Akka
Moody old mage.
You seem to make a lot of effort to not get the point I was making. That's fine, you do you.And? Does it matter what position on the spectrum I define when it comes to how the policy originates? It applies to left-wingers, centrists, you name it.
And? They're still policies from that part of the political spectrum. They cannot be analysed independently of context. If a party wanted to (completely hypothetically) reduce VAT, but deport all black people, you can't say reducing VAT is a positive for black people. What does the fact that one of more of your far-right parties have other policies? What relevance does it have to what was being discussed?
The definition of the word? What are you trying to argue? You asked if something can be both extreme and popular. The answer is yes. Why are you now trying to define what "extreme" means? What are you actually objecting to?
"at certain times", yeah it seems that it's always relevant to the current social consensus then.Words mean what people understand them to mean. There are loads of different definitions, the UK gov one is "Extremism is the vocal or active opposition to our fundamental values or killing squadies". That is a bit specific but captures the idea that is based on the positions, not how popular they are. Killing squadies has been quite popular in certain bits of the UK at certain times for example.
My main points still stand unaddressed, but well, what did I expect ?