should go to local government-funded ERs for fuck's sake! His positions are not ideologically based, they are based on corruption and cronyism and what will enrich his supporters at present.
But they are ideologically based - conservative think tanks such as the American Enterprise Institute, the Cato Institute, and academics such as the late William F. Buckley have been warning for decades against the perceived evils of a regulated health care market and the virtues of a free-market system.
That's true, conservative think tanks and organizations constantly oppose regulated health care markets. I however don't think that Bush cares one way or the other about this. Bush is not an ideologue. He has adopted the anti-socialized medicine routine because it will enrich his supporters and lobbyists, not because he has some kind of ideological attachment to it. That's my firm belief. Obviously it's just theory, as I can't read Bush's mind, and perhaps you're right, but it just doesn't fit with the rest of Bush's agenda unless he's trying to give a shout out to his lobby supporters.

At least that's how I see it. I can see how you'd see it differently though...
In response to the idea of restricted civil liberties as not being conservative, this went out the window during the Nixon administration and has never returned to mainstream conservative thought. Nixon was able to use the specter of communism, of the civil rights movement, and of internal dissent to rally the 'silent majority' towards voting for a strong authority figure capable of protecting America from both real and illusory enemies.
I really don't agree there either. Yes, Nixon did a lot of those things, but did Ford? Did Reagan? Did the first Bush? Did Eisenhower before them? Goldwater, who is a supra-conservative ass, I grant, was one of the people who was chosen to tell Nixon that he had zero support in the Senate prior to his resignation, from either side of the isle. Republicans presided over his fall, as did Democrats. It was not a single party trying to hunt the President down (as it was with Clinton).

... I don't know. Could be you're right, but I just don't see that shift in mainstream conservative politics until the Neocons userped the mantle and shifted the Republican agenda into something completely non-Conservative.
Ultimately the conservatism you're describing is something that may well exist, but it's not represented in any mainstream republican/conservative politicians in existence today, and it certainly wasn't on display last night at the Republican National Convention. What I saw was the worst of jingoistic worship at the altar of nationalism, utter contempt for the poor and their defenders, such as community organizers, and broad, largely untrue platitudes about the virtues of private business and deregulation. A discussion of theoretical conservatism would certainly be interesting, but what I am interested in dealing with is the conservative movement here and now.
Well you'll get no argument from me there. Like it or not, the Neo-cons are in charge of the Republican party, and have been for a long time. Jingoistic worship at the altar of nationalism, contempt for the poor, platitudes about conservative virtues... they're all on display. My point was that what you call "theoretical conservativism" however is not theoretical, at least I don't think it is. I don't believe most Republicans are Neo-cons. I believe most republicans have been hoodwinked by Neo-cons dressed up in Conservatives' clothing. There are many different flavors of Conservativism, but none of them are Neocon.

That's just how I see it, for the reasons explained above.
E: Not to introduce a distraction, but citing Pat Buchanan? In his most recent book, he suggested we could have avoided WW2 by giving Hitler Poland, and we should have not interfered.
I know Buchanan's a nitwit. Believe me, it physically pains me to cite him. But the fact remains that Buchanan is an example of the extremes of Conservativism, and Bush is not. Buchanan is reprehensible, but he is not the same thing as Bush. Bush is outside the spectrum of Conservativism altogether. Doesn't make Buchanan any less of a nitwit, but Nitram was arguing that Bush is what you get when you remove all the stops from Conservativism. I'm arguing that Buchanan is more like what you get in that case.


Now, guys, I'm sorry, but I physically cannot write any more today in this thread or my hands will fall off. Please do not take future silence from me as anything except exhaustion. I'll try to get back to any particular point anyone wants to make (assuming I haven't killed the thread altogether with my barrage of text) once I can do so without crippling myself.
Last edited by General Havoc on Thu Sep 04, 2008 3:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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#27

Post by SirNitram »

General Havoc wrote:
SirNitram wrote:Okay, since you're apparently not really aware of what you're talking about, I'm not bothering.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have here yet again the usual routine of ignoring everything that was said in favor of making shit up about it. Notice how he claims I do not know what I'm talking about, but does not provide any example about what I said...
You define the present movement as Neocons? Or how about where you say deregulation wasn't a cause? Or even the tautology I later cite? In short, I did. You just don't like that I did.
Seriously. Anyone who stands there are calls the present movement Neocons is wrong.
... still looking for the reasons why, Nit.
They are a mere subsect of National Security hawks, more accurately described as Imperialists than Conservatives or Democrats. It's why they got thrown out of the democratic party.
Neocons are those advocating Imperialism in Iraq and so forth, not the domestic policies. The Housing Bubble damn well was caused by deregulation, as several things done during it were flatly illegal not too long ago, like over the requirements to be a mortgage lender. Hell, Enron? More deregulation, by stating you don't need to report energy trading.
Since when were we talking about Enron? And by the way, the Housing Bubble was not caused by de-regulation. I'll concede for the sake of argument that it was a factor, but it was neither the primary factor nor the indispensable one. That's another debate however.
The bubble was caused by removing all oversight, regulations, as well as the silly cry of 'Ownership gives you more of a stake' by the government. You are free to start showing why it's something else.

But no! You grab onto the buzzword of the day and treat it like it's not a defined movement, originating in liberalism and mutating over the years and then latching onto the National Security platform of conservatives.
Hold on... so now you're claiming that Neoncons DID originate in Liberalism and mutated before latching onto the National Security segment of the Conservative platform? That's... Nitram you just proved my point! Surely that's not what you meant to say...
Only if your point is farcical. Neocons are only the Iraq/Afghanistan/Iran/Etc warmongers of the party. The ones shrieking about the Red Menace. They are not domestic policy. In short, for you to have your point proven by me, your point must be something other than what was written.
I can't debate someone who doesn't know what they're talking about.
You're the one who just changed arguments mid-stream! Now you're claiming that the Neo-cons AREN'T conservatives?
No, I never claimed neocons were conservative. They defy liberal/conservative lines because you can walk from Mussolini Corporatism to The Culture without hitting them. They exist as a pure national security/foreign policy entity, one labeled Empire.
The mere fact you pretend Fiscal Conservatism defines conservatism as not being reckless loonies with money is all I need to see this isn't a debate, it's your preaching. Define something as itself and you haven't won an argument, you've made a tautology.
Coming from someone who just tried to define Neocons as having no domestic platform whatsoever, AND who apparently now agrees that Neocons are simply parasitic opportunists who use part of the conservative platform, that's a case of the Black Hole calling the Kettle Black. You just, in two paragraphs, completely redefined everything that we were talking about so that you could be right. Great debating job, champ.
Here we go again! You claim neocons are something they've never been. This is why I mocked you as having no idea what you're on about.
Oh and by the way, I love that you accuse me of mis-defining Fiscal Conservativism, and then don't define it yourself.
Fiscal Conservatism is a phrase thrown around by conservatives. Fiscal responsibility.. Well, Tax And Spend. Make sure you have the income to pay for your outlay. Very simple principle. But conservatism made Tax and Spend an attack, so we get Spend and Spend.
Goldwater? Man who opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964? Openly calling for legislating morality in his Presidential run("…we, as a nation, are not far from the kind of moral decay that has brought on the fall of other nations and people…I say it is time to put conscience back in government. And by good example, put it back in all walks of American life.")? Hell, one quote sums him up: "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue."
Look back up at my post, seriously. Look at it. Tell me where it was that I defended Barry Goldwater as a moderate.

I'm waiting.

Back yet? Don't worry, take your time.

Still nothing? I'll explain why. I DIDN'T

Barry Goldwater is an Arch-conservative. Pat Buchanan is an Arch-conservative. These people hold positions that are reprehensible to me, but they are DEFINITELY NOT Neocons, nor are they Bushites. A point you have (yet again) conveniently forgotten that I made.
Of course they're not neocons. They're not Imperialists. You farcical insistance that neocons comprimise the majority isn't changing into fact anytime soon.

[quote
Fiscal responsibility.. Well, numbers and facts > Rhetoric.

Link Go to 7.1 Download and view. Or, use this version, divided into Presidencies.

Here

Ike did cut the debt(Getting out WW2 is a major factor there; that was massively deficit spending), but the only poor performer in the Dem's house for reducing was Carter, who quickly discovered that conservatives will listen to a movie star rather than a nuclear technician on energy issues.
I STRONGLY AND WILDLY encourage people to visit those links Nitram thoughtfully posted. They show the following: The three presidents during whose terms the debt was the lowest (as a percentage of GDP) were Ford, Nixon, and Carter, the former two conservatives. The four presidents who cut the deficit the most (or who had the economy grow fastest relative to the deficit) were Eisenhower, Nixon, LBJ, and Clinton, the former two conservatives. As I said, fiscal conservativism crosses party lines.[/quote]

Yes, please visit. You will notice the debt climbs under Ford and tilts lower for Carter.
Ram your strawman up your ass.
Nitram, you have a seriously unhealthy fixation with ramming things up my ass.
And you have an unhealthy one with declaring you'll quit then rushing back in to shriek the same misconceptions.
You're clearly not interested in having an adult conversation about this, so I'm gonna sum up. You are a rank hypocrite. You erect Scotsman fallacies and then accuse me of erecting them. You erect strawmen, and then accuse me of erecting them. You literally accuse me of saying the exact opposite of what everyone with eyes can see that I said, and then you have the temerity to get pissy with me when I call you out on it?
This only works if you define neoconservatives as more than what they are. Or do you not like that words have meanings that you don't get to reassign? Neoconservatism is a foreign policy attitude, nothing else. You just try and claim it's the whole spiel today.
Since I don't have a straw man, I can't ram one up my ass, and since every argument I have with you ends with you insisting that I do the impossible with something I don't possess, I'm going to save us all a lot of time. The next time you want to twist people's words around so as to make them sound like bad people, do it somewhere where the original version of what they said isn't sitting above your own.
Of course there was a strawman, though you snipped it for your own face-saving. You claimed conservatism was being painted as the origin of all evils, but that's bullshit. It's responsible, in extreme forms, for many varieties of suffering.. As is Imperialism, Autocracy, Libertarianism, and most other philosophies if you take them to the extremes.
Now I could get all upset about you doing these things, but given that you do this every time we have a debate, it really would not be fair for me to do that. I would be getting upset at you, when I really should get upset at myself. After all, when every time I debate you (seriously, go back and check), it degenerates into you refusing to read word one of what I say, and just making shit up while telling me to fuck myself, or some such, why do I insist on assuming that "this time, this time it will be different!" You scanned my post, picked out the name Goldwater, and ranted about how he was a bad person. Why should this surprise me? It's all you ever do.
Wah wah wah. You shriek stupidity like you do, showing you've no idea what you're talking about, and you expect me to take anything you say seriously? Please. Why should I read through a post declaring it's all the neocons when they're sole accomplishment was Iraq and warmongering, the abandonment of Soft Power?
So I'm sorry Nit, this is my fault. I am continually expecting more from you than you are prepared to give, and there's nobody to blame for that but me. I look forward to the next political thread in which I will make an argument, and you will gesticulate wildly at the names of various logical fallacies that you yourself are making and then tell me to ram things up my ass. I should not get upset at these things. They are a natural part of the cycle.

Until next time... :)
Yep. The next time you shriek into this thread to pull lies and expect me to sit through every one of them, instead of you just showing me this Golden Age Of Conservatism where it wasn't grounded in the bullshit of today with varying efficiency of bullshit overtop. You even cry in a later post than this about being unable to type, but you'll be back, because you cannot let yourself admit that you are WRONG. You are WRONG that the neocons rule everything now. You are WRONG about the effects of decades of deregulation. You are WRONG on many of these things, and the facts show it.

But hell, what do I care? The only differences between the American Democratic Party and the idealized Conservatism you espouse are..

1) Individual Choice vs. Social Equality, they do lean more for social equality.

2) Private Sector, they don't support it for areas it's proven, well, disasterous at(Healthcare, being the prime example today). Indeed, the largely Democratic state I live in recently privatized Worker's Comp because it was the logical, cost-effective choice, the same reason for the rallying around a new Healthcare plan.

3) Right to Bear Arms, while there are occasional farces(Assault Weapons Ban), is largely untouched, and Obama has explicitly said he doesn't think it's a policy to touch.

4) Low taxes low expenditure, they prefer the 'Make sure you're paying for everything that's needed' model. That being said, unless you're making a few hundred thousand, you will get lower taxes under Obama's plan.

In short, if one wishes to continue an idealized conservatism, it's easier to allow a few changes(Many, in my mind, common sense; if the private sector will be more expensive to the nation than public versions of the same, cost-benefit, not idealogy, should rule) and go Democrat.

Liberals are, well, reduced to the protestors trying to remake '68 in Denver. By claiming they'll levitate a bank. Guess how well that worked.
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#28

Post by Jason_Firewalker »

Albeit I am extremely Liberal, a member of the green party to be exact, I beleive in several key things to help our national defense and such, that are considered conservetive views. I just wanted to post in and say "GO HAVOC!"
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#29

Post by SirNitram »

Jason_Firewalker wrote:Albeit I am extremely Liberal, a member of the green party to be exact, I beleive in several key things to help our national defense and such, that are considered conservetive views. I just wanted to post in and say "GO HAVOC!"
National Defense needs a serious overhaul. It's become encrusted with nonsense.

1) Monopoly. There's pretty much only a handful of firms for heavy lifting. This means you get shit like precisely two competitors for the refueler contract. Competition is inhibited, which leads to crappier products.

2) No Bid Contracts. They are just plain bad fucking ideas.

3) Privatization. Not so much the Blackwater types(Though we could use with either vastly stronger oversight or other such regulatory measures), but privatizing the supply train and non 'trigger-puller' positions.

4) Money going to pie-in-the-sky projects, not troops, either as proven equipment, or greater numbers(Note: Obama has supported reversing this trend.).

5) Lack of update to GI Bill, rejection of pay increases in line with inflation. The updated GI Bill is now law, after far too long without. But still the minimum cost of living has been chewing up from beneath soldiers. They should not be worried about the paycheck in the field.

6) Tighter standards for those businesses operating around bases. The predatory lending that hit them was bad enough when it's just around civilians; but a battlefield is NOT a place to worry about a foreclosure!


Beyond this, the idea that 'Soft Power' is bad needs rejected(Carrot and stick, not just stick), and less 'Rar, we'll go it alone!' silliness.
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#30

Post by General Havoc »

Once more unto the breach...
SirNitram wrote:
General Havoc wrote: Ladies and gentlemen, we have here yet again the usual routine of ignoring everything that was said in favor of making shit up about it. Notice how he claims I do not know what I'm talking about, but does not provide any example about what I said...
You define the present movement as Neocons? Or how about where you say deregulation wasn't a cause? Or even the tautology I later cite? In short, I did. You just don't like that I did.
Nononono, you do not get away with that bullshit this time. You still haven't provided any evidence for any of your claims, nor even explained what your claims are. The focus of our conversation was how they are not conservatives. All of a sudden now they're not Neocons? I am not taking your fucking word for this one Nitram, if they're not Neocons, then let's hear about why. You do not get to define yourself as right and then accuse everyone who disagrees with you of ignorance without explaining word one of your claims. They're not neocons? Fine. Explain what they are. Until you do, you are merely pretending that you know better.

They are a mere subsect of National Security hawks, more accurately described as Imperialists than Conservatives or Democrats. It's why they got thrown out of the democratic party.
Okay... now we're getting somewhere.

They certainly are Imperialists, I'll agree with you there. I will also agree with you that they are moreso Imperialists than they are Conservatives or Democrats (or Liberals). I further agree that this is one of the major reasons they got thrown out of the Democratic party. In fact, I agree with the whole thing above, especially as it supports the point I've been making all along.

So far so good...
The bubble was caused by removing all oversight, regulations, as well as the silly cry of 'Ownership gives you more of a stake' by the government. You are free to start showing why it's something else.
Firstly Nitram, as someone who works in the financial services sector, specifically with mortgages, whoever told you that the Conservatives or anyone removed all oversight and regulations from the mortgage industry was telling you filthy, filthy lies. The regulation on mortgages and their lenders is broad, and remains so, and remained so during both the bubble and the crash that followed it.

What caused the bubble was a combination of a number of factors:

1: The regulations were reduced, as was the oversight, but not entirely, and not as comprehensively as you seem to think. Nevertheless they were reduced, and the result was that more abuses got through the system. That was a factor, but only one.

2: Greed. As someone pointed out earlier, the banks went hog-wild with securitizing these mortgages because they thought the prosperity would last forever. They offered teaser rates to homeowners who had no idea (or so they claim) of what their final rate was going to be. They accepted mortgages without any proof of income or credit. They constructed liability arrangements so complicated that they themselves were unable to untangle who exactly was liable for what whenever a mortgage went belly-up. And major financial institutions bought into it, and down they went when the bubble burst.

Some of the things they did were made easier by the lightening of the regulatory load, I will certainly grant. But deregulation did not cause the bubble or the burst.

And as to the cry of "ownership gives you more of a stake", it has been the federal government's policy since the 30s to encourage home ownership, primarily with tax policies. It's one of the primary agenda items of the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, and as far as I know, has been from the begining. I do not know if you can call that a Conservative policy, but it's a very old one, that has survived dozens of administrations. It's the foundation of much of the domestic policy in this country and has been for a very long time.
Hold on... so now you're claiming that Neoncons DID originate in Liberalism and mutated before latching onto the National Security segment of the Conservative platform? That's... Nitram you just proved my point! Surely that's not what you meant to say...
Only if your point is farcical. Neocons are only the Iraq/Afghanistan/Iran/Etc warmongers of the party. The ones shrieking about the Red Menace. They are not domestic policy. In short, for you to have your point proven by me, your point must be something other than what was written.
Nitram, I'm sorry, I just don't buy your definition of "Neocons". Neoconservatives are strictly-speaking, democrats who have moved away from the Liberalism of LBJ's time towards a more conservative view. There's a great deal of uniformity in their foreign policy, yes, and their foreign policy/warmongering view is very important, but they are influential in domestic matters as well.

Nevertheless, your point is essentially correct. I should not just use "Neocon" as a substitute for "Bush administration" when I speak of these things, as that is inaccurate, and I apologize for that inaccuracy. I do tend to conflate the two terms incorrectly. The point was whether the Bush Administration are following Conservative values or not, and I believe they are not, and that they are not Conservatives, though I should not simply call them Neocons either. That is inaccurate.
No, I never claimed neocons were conservative. They defy liberal/conservative lines because you can walk from Mussolini Corporatism to The Culture without hitting them. They exist as a pure national security/foreign policy entity, one labeled Empire.
I still don't agree with you completely. Neocons are not simply without a basis in domestic policies (and not necessarily a conservative one). I will grant however that they do not display the same uniformity of cause in the presence of domestic politics. As I said, it was my mistake in using the term as synonymous with Bush's administration in the first place. I shall refrain from doing so in the future.
Here we go again! You claim neocons are something they've never been. This is why I mocked you as having no idea what you're on about.
Point conceded. I did made this mistake. I still don't agree that Neocons have no bearing on domestic politics, but that's an argument for another day.
Fiscal Conservatism is a phrase thrown around by conservatives. Fiscal responsibility.. Well, Tax And Spend. Make sure you have the income to pay for your outlay. Very simple principle. But conservatism made Tax and Spend an attack, so we get Spend and Spend.
I agree with your definition, but not with your conclusion. Conservativism did not make Tax and Spend an attack, as your own data from a few posts back indicates. Fiscal responsibility or whatever you want to call it has been a hallmark of many presidents, conservative and liberal both. It remains a hallmark of many politicians today, conservative and liberal both. I consider it fundamentally a conservative policy, but that's open to debate.

What Conservatives did demonize, was the lack of control over spending, and the consequent spiraling taxation that it entails. They did this both to Republicans and Democrats. A local example: California Proposition 13, generated and passed by a conservative grassroots organization (headed by Paul Gann and Howard Jarvis) over the multifold objections of both republican and democratic lawmakers (not all, but a lot). For those who don't know, Prop 13 drastically limited property taxes within the state of California, and continues to do so up to this day.

I don't see any way to categorize Prop 13 as anything but a conservative proposition. Certainly the people who proposed it described it that way. Fiscal responsibility or whathaveyou is one of the hallmarks of Conservative politics, not that you could tell that from the current crop of idiots in charge.
Of course they're not neocons. They're not Imperialists. You farcical insistence that neocons comprimise the majority isn't changing into fact anytime soon
I was not claiming that Neocons constitute the majority of anything! I was claiming that they wield great influence in the present administration, which I believe extends WELL beyond the realms of foreign policy and into domestic policy. They're certainly not the only factor there, but they're one of the driving forces behind the Bush presidency, and one of the reasons I would not characterize Bush or his team as Conservative.
Yes, please visit. You will notice the debt climbs under Ford and tilts lower for Carter.
It climbs under Ford by a minute amount, and tilts lower for Carter by the same minute amount. That's an inflation-adjusted statistical rounding error compared to the massive falls it takes under both the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations (and let's be fair, the LBJ and Clinton ones too). And by the way, Eisenhower took over in 1952, seven years after WWII. It was Truman who got us out of that war. It fell under Ike's watch because Eisenhower was a strict fiscal conservative, not because we had just finished the second world war (though it might be due to the end of the Marshall Plan. I'm not sure about that one).
Nitram, you have a seriously unhealthy fixation with ramming things up my ass.
And you have an unhealthy one with declaring you'll quit then rushing back in to shriek the same misconceptions.
I don't recall declaring anything of the sort. In fact, let me check...

... yep, I didn't declare anything of the sort. I didn't even say anything that could remotely be construed as anything of the sort. This question could be asked at a lot of points, Nitram, but I'll ask it now:

What the fuck are you talking about?
This only works if you define neoconservatives as more than what they are. Or do you not like that words have meanings that you don't get to reassign? Neoconservatism is a foreign policy attitude, nothing else. You just try and claim it's the whole spiel today.
All right, I will!

Neoconservatism is not, was not yesterday, and will not be tomorrow purely a foreign policy attitude. It was not that when it was invented. It was not that as of the convention this evening. It has at no point been restricted solely to matters of foreign policy. Not all hawks are Neocons.

Much of the Neocon platform, their primary unifying thrust, has been aimed at foreign policy, certainly, but that is not the extent of their philosophy. I cite Leo Strauss, one of the godfathers of Neoconservativism, and his philosophy of the "Noble Lie". I cite the support of Intelligent Design by prominent neocons as part of this same effort. I cite the fact that Michael Harrington, the man who invented the modern use of the term "Neo-conservative" defined these people as 'supporters of a welfare state of sorts, but not in its contemporary form'. I cite [url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m ... 89596/pg_5]Irving Crystal, a neocon himself, who wrote:

"It follows that our natural impulse was melioristic. Even while being critical of the Great Society [...] the Public Interest was always interested in proposing alternate reforms, alternate legislation, that would achieve the desired aims more securely, and without the downside effects. This was something that did not much interest traditional conservatism, with its emphatic "anti-statist" focus. The difference also had something to do with the fact that traditional conservatives had many distinguished economists in their ranks, and economics is above all the science of limits, a great nay-saying enterprise."

Not one bit of the above addresses foreign policy matters.

Even to this very day (that article was written about a decade ago), the distinctions between Neocons and traditional conservatives are many and varied. On subjects such as globalization, immigration policy, and, yes, fiscal conservativism, neocons are at complete odds with traditional conservatives.

So in short, no, Nitram, Neocons are NOT purely a foreign policy group who have no influence, distinct policies, or interest in the domestic sphere. They're derived from Great Society Liberals originally, and even if the modern neocons have never been Democrats, they are informed by the policies and positions that the movement has undertaken. Obviously they're imperialistic, and very focused in terms of their foreign policy goals, but that's not all there is to them.
Of course there was a strawman, though you snipped it for your own face-saving. You claimed conservatism was being painted as the origin of all evils, but that's bullshit. It's responsible, in extreme forms, for many varieties of suffering.. As is Imperialism, Autocracy, Libertarianism, and most other philosophies if you take them to the extremes.
I snipped nothing whatsoever, Nitram, and I'll thank you not to make things up when you are referring to what I have and have not said.

I claimed, as I am claiming now, as I will continue to claim, that the administration of George W. Bush is not a conservative administration, a claim you ridiculed as fallacious, and that I am defending. I assumed that you were ridiculing it because you wished to cast Conservativism itself as consistent with Bush's flawed and failed policies, which is inaccurate. I should not have done that, because I don't know why you chose to ridicule it, nor why you thought it should be ridiculed, as you declined to tell me and I had to drag the explanation out of you. Nevertheless, my point remains as it was at the beginning:
This is not Conservativism.
That is what I am claiming.
Wah wah wah. You shriek stupidity like you do, showing you've no idea what you're talking about, and you expect me to take anything you say seriously? Please. Why should I read through a post declaring it's all the neocons when they're sole accomplishment was Iraq and warmongering, the abandonment of Soft Power?
...

...

Are you fucking kidding me?

Are you FUCKING kidding me?

Are you seriously sitting there and telling me that you did not read my post, and then walked into this thread and told me I was a liar? Are you actually fucking telling me that, Nitram? Are you telling me that I spent all day writing complex defenses of my positions, responding point by point to your assertions, and that the entire time we've been talking here, you have been arguing in bad faith?! That I'm being a crybaby for expecting you to read my posts?!

...

...

No.

No, I do not believe it. I do not physically believe that even you would do such a thing. I believe that I am mis-understanding you, somehow. Nobody, not even online, is that big of an ass. Nobody. I have to be making a mistake. I will give you the benefit of the doubt.

I know that I've accused you of not reading what I've written before, but this is slightly different. I am not responding to the rest of your post until you answer me this one question: Did you, or did you not, fully read my posts from before? Answer me that, and that alone. I do not want to hear about how I am a liar. I do not want to hear about how I am a crybaby. I do not want to hear any more of your sanctimonious crap that you flail about widely in place of evidence or substance. I want to know the answer.

Did you read what I wrote before?

Because I cannot believe, even with what you just said, that you would actually enter a thread, not read what someone said, and then accuse them of being a liar. I cannot believe you would string me out for an entire day by arguing in bad faith.

Because God Help Me, Nitram, if you didn't read it, as you appear to just have claimed... then I do not fucking know what to say to you.

But I assure you that I will think of many things.
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...

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#31

Post by SirNitram »

Sorry, Havoc. The instant you revealed you don't give a shit to the point you would declare something so stupid as to slap the Neoconservative description onto the whole modern movement, I stopped pretending there was a reason to argue in good faith. What the fuck was the point in doing so? Listening to you pretend each time I explicitly explain how the Neocons are not what you like to think they are, you just come back with.. What? Crystal? Right, we should ignore the rest of it all, just focus on that article, instead of what places the Neocons(Who were proudly announcing themselves a few years back) were getting into, and what they were doing?

No.

For the self-same reason I will not buy 'Private solutions are inherently better', will I buy that claptrap.

Maybe you should look at what they did, not what they wrote. Maybe, just maybe, admit actions speak a fuckton louder than words. Oh, they make a welfare state of a sort, but it's one of foreign policy; the welfare of huge defense corporations, and other countries.

Oh, once they were more domestic. Once they were also so blatantly derived from Marxism you'd laugh. But while they still seek the permenant democratic revolution, it's not their main gig. Wasn't when they ascended to power in the Republican party in Reagan's years.

Mind you, despite heavy secular backgrounds, they did start flogging the religious right's views in their diatribes in the late 1990s, when the Religious Right had become the major source of votes for the Republicans, though I've seen less and less of their 'welfare state' talk in publications past the 70s. I suspect the same political opportunism as their advocacy of ID.

The inheritors from the founding.. The Kristols and the like.. Are blatantly foreign policy based. I offer a simple quote.
Frank neoconservatives like Robert Kaplan and Niall Ferguson recognize that they are proposing imperialism as the alternative to liberal internationalism. Yet both Kaplan and Ferguson also understand that imperialism runs so counter to American's liberal tradition that it must... remain a foreign policy that dare not speak its name... While Ferguson, the Brit, laments that Americans cannot just openly shoulder the white man's burden, Kaplan the American, tells us that "only through stealth and anxious foresight" can the United States continue to pursue the "imperial reality [that] already dominates our foreign policy," but must be disavowed in light of "our anti-imperial traditions, and... the fact that imperialism is delegitimized in public discourse"... The Bush administration, justifying all of its actions by an appeal to "national security," has kept as many of those actions as it can secret and has scorned all limitations to executive power by other branches of government or international law.
But you want me to drill home again why I didn't bother to read everything you wrote? You were full of it. You tossed around Neocon as if it were the 70s or earlier. You reject basic realities like the fact that regulations exist to restrain greed, so deregulation's effects are always tied to greed. And you keep hanging onto the idea that this conservatism you claimed to exist really did.

The best you'll find is the Blue Dogs. Hope you don't mind AT&T listening to your calls, though, they support that crackerjack nonsense.

You can huff and puff and be offended again, if you'd like. You can say or think whatever you like. I'll continue trying to drive basic, single points home, because frankly, unless you really change in this, why should I? Because you're upset enough that you'll strawman me into saying conservatism is always racist, or responsible for all evils? Nah, strawmanning is just a sign of weakness.
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#32

Post by General Havoc »

A sign of weakness?

A sign of weakness?

You blatantly admit that you do not even glance at the things people say, make up RANK LIES about those things which you have not read, assume that people are saying what you want them to say so you can be right, and then you have the gall to accuse me of weakness for calling you on it?!

Who told you that you could act this way among civilized people?

Who told you that you could argue in bad faith for an entire fucking day, and that this was okay because it was in the service of you getting attention for yourself?

If you had read word one of the posts you have not read, you wou8ld know that every single word of what you just said was a lie. Every single word. The proof is sitting there in black and white, for all to see. Though I believe that you are wrong, I have paid you the compliment of examining each of your arguments in detail. I have argued against them when I disagreed, and conceded the point when I have not. What have you done? You have made up fantasies about what I have said so that you can make yourself right. There is a word for such actions:

"Strawman fallacy"

Hypocrite, thy name is Nitram.

You are making accusations about statements you have never read.

I mean, seriously, there is NOTHING to be added to that. You are making accusations about statements you have never read. I don't give a fuck if you think you're somehow justified in making accusations about statements you have never read (apparently because I had the gall to tell you that you are wrong). Is this your usual debating technique? Does it get you places? Does it actually work?

Hell, the answer to that might be yes.

I cannot believe that I allowed myself to be taken in for an entire day and a half of debate with someone who literally was not reading the words that were being directed their way. I won't even try to speculate on why you strung this out for so long. Here I thought that we were debating a point, when all you wanted to do was hear yourself talk.

But I've got a little bit of news for you, Nitram. Things are not as you say they are simply because you say it. You believe that Neocons are purely a foreign policy base, and you are wrong. You believe that deregulation was the sole cause of the housing bubble, and you are wrong. Screaming and flailing your hands in the air, and refusing to illustrate any points because we're all too inferior to acknowledge the binding law of your very word, does not make you any less wrong.

My arguments stand for themselves, and anyone who wishes is free to peruse them, as Nitram has not.

And Nitram, I will bear in mind in future debates that you are not arguing for the sake of convincing people of your point. You are arguing for some other reason I cannot hope to fathom, and that what you say actually has no bearing on what people have said to you. And moreover, I will take pains to remind others of that little fact, should this crop up in the future. No use confusing people not acquainted with this little matter.

In any event, since you don't care what I say, and won't even read this far (I could literally say anything I wanted here and it wouldn't matter. I could reverse my argument completely. I could start talking about Ethanol or trade deficits or the Georgian-Russian war! It's LIBERATING!), I will conclude by saying that I have made the points I came here to make, and I leave it to anyone else who wishes to read this far (lord knows why) to judge for themselves which of us is correct. I stand by the original statement I made, one that Nitram has refuted by stating, in essence that it is wrong because I am a cockface who refuses to admit that Nitram knows everything, and that my evidence isn't worth looking at because I am a cockface who refuses to admit that Nitram knows everything.

I leave it to the adults in this thread to make their own determinations.

And I leave it to the immature children to continue gesticulating wildly at various "logical fallacies" they don't realize they're more guilty of than anyone here.

Good day.
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...

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#33

Post by SirNitram »

See, this is what happens when you're honest with those who have an inflated sense of self. You make a mistake, you come clean, they froth at the goddamn mouth.

But the most hilarious part is where you're pretending you're leaving. Seriously now. How many times in this thread have you said variations of that theme, only to charge back in? Did you think, perhaps, such silliness would not impact your credibility?

Especially after you recite, verbatim, a pattern that screams to the goddamn rafters. 'Not a conservative'. Followed by the stock boilerplate the GOP attaches to every declaration of values. And as I skim your reply to prepare a rebuttal, there's the same excuses as ever.

There's why. Was it the right decision? No, the right decision would have been not to bother. Oh, you can blow steam out of your ass about how I'm not trying to convince you.. Guess what, everything directly above? Points to someone who will not allow themselves to be convinced.

Why do you think you're special?

Point blank, I reacted on predictable ways because it was fucking stock footage. Again, this was incorrect of me. But when I cooled off, I said why. You, of course, can continued to be hyperoffended at the idea I did not act impeccably, or that I didn't bullshit you when I came down.

I expect you to rush back with more condemnations.. But really, take your time.
Half-Damned, All Hero.

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#34

Post by General Havoc »

Well I'm sorry that I overreacted. I actually am. Despite what it may appear like, I do actually take the time to calm myself down before replying to these posts, which is why I usually wind up having to go back and respond to something that got posted in the interrum.

Look, I have no idea what other stock footage from would-be conservatives you encounter. I don't generally hang out online in political forums because it gets my blood running. I'm sorry if I was repeating the general lines of some argument you've heard a thousand times already. I interpreted your last post not as attempts at honesty but as "why would I ever listen to anything anyone ever says". That sort of thing drives me up the wall (as I would imagine you have guessed).

Anyway, I'm sorry I blew up, and that I made the errors you rightly pointed out me making. I don't know what kinds of arguments are being made by the stock conservatives on the various forums you frequent, but I'd imagine most of them are asinine. I do try, even if I fail sometimes, to never speak asininities (Yes, that's actually a word, I checked!).

Apology accepted and another one offered.
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#35

Post by SirNitram »

Look, I have no idea what other stock footage from would-be conservatives you encounter.
'Stock footage' is a combination of inputs which repeat with very little, if any, variation. Attuned to patterns, I react. The exact repetition in this case is, and it will be someone who I know supported the person/group in the past, like this..

'They're not conservative. Conservatism is <Standard Boilerplate>. They are <Recitation of variations with it>. They are not conservative. Conservatism is dead. It's all the <Insert Republican faction that's the fall guy for the latest fuckup>.'

If the individual admits to their previous support, they will make up reasons why it was a 'protest vote' or they WANTED the other guy in the primary. More often, they just flat out lie to my face.

Because while this repeats itself online times innumerable, this has happened to my face no less than twelve times. One can see how one stops being entirely rational about it by then. I do still doubt the boilerplate was ever real, as opposed to invented in the Reagan era(Same era these factions were welded together). Then again, the only constant in the history of Conservatism is that, ever since the French Revolution(When the modern philosophy is named), it's been centrally put around 'Tradition'.

As for apology, accepted and I'd prefer to move on. Whether we call 'em conservatives or not, they are farcical, dangerous looney tunes, and we both see that.

As for the attitudes here, the advantage to burning hot is that you don't smolder. I think I'm done, might have a few thoughts later, but nothing much.
Half-Damned, All Hero.

Tev: You're happy. You're Plotting. You're Evil.
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Tev: You're turning me on.

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#36

Post by General Havoc »

I still don't agree with you on that definition of Conservativism, but indeed we do both see that they are farcical, dangerous, loonies. I too would prefer to move on.

The irony of course being is that both of us are voting for Obama anyway (and that given you in WV and me in CA, neither of our votes will matter a damn bit).

Anyhow, I'm out of things to say as well, so let's wait and see what the next act is in this farce that the Republicans are calling a Presidential campaign.
Last edited by General Havoc on Fri Sep 05, 2008 4:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...

Havoc: "So basically if you side against him, he summons Cthulu."
Hotfoot: "Yes, which is reasonable."
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