Wellesley
Well-known member
- Jul 24, 2013
- 4,973
All blurs into one for me. I am personally slightly to the right of centre with a sprinkling of liberal views. I am known by my other half as the Victorian Father for my old fashioned views and insistence on wearing long sleeves at the beach. But am all for equality for the straights, the homosexuals and the "don't knows". I believe women should always be treated as if they were equal and multi-culture stimulates me.
I consider myself well-rounded albeit a bit of a nob.
It sounds like you are associating these things with the left? I'm on the right rather than the left and those things are all true of me too. I've never met anyone on the right who opposes equality for homosexuals, equality for women, or is opposed to other cultures.
I have.
I have. But no, I was in fact pointing out, using myself as an example that those who lean to the right also hold normal, liberal views.
I don't know what to think about that.
Really? I had lunch at the Carlton Club yesterday, a club which describes itself as "the oldest, most elite and most important of all Conservative clubs" and is only open to "persons of full age who support the Conservative Party". It was only ten years ago that women were not allowed to be full members and whilst there are now some female members, yesterday the only women in the dining room were the waiting staff. If you have never met anyone on the right who opposes equality for women, I don't think you have been paying attention...It sounds like you are associating these things with the left? I'm on the right rather than the left and those things are all true of me too. I've never met anyone on the right who opposes equality for homosexuals, equality for women, or is opposed to other cultures.
Banned for racism. What a total wast of oxygen.
I'm not opposed to telling someone to do one, but it's cheap to use a criticism of the person as an invalidation of their argument. It's a fallacy, probably the most well known of all fallacies - ad hominem. The reason it's bad is because it doesn't invalidate their argument in the least. Maybe it somehow feels like it does, but it doesn't. That's really my point.
Well you may have met some on the right who opposed gay marriage for example, but likely in defence of the Church and it's right to define it's own sacrament. Would that person have opposed another kind of civil union, which anyone of any sexuality could enter into, with all the same rights and legal standing as marriage? It tended to be forcing it on the church which was at issue, rather than an opposition to equality for homosexuals.
You may have met some on the right who challenge the idea of a wage gap, but the wage gap (being based on gender) doesn't stand up to scrutiny. That isn't a belief that women and men shouldn't be treated equally. They are treated equally as far as I can tell. The Conservative party have a female leader and Prime Minister, and did throughout the 80's too, never heard anyone on the right take issue with that in the least.
You may have met some on the right who are opposed to open door mass immigration, but when I was growing up we had a lot of immigration in this country, we have had for a considerably long time, and it was never a political issue, it only became one when the numbers increased massively. So it's not been an opposition to other cultures, it's been an opposition to the numbers primarily.
Of course there are small minded prejudiced people in this country as there are everywhere, but as far as the mainstream political right goes, don't take the above things to be the same as being against equality for homosexuals & women or a dislike of other cultures, because they aren't those things at all.
Really? I had lunch at the Carlton Club yesterday, a club which describes itself as "the oldest, most elite and most important of all Conservative clubs" and is only open to "persons of full age who support the Conservative Party". It was only ten years ago that women were not allowed to be full members and whilst there are now some female members, yesterday the only women in the dining room were the waiting staff. If you have never met anyone on the right who opposes equality for women, I don't think you have been paying attention...
I don't consider that "old boys club" to be an example of the mainstream right, by it's own haughty definition, it isn't.
Can you give of an example of anything anyone on the right has said which expresses an opposition to equality for women? Some kind of "women shouldn't have the same rights as men" statement?
There are people that oppose women's rights, are prejudiced against gays (for non religious reasons), do not like foreigners and proudly package this all as their right wing political beliefs. And you really don't have to gao far to find them. Bolton Conservative Men's Club is a good place to start. They have a gild framed picture of Enoch Powell in the lobby.
My reply to [MENTION=30352]McTavish[/MENTION] applies to this post too, same question. I don't think these are examples of the mainstream right. What I've been talking about on both the left and the right is the mainstream, someone/something you might hear said on the daily politics or elsewhere in the context of the public political discourse.
You'll find that attitude is not spoken out loud much in public forums these days but go behind the closed doors of many institutions and you'll experience it aplenty. Head to the VIth form Common Room in any British boarding school if you are tempted to think these attitudes are dying out too.
You must be extremely naive to think that politicians' views expressed in public always echo their private views.That's a no then.
I don't consider that "old boys club" to be an example of the mainstream right, by it's own haughty definition, it isn't.
Can you give of an example of anything anyone on the right has said which expresses an opposition to equality for women? Some kind of "women shouldn't have the same rights as men" statement?
So you mean you will only accept a political view from a politician? I'm talking about the outdated right wing views present in the everyday fabric of our society. You don't have to go far. But if you are not willing to accept that as an example we shall have to agree to disagree I think.
No politician or public speaker , not even Robinson, is daft enough to get on a public platform these days and come out with sexist, racist or homophobic views. At best it'd ruin their career, at worst get them charged with hate speech. But you will not convince me people don't still hold these views and regard them as integral to their right wing politic because I know that is simply not true.