are you american?
Comment on How come liberals dont hate conservatives the way conservatives hate liberals
Nemo@midwest.social 6 months agoThat most changes are bad and this people who advocate for change are to be viewed with skepticism
That there is inherent value to human labor
That the family is the primary unit of society
That heirarchies are natural to humanity and can be beneficial OR destructive
That freedom of religion (including the freedom to disdain religion) is the most important human right
That human rights are real things on their own, an essential part of the human condition, and cannot be granted or removed by governments, only respected or infringed
That any discussion of policy must include a discussion of what will cost, the likely secondary effects, and how likely it is to actually address the problem it seems to address
That government spending should not exceed government revenue over a ten-year period
That the Constitution is a carefully constructed document that has seen the US become the longest-lasting liberal democracy in history, and should be defended as such
That Enlightenment liberalism is the best form of society thus far, and while it can be refined it ought not to be replaced
Asafum@feddit.nl 6 months ago
There are a few there I would argue arent specific to conservativism like labor having value and freedom of religion, but yeah I could see those on the left having an issue with too much concern over spending as the government isn’t the same as your personal bank account that needs to be balanced.
Nemo@midwest.social 6 months ago
Damn, typos, but this is not the kind of comment you want marked as “edited”. My apologies.
femtech@midwest.social 6 months ago
What do you mean about the family unit? It’s used as a dog whistle for straight couples most times.
Nemo@midwest.social 6 months ago
I actually protested for marriage equality here in Illinois; my wife and I refused to file our marriage license until the law was updated and asked our wedding guests to forgo gifts and instead donate to Lambda Legal and other organizations also working for marriage equality.
So when I say “families”, I do mean queer couples as well. But also intergenerational households. The focus on individualism and geographical mobility has been destructive to intergenerational wealth and wisdom, to familial connections, and to mental health. It’s one of my big gripes with the way capitalism operates in the US, honestly; the balance of power lies far too heavily with employers rather than the workers and this often means that family life suffers for the sake of economic advantage.
But yeah, I’m also talking about children. I don’t think anyone who doesn’t want kids should be pressured to have them, but for those who do want kids, that’s something we as a society should encourage. To that end I favor pronatalist policies as well as policies that seek to make adoption easier and less expensive, especially domestic adoption.
And while I know sometimes pronatalism is used as a fig leaf for anti-immigration sentiment, that’s not the case here; I’m very pro-immigration for a variety of reasons but it’s no secret that immigrants tend to have larger families and are more likely to have international households.
drphungky@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Hear hear! The government should completely get out of marriage and leave it to religion, or completely go in on encouraging marriage (actually domestic partnerships) between whoever if we think it’s going to be good for communities. Before Obergefell I would’ve said marriage is old, let religions have it. Encouraging people to take part in their community, have close ties with benefits like hospital visitation, tax breaks, etc should all be domestic partnership based, and we should’ve made everyone get domestic partnered - marriage should have conferred no civic benefits. As is, we have a weird hybrid religious and civic thing called marriage but at least everyone has access now.
But yeah as far as encouraging families we should do the same incentive wise with having kids and immigration to help with our birth rate problems, and continue trying to make home ownership more affordable (and more varied - looking at you missing middle housing) and encouraging it to again, incentivize investing in local communities. Civic policy like this stuff gets jumbled and we should be more clear about what we want to incentivize and why.