Ardsgaine
Active Member
ris said:it depends if you actually identify the term with yourself or not. you'd prefer not to be described a conservative, i see no reason not to extend the same consideration to those who prefer labels not added to them.
It's not that I prefer not to be called a conservative, I'm simply not a conservative by any stretch of the imagination. One can call me a capitalist, a classical liberal (19th century edition), a libertarian with a small 'l', a Jeffersonian, a free market advocate, an Objectivist...
My views do fall into certain categories that can be labeled. Some are more exact than others, but they all fit within a range. I'm not ashamed of those categories. If someone wrongly accuses me of being a fascist, my objection is to the accuracy of the label, not to labels as such.
Communism, socialism, modern liberalism, and welfare-statism are all left-wing philosophies which at one time were reputable things to believe in. The reason they're in disrepute now is because they failed miserably. People who believe in some form of state intervention in the economy don't want to be identified with them, so they say, "don't label me." It's an attempt to defeat a conceptual approach to political issues. "Don't try to connect us to all the other forms of statism that have failed in the past. We have to look at individual cases, take each proposal as a completely new phenomenon." They don't want to have to explain why anyone should think that their form of statism will work when every other form that's been tried has failed, or is failing.