I've been on CFC since 2007. I've long been a member of the off-topic section but I took a long hiatus.
This site is moderated, as opposed to some other sites. Here, if you stray too far from the topic or troll the board, something will happen. Thus, I'm conversing here.
I still don't understand why you would invest so much energy into a giant rant against conservatism on a leftist forum. Is this just something you couldn't keep bottled up any longer? That happens to everyone occasionally, but this thread seems more like it should have been hashed out in therapy.
The fact that human beings get hungry or require medical assistance does not make us politically the same.
No, but it provides communities of human beings with enough solidarity that they form themselves into nationalities and ethnic groups.
Some human beings believe it is perfectly fine, in fact, superior, that the poor should die off,
Not human beings affiliated with modern American politics.
and that controls by the government would be a worse outcome for both them and the nation at large.
And you were accusing conservatives of being tribal? I'm not a particularly big fan of deregulation, but I understand that common ground can be made with someone that is.
If you're asking why discrimination for a basic service that is required for people's survival, based on wealth,
'Discrimination' calls to mind a different social evil than avarice.
employment status,
But it isn't really about employment. There are many poor people who work two jobs, and many rich people who don't have to work. Yes, it will more often than not be the opposite, but all I'm saying is that discrimination shouldn't be the focus here.
or legal immigration status is discrimination,
That is actually discrimination, but not a (necessarily) bad kind. Unless you think that citizenship should be abolished entirely, you, in fact, are pro-discrimination. This is what the social contract refers to: an agreement between state and citizen.
When you have the state prevent the woman from making her own choices about what happens inside her own body, that means you are rejecting the latter.
No, it means that we're holding the former to be more important. Two rights can contradict each other, y'know. I have a right to my pancakes, but if a man comes to me dying of hunger, his right to live is going to outweigh my right to control my property.
Imagine that, your personal experience with the world isn't the most knowledgeable one. Why do I know more about your political movement than you do?
So your argument is that conservatives don't use the slippery slope argument to connect voluntary euthanasia to healthcare? Sarah Palin doesn't ring a bell? She's not an outlier either. The SND link I provided in the OP made that argument explicitly.
I am not affiliated in any way with a conservative movement or party; certainly not the GOP.
"Euthanasia & Physician-assisted suicide
Conservative
Neither euthanasia nor physician-assisted suicide should be legalized. It is immoral and unethical to deliberately end the life of a terminally ill person (euthanasia), or enable another person to end their own life (assisted suicide). The goal should be compassionate care and easing the suffering of terminally ill people. Legalizing euthanasia could lead to doctor-assisted suicides of non-critical patients. If euthanasia were legalized, insurance companies could pressure doctors to withhold life-saving treatment for dying patients. Many religions prohibit suicide and euthanasia. These practices devalue human life."
But saying that doctors may pressure terminal patients to be euthanized isn't something inconceivable. Some doctors will, inevitably, make moral judgments of that sort. A pretty far cry from "state-sanctioned murder."
No, but they instead argue it doesn't exist, so they don't have to make such an argument. Google "Fox News global warming" and read just about any link at random, that'll get you started. I could mine 100 links for you, it's tough to know which one to pick. I doubt it would get read or get a reaction from you if I bothered.
I'm already aware that denying man-made global warming is a conservative talking point. I'm asking how YOU KNOW that they don't really believe it. Why can't they be deluding themselves about it because they have investments in petroleum or just worship the free market?
Pointing out climate change denial, the kind of denial which is almost a direct parallel to the cigarettes cause cancer denial, that's an example of a lack of empathy?
No, declaring that climate change denialists are really self-centered liars who could not care less about what happens to future generations is.
I mean, it's a useful rhetorical trick, on stupid people. Not gonna work here.
I dunno, you've based your entire rant off of some variation of it.
https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/publications/FY 15 DHS Entry and Exit Overstay Report.pdf
Canadians are the number one source of Visa overstays. In other words, more people illegally overstay their visa coming from Canada than Mexico, or any other country. In fact, more than double the amount of Canadian overstays compared to Mexican overstays.
Source: Department of Homeland Security report, United States government, page 21 of 28. The charts on pages 19 and 20 will help you compare. The chart on page 21 shows how much more visa overstay happens from Canada and Mexico than the others, and Canada is more than double Mexico's rate. Almost 100,000 people from Canada per year overstay their legal Visas and remain in the country. Third column from the right, "total overstays."
Yes, immigration from Mexico isn't as large these days. But the fact remains that most illegal immigrants living in the US are Mexicans and other Hispanics. Those immigrants are also extremely concentrated in the Southwest, so those states have a heavier burden than a simple nationwide comparison would suggest.
(You've entirely ignored my points about Canadians being culturally identical to Americans, or that they come from arguably a richer and freer society.)
Meanwhile, Mexican immigrants commit fewer crimes than the average American citizen.
Thought experiment:
"Lawbreakers are dumber than the general population. We know this because we have tested criminals."
Do you spot the mistake?
Sure I can. I just would impose some conditions on their staying. Mainly, getting on the grid with a government ID, complying with minimum wage laws, and ensuring that they pay their fair share of taxes, which many of them already do. And they need to submit to a background check. Once that happens, they can stay.
On the grounds that immigration in general is good, or that descendants of the colonizing Englishmen don't have a right to sovereignty like others do? Because what you said implies the latter.
That's called a pathway to citizenship and almost all liberals and any reasonable conservative would agree with it. Those who totally oppose all pathways to legal citizenship are folks on the far right like el Trumpo.
I don't recall him saying this.
But since the argument was made during the entire same sex marriage debate that law and tradition supported the conservative cause, now I get to say, it doesn't anymore.
Neither the law, nor the popular opinion, supports it. And even if both did, it would still be wrong. Now it's correct. Stop trying to break it.
Looking over your original argument, you don't actually invoke morality at all. The closest you come to an argument is your stating that the courts support it. Than you just start talking about how the anti-gay marriage people are trying to make America a theocracy, and comparing the absence of gay rights to slavery. You know, dialogue-y kind of things.
If you can't summarize, I'm going to assume you didn't read it either. I summarize the content of my links. If you can't be bothered to make the argument yourself, I mean, why bother posting here?
I posted a link because it didn't seem necessary to explain them, but I suppose you're the only one who gets to throw links around here.
The first one explains that we see the direct effects of something, but we don't see what it prevents from happening. This creates a bias in which we entirely neglect what we don't see, and draw up causal relationships between the things we do see. Seems like a fair criticism of your pointing out how innocent people are getting killed with US weapons, how many wars we've been in, how many radical jihadists groups we've failed to stamp out, etc.
The second one is an illustration of that point: the Wiki page of the 'Long Peace.' America's direct intervention ended WWII on the Western front, and its involvement in Europe ever since has prevented a recurring conflict. Asia is pretty much the same: China and Japan are kept from each other's throats by the overwhelming influence of the United States with both countries. I think it's fair to say that ordinary Americans can't ignore a Franco-German crisis, or a Pacific territorial conflict. Look at the frenzy Brexit stirred up.
Our defenses are not the problem. I have no problem with police work in the United States or background checks on the border or air marshals on planes.
No, I was referring to the actions of the US military and intelligence which you are criticizing.
Our attempt to squash terrorism by invading states has not squashed terrorism. Those trillions of dollars and those thousands of soldier's lives would not have been lost, and there is simply no way that Al-Qaeda could have caused the number of casualties we've inflicted upon ourselves by going to war, nor the level of economic damage.
So have Trump supporters and neocons become the same thing in your head? I think Iraq was a disaster as well, but I don't think that "squashing terrorism" was what the Bush administration had in mind.
(I also don't think that they did it for oil or because the Illuminati ordered it. Just a really deluded foreign policy move, which Bush used counter-terrorism to justify.)
9/11 was the best they could hope for.
I agree, but it's much easier to state that with a decade and a half of hindsight.
Guys in jeeps in Afghanistan can't hope to do more than that, and I fully and totally support the defenses we implemented in the United States that still respected the constitution and didn't involve torture. All of those were practical, cost-effective, and 1,000 times cheaper
It may not be an attack by a sovereign state, but it's not hard to imagine the consequences of doing nothing.
I am perfectly okay with you noting if a source is awful, because (as has been demonstrated by my penchant to cite government sources wherever possible, and I have generally avoided using liberal blogs or opinion pieces) I only want to use good sources.
If you want me to blacklist Globalresearch, I will. It was the top google search result for what I looked for, and it was backed up with plenty of other sources down the list.

So I'll go down the list.
http://www.snopes.com/toddlers-killed-americans-terrorists/
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-m...hecking-comparison-gun-deaths-and-terrorism-/
Snopes and politifact.
Fact checking websites side with my position. And even Globalresearch, if it is a crappy source with other weird positions, got this one correct.
So you can piss and whine about the source all day long. Doesn't bother me.
I'll find a different source, if it is indeed a bad source. But the source being bad didn't change the facts. The bad source reported the same correct facts as a more reliable source. The bad source was a good citation in this instance, because it was STILL TRUE.
You want to challenge this? The onus is on you to find better sources.
You want to rebuttal? You don't get the easy way out of saying that since I posted one bad source (with correct information, might I add) that the many dozens of other links and sources I have are invalid.
I didn't mean to give the impression that I was disputing your source (it is, in fact, completely irrelevant to the argument I made, which you'd likely know if you read it in the first place). Even Holocaust deniers or libertarians can state true facts. I'm simply questioning the integrity of someone who would link to a website without conducting a basic inquiry into it.
You're just hiding like a coward at that point. Is that who you are?
Gotta say, it's not unbalanced at all that your posts always include some kind of rant or condescension against the people you dedicated a small novel to 'establishing a dialogue with.'
I responded in chronological order and I do other things in my real life. Also, when you have to find actual data for things, it takes longer.
If I take a day, or two days, or three days or a week to respond to you, you'll just have to sit patiently like the rest of the class. Educating you for free takes time.
Case in point.
Really, you don't have to respond to people by saying that they are stupid and don't understand basic logic/economics, or are egotistical, or religious nutbags. I, personally, would find it pretty satisfying to tell progressives what stupid idiots they are, but that's not likely to win arguments or friends.
Coupla things.
First, I'd tend to use a broader definition of "intellectual". Not just professors and philosophers, but anyone who's seriously involved in the exchange of ideas: trade union organisers, journalists, clergy, anyone who plays a role in formulating and circulating ideas. Something like Gramsci's "organic intellectual", rather than a discrete intelligentsia. Overalls are as fitting a uniform for the intellectual as a black turtle-neck.
I would say that if you don't support Brexit, and that everyone else in your life with whom you engage with intellectually also don't support it, than you do not deserve to be labeled as "organic." How do you be part of a society where you regard half of the voters as irrational and swayed by populism/lack of education?
Peter Mandler put it correctly when he called Britain's elites "a nearly hereditary professional caste of lawyers, journalists, publicists, and intellectuals, an increasingly hereditary caste of politicians, tight coteries of cultural movers-and-shakers richly sponsored by multinational corporations." Those kinds of people can't understand why rural Britons don't care if the banks move to Frankfurt.
Second, it's not about being right or wrong. I think that most conservatives are wrong about most things most of the time. But, there's wrong and there's wrong: there's wrong because your premises or reasoning are in some way flawed, which does not prevent your arguments from being robust and sophisticated and even profound, and there's being wrong because you've made no serious effort at being anything other than wrong, and that's what I see in a lot of contemporary conservative thought, especially in the United States.
The intellectual hollowness of conservatism isn't about a lack of beard-stroking philosophers in their camp, it's about the fact that conservatives have collectively stopped seriously engaging with political ideals, their own or those of others. Some still try, but they are very far from the mainstream, and seem to be regarded with suspicion and hostility by their fellow travelers, who seem to regard self-criticism as intrinsically Marxist. The state of modern conservatism is such that people who read Ayn Rand books are among the more thoughtful and imaginative members of the movement, and that's something that any serious conservative should find very worrying.
But the entire point here is that conservative movements are oftentimes a genuinely grassroots phenomenon. People understand what goes on in their neighborhoods, and they vote based on it. If you think that a lack of intellectualism is enough to discredit conservatism than you have entirely missed the point.