• realcaseyrollinsOP
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    4 months ago

    I’m a conservative, but I’m getting disillusioned by the movement. Barely any of them seem to care about actually limiting the scope of the government, which is one of my biggest political values, and many seem to be either dumb or grifters. Even worse, we’ve got alt-right Christian nationalists calling for a theocratic fascist state. This isn’t how either Christians nor conservatives are supposed to behave, but I don’t think there’s a political home for me anywhere else. I’d be more at home with the centrists if I wasn’t still right wing to some degree.

      • realcaseyrollinsOP
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        4 months ago

        I support small government, but not no government. I respect anarchism and libertarianism, but I don’t think that type of society would work well enough for my liking.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Anarchism isn’t chaos, or no government. It’s not even strictly for “smaller” government. But flatter government. Anarchist organization and government aren’t oxymorons.

          • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            The anarchist movement has a massive messaging issue / needs to decide what it actually is. I think this problem is itself caused by the movement being made of anarchists, who do not as easily fall into a decision-making structure.

            • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              They are not anymore confused or vague than economic liberalism. Many like to pretend they’re libertarian. And others differ/clash over social and bigotry issues. Like Republicans and Democrats. Despite being similar economically.

              If you’ve ever heard the phrase “power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely”. That is the kernel behind anarchism. Power should be kept as granular, diluted, and as flat as possible. As an effort to control and reduce corruption. Large complex hierarchies quickly go beyond being simply efficient mechanisms of administration. Into being structures to concentrate and abstract power. The only real debate or disagreement happens around where that divisor is. Antisocial ones who argue that even a neighborhood town Council are to authoritarian and dictatorial. All the way to the ones who are reasonably down for a permissive National Council of some sort.

    • PyroNeurosis@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 months ago

      It’s a nonsense framework anyway. I have conservative leanings in 2A aspects and hard left leanings in such social aspects as gender and sexuality. Everyone just has to find their best fit, and the American duopoly I live under is a godawful system for that. Proportional representation would be better, but only to a degree.

    • chingadera@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      ive got great news for you. compare the US left to the political right in most of the world and youll fit right in with the Democrats.

    • rothaine@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      limiting the scope of the government, which is one of my biggest political values

      Why?

      Smaller government = bigger corporations. And corporate control = everything goes to shit. We’ve reached maximum shareholder primacy.

      And it’s not like we can “vote with our dollar” anymore, with how consolidated everything is. For example, consider the attempts at boycotting Nestle…

      • realcaseyrollinsOP
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        4 months ago

        Big government usually has more power to do more harm than big government, as the state has a monopoly on violence to a degree.

        • rothaine@lemm.ee
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          4 months ago

          I wonder if that’s even true. Sure, corporations aren’t black-bagging people in the night (yet), and the VOC genociding entire islands was many many years ago, but who put lead in gasoline and lied about its safety? Who covered up decades of climate change research? Why are we inhaling a credit card of microplastics every week? How are property management companies colluding on rents to create price floors and evict families?

          Or here’s something forward-looking:

          If Albertsons and Kroger are allowed to merge, do you think that’d be a good thing for American food security? If the government was not powerful enough to stop the merger, what should the citizenry do?