this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
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Have you ever met a liberal though? Eg. NPR is non-stop zionist propaganda. Two sides of the same coin.
“Liberal” doesn’t mean what many people think it means.
It doesn’t mean “leftist” or “progressive” or “humane”. There might be some overlap, but these are not the same things, despite conservatives trying to define them as such.
Curious comment, so I looked at Wikipedia’s Liberalism in the United States. Still not sure what you’re suggesting.
Could you elaborate?
Liberals are pro free market and capitalism. Leftists are pro social programs and taxing the rich.
Thanks! It sounds like “liberal” in this thread is what I’ve always called neoliberal, and “leftist” is what’s known as democratic socialism?
Depends on how far you want to go left. On the more extreme side, these people want to abolish capitalism entirely and replace it with a communal system (workers owning the means of production). Democratic socialism is a very moderate form where capitalism is kept, but people get a fair chance of living in the system (usually through monetary assistance), no matter what family they come from and what their abilities are.
I think you're confusing social democracy with democratic socialism. The first is as you say, and has huge overlap with liberalism, left liberalism, and progressive liberalism.
The second is achieving socialism through democratic means, without the need to overthrow government as once was believed to be entirely nessecary.
But then again, terms do change context over time, and by place. So maybe I'm the one who is wrong.
that’s only partly true:
economically liberal indeed means free markets and capitalism (this is why the australian conservative party is called the Liberal party)
however liberalism as a whole includes individual rights like human and civil rights, secularism, etc (this is what the US tends to define as liberal)
it’s an overloaded and imperfect term for our current global political cultures
similar applies to left and right wing:
the left are supporters of change and generally change that supports less fortunate and leads to less social hierarchy
what both these things have in common is that liberal and left wing are about change and new ideas, whilst conservative and right wing are about maintaining the status quo (or as is more currently the case, regressing to a previous status quo)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberalism
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left-wing_politics
The same you could say with "conversative" term meaning. In the original meaning it was "not willing changes" not "far right radical" whatever it means ( right now it's considered to have conservative people in that group by left wing people )
Where are you getting this? Also NPR is center-right, they havent been on "the left" for a good while
Literally the only thing this guy posts is “but whatabout zionists”
Endlessly, no matter how irrelevant