Cain
Straussian
Well, I do see a whole lot of BS in this thread, which is to be expected. How can we classify the Greens/Socialists as "socially conservative"??
And what does "fiscally liberal" mean, anyway? Could we call the current regime "fiscally liberal" since they spend money like mad while running up deficits? Or is conservative because they're taxing future generations and spending money on the military?
What if with socialized medicine we end up spending less on health care. Does that then make such a policy more fiscally conservative than the current system?
On the social side we have arguments over legitimate interference in our personal lives (homosexuality and abortion are the two major issues). Is that an appropriate role for government? Then there's the question about regulating business to protect the environment and workers, in addition to providing healthcare and education. Some people here will say these are illegitimate functions of government in principle, which puts them at odds with most of public (as well as the civilized world).
Now of course these are not entirely separate spheres. Economic regulations can be imposed for social reasons (think of blue laws), and social policy can have an economic dimension (gay rights as far as inheritance, taxes and medical coverage is concerned).
And what does "fiscally liberal" mean, anyway? Could we call the current regime "fiscally liberal" since they spend money like mad while running up deficits? Or is conservative because they're taxing future generations and spending money on the military?
What if with socialized medicine we end up spending less on health care. Does that then make such a policy more fiscally conservative than the current system?
On the social side we have arguments over legitimate interference in our personal lives (homosexuality and abortion are the two major issues). Is that an appropriate role for government? Then there's the question about regulating business to protect the environment and workers, in addition to providing healthcare and education. Some people here will say these are illegitimate functions of government in principle, which puts them at odds with most of public (as well as the civilized world).
Now of course these are not entirely separate spheres. Economic regulations can be imposed for social reasons (think of blue laws), and social policy can have an economic dimension (gay rights as far as inheritance, taxes and medical coverage is concerned).