Hi CCJones: I see your point, but I don't think the example you gave was the best one to use.
This issue was not picked up and dragged out, but it seemed to die off before it began.
(Of all the conservatives I know, NONE of them paid attention AT ALL to this issue.
NOT ONE WORD. That's how important it WAS NOT.)
What you DID illustrate instead is this habit of opponents SAYING that "but the other side keeps doing X Y Z" and using that to attack credibility of the opponents.
It does not solve the problem, but detracts even more and makes it worse.
I agree with you that abusing something "out of context" WEAKENS the credibility of their stance.
So that's why this issue got dropped. I don't think it is a good example.
In this case, issues like this that are relatively EASY to resolve SHOULD be used that way: to CORRECT the problem so this is NOT abused as ammo against credibility of either side.
Can we agree that where people bring up complaints, objections, grievances, or points to show conflicts of interest or hypocrisy,
that we strive to RESOLVE the issues brought up or expressed?
These may well be erroneous, out of context, off the wall or from another plane of reality, but if we focus on CORRECTION and RESOLUTION of whatever point or opposition is being expressed, can't we make something good of the opportunity to share anyway?
If we commit NOT to "put people on the DEFENSIVE" by ATTACKING each other's beliefs, this reduces any need for stray arguments, grasping for straws or for straw men. But we could better invest in building on programs and principles instead of wasteful conflict.
And of course those on the left perceive this occurring mostly on the right.
For example, there was a thread recently about the AG’s comments concerning a personal gun safe designed to open in response to an RFID chip contained in a bracelet worn by the gun owner.
The partisan right took the story and contrived the lie that the AG wanted to ‘compel’ every gun owner to possess such a chip so the Federal government could trace the movements of all gun owners:
The Justice Department rejected "any suggestion" that Holder supports tracking legal gun owners.
"The administration is working with the gun manufacturing industry to encourage private-sector solutions to improving firearm safety," Justice Department spokesperson Brian Fallon told TPM in an email on Tuesday. "That is what the Attorney General addressed. Any suggestion that he endorsed a proposal to physically track law-abiding gun owners is a dishonest distortion."
No, Eric Holder Doesn't Want To Make Gun Owners Wear 'Tracking Bracelets'
Indeed.
And with regard to the OP’s inquiry as to “Do the posters actually believe what they post in these cases”?
It’s hard to say, but it’s conceivable many on the right did in the above case, as it conforms to the myth about the AG contrived by the right, and it clearly served the purpose of inciting the rightwing base.
Sadly, whether such lies are true or not – or believed or not – is irrelevant to those propagating the lies, as the intent is not honest debate, but to muddy the waters of political discourse to achieve some perceived partisan gain.
The best strengths I see in the different parties and approaches:
* Republicans/Libertarians tend to focus on Free Market and Rule of Law (and fail when this isn't enforced consistently)
* Democrats tend to focus on Equal Inclusion and Access to end disparity and discrimination (and fail when they don't act inclusively or discriminate politically)
* Greens tend to focus on sustainable solutions and consensus/conflict resolution
From what I see, the Rightwing Conservatives tend to stick to "FUNDAMENTAL Constitutional arguments" that remain independent of proving this case or that one, etc.
Even the Hobby Lobby case, the Rightwing are not dependent on the arguments or outcome of this case "to prove the issue of civil liberties and religious freedom" -- but the opposite, that these freedoms and liberties are already "God given and inalienable," and this case is used to address govt conflicts with the central laws that ARE the default.
If you look at the letter of the arguments, this case could be easily picked apart legally.
The point is the "spirit of the law" that was violated, where the nitpicky legal flaws don't matter to them, but would be used to argue against the Opponents as missing the point.
The Leftwing does the opposite, DEPENDS on Roe V Wade (and subsequent govt laws and relative support of politicians) to "justify and establish" prochoice, but isn't deriving this DIRECTLY from the natural laws and rights as made statutory by the Constitution.
So it is THIS habit of NOT invoking DIRECT liberties and freedoms at the source (ie by natural laws), but DEPENDING on government laws, judicial precedence, majority rule (and thus party, votes and elections) to "establish it" that BIASES ALL OTHER arguments and views to keep "defending their positions" based on MAN MADE CONDITIONS.
This causes ALL the issues with "voter suppression or political fraud in election campaigns" by DEPENDING on PARTY POLITICS and GOVT to DEFINE and DEFEND policies for them.
Politics/Government ==> defends/establishes the beliefs/views/principles for the people
Versus
Principles and consent of the people ===> establishes laws, contracts, govt policy
As long as Christians, Conservatives and Constitutionalists continue to derive authority directly from the source of natural laws; and as long as the Left draws their power from political OPPOSITION in REACTION to this group taken as the "default"; there is never going to be equality. And there will be biases in the arguments back and forth based on assuming "different starting points" for "where authority of law comes from."
As a progressive Democrat, I have learned this the hard way. I found fellow Democrats generally weak if educated at all on Constitutional arguments and principles, and relying instead on the case by case attacks AGAINST positions by Conservatives or Christians considered the predominant view in power. So it tends to come across as "reactionary," not free standing principles. Because my fellow Democrats know I am sincere in wanting to achieve the goals of inclusion and equality the right way, and not just pushing Constitutional arguments on them as some kind of opposing agenda politically, they have listened and have earnestly tried to understand, but it takes an involved process to catch them up with where other Constitutionalists are who have been working on this for years.
I don't think it is people's fault for coming from different background and approach.
I thought it could be reconciled by agreeing on the laws; I thought "prochoice" was the liberal equivalent of arguing for inherent liberty and freedom from govt intrusion, based on Constitutional principles alone. But the ACA conflicts proved otherwise, and I realized people's starting base beliefs are not on equal ground; I even found a close friend (Black Republican) defines racism and power based on "white people" as the default, so all other laws, govt, and issues are built on that premise and everyone else is reacting to that.
Another friend who is so inherently opposed to "conservative Christian rightwing" depends on the Democrat Party for representation, and does not relate at all to Constitutional laws.
This drove home to me that "prochoice" is still politically reactionary, and not about establishing "freedom of choice" OR DUE PROCESS by Constitutional principle but depending on the Democrat Party to counteract equal beliefs in prolife views associated with Republicans (where before I thought the issue with Roe V Wade was conflicts with DUE PROCESS that made the bans on abortion unconstitutional, but found out later the Democrats do not have qualms with taking liberties without due process with ACA).
With this understanding that the political biases cannot always be helped, but are engrained and as natural to people as their religion, I have been approaching Conservatives to understand this, and try to work out ways to separate political beliefs while keeping these intact.
I believe what may come from this is a collaborative movement of separate groups,
all uniting to defend prochoice, prolife and proliberty views EQUALLY even where they do not even agree with each other's views, but agree to separate them from federal policy.