luns101 wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:And Universal Healthcare?
...and universal housing, groceries, and vehicles!
She is from California.....
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luns101 wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:And Universal Healthcare?
...and universal housing, groceries, and vehicles!
luns101 wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:And Universal Healthcare?
...and universal housing, groceries, and vehicles!
Juan_Bottom wrote:luns101 wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:And Universal Healthcare?
...and universal housing, groceries, and vehicles!
She is from California.....
Juan_Bottom wrote:got tonkaed wrote:They also are pretty strongly against freedom of association, which while ideologically sensible for their position, shows how they are sort of choosing what they feel is best (not that theres anything wrong with that).
I don't think that there is any established method of measuring freedom. I can argue with them, but I'm not sure how I would go about disagreeing about what freedom means in this country. If you know what I mean? Plus, you are invited to re-do the study for yourself, and see what states you would define as '"free." So it's not really like they are telling you what's what.
I didn't say it was, just that it's something a liberal group might put in their own "freedom" index. Although my own opinion on this is no secret, I was not making a value judgment here. I realize that libertarians, though in general they tend to be in accord with what is known as the "religious right", tend not to emphasize this and other similar issues.
Healtcare, absolutely ... it is cheaper for everyone and better!
got tonkaed wrote:You can make arguments seemingly against the bias in terms of libertarians in terms of your freedom hijacking as well. If the constituion is a living document, we certainly can make arguments about how to claim it and interpret it.
Its really a bit of a moot point on most of your other stuff. The type of freedom index they are talking about is PhD work of a few years at the very minimum, that type of work comes out of few groups i know of, certainly none of which casually post on a gaming forum.
I don't think the fact that these figures/charts are biased is the big issue, it is that they pretend not to be.
If they were clearly put forward as the Pro-Liberaterian states versus not... instead of referring to "freedom", I doubt anyone would object.
Snorri1234 wrote:Then again, it's also a bit silly since libertarian philosophy is a bit silly.
thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Then again, it's also a bit silly since libertarian philosophy is a bit silly.
I'm not trying to start a fight here, but I'm curious why you find libertarian philosophy a bit silly. Are your thoughts somewhere in line with Winston Churchill's famous quote about democracy being the worst form of government except for all the rest? (I believe it was Churchill). Or do you find the idea of libertarianism silly compared to other political thought?
On that we can agree. Well put.PLAYER57832 wrote:I don't think the fact that these figures/charts are biased is the big issue, it is that they pretend not to be.
If they were clearly put forward as the Pro-Liberaterian states versus not... instead of referring to "freedom", I doubt anyone would object.
Juan_Bottom wrote:But they let you plug your own information in. The conclusion is fluid, from one person to the next. Wouldn't biased be finding a conclusion that supports your views, and then calling it good? Even if these guys are biased, they are still giving you the tools to plug your own views in. You can make this into whatever your view is.
luns101 wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:And Universal Healthcare?
...and universal housing, groceries, and vehicles!
