TheBicyclingGuitarist wrote:
No. I read that definition decades ago, and being autistic, I never forgot it!
I'm sure I could pull out a dictionary definition out of my ass of liberals being perverts*. In the UK of the 1970s, a prominent civil liberties organisation, including quite a few current Labour MPs, were calling for paedophilia to be made legal. Do you know who was opposing them? The bloody National Front! Yup. Out-and-out neo-Nazis.
I'm a conservative and a liberal, in UK terms. A classical liberal but also with some conservative preservationism (with an allowance for the welfare state), you might say.
By this definition, Saudi Arabia would be an impeccably liberal country, given that they don't have an age of consent, and disgusting, fat, sweaty old men can marry little children if they want to.
TheBicyclingGuitarist wrote:
And it DOES fit. There are even some brain studies that show that people who declare themselves to be conservative have larger "fear centers" in the brain than self-proclaimed liberals, so apparently FEAR is a bigger factor in the decision making process of a conservative person than it is in the brain of a liberal.
Perhaps those 'liberals' (many of whom I find to be a massive pain in the ass) don't realise when they should be scared of something.
TheBicyclingGuitarist wrote:
Intolerant? Many conservatives are proud of it.
After being told over and over again that you're intolerant, Islamophobic, racist, nationalist Little Englanders for so long by so many impeccably intolerant 'liberals' and socialists, you sort of get used to wearing the epithet with pride. After a while, the bile washes over you and I think it says more about the people using the slurs than about myself.
TheBicyclingGuitarist wrote:
arrow-minded? Ditto. They think their way is the best way for everybody
Massive fallacy.
I'm a conservative, yet I recognise that we all do and think things differently in life. You're probably referring to authoritarianism, not conservatism.
TheBicyclingGuitarist wrote:
without appreciating or realizing that diversity in a population or a society gives strength, not weakness.
It depends. It depends how much. Too much diversity in a society is damaging to the society because people will just be different, won't come together, won't share common bonds, will see themselves as entirely separate people and groups for everyone else. We do need some diversity, but we also need a sense of belonging, of things that bind us together. I think a society that is based on that is better than simply worshipping 'diversity'. Yes, we need room for freedom of thought and action, but IMO being different shouldn't be a defining principle.