On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 7:54 AM, Wojtek S <wsoko52 at gmail.com> wrote:
> [WS:] As I see it, this whole left/right discourse is basically a mental
> football match - the teams compete not because they stand for different
> values but because they are simply opposing teams, and the rules of the
> game
> require that opposing teams compete against each other.
>
> Both historical "left" and "right" have their shares of authoritarianism,
> xenophobia, populism, liberalism, internationalism, and democratic
> governance - so attribute some of these traits to one side but not the
> other
> is not grounded in facts. What makes a difference is that is a specific
> historical circumstance, a course taken by one side is almost automatically
> opposed by the other. For example, gun ownership is neither "left" or
> "right" , but under current political circumstance is a bone of contention
> -
> one side defends it because the other side opposes it and vice versa.
>
> Ditto for environmentalism or government regulation. In itself, neither
> is
> "left" or "right", but the US left espouses both because they are
> signifiers
> of anti-capitalism, while the "right" opposes them because they are "left"
> issues.
>
> The entire modern political "discourse" has been reduced to a shouting
> match
> between opposing camps. The main goal of this match is to shut down the
> opponents, not to decide merits or demerits of their "positions." In fact,
> there are no "positions" in a conventional meaning of the term i.e.
> logically coherent systems based on a set of fundamental principles.
> Anything goes as long as it scores points for "our" team. Thus, the same
> health care system that was a brain child of Heritage Foundation and the
> Republican governor of Massachusetts became "socialism" when proposed by a
> Democrat president. This shift defies conventional logic, but is perfectly
> consistent with the logic of a football game - the very same maneuver can
> be
> either good or bad, depending is "our" team is scoring or losing points.
>
> For that reason, I am rapidly losing interest in political discourse, just
> as I have zero interest in spectator sports.
>
> Wojtek
>
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 8:42 PM, brad <babscritique at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I am having a little trouble grasping exactly what you mean by the left
> > being defined as 'fight on the side of the oppressed'. Who exactly is
> > deciding who is 'the oppressed'? Sure all of us here might agree on
> this.
> > But the left deciding who's oppressed which you claim determines if one
> is
> > on the left is pretty circular. There are plenty of free market wackos
> who
> > would argue that they are fighting for the oppressed. What about
> stiglitz
> > and sachs, don't they claim to be fighting for the oppressed. Are they
> on
> > the left? Seems a bit subjective or open ended.
> >
> > Brad
> > ___________________________________
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> >
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>
-- ********************************************************* Alan P. Rudy Dept. Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work Central Michigan University 124 Anspach Hall Mt Pleasant, MI 48858 517-881-6319