I'm interested in whether members of this forum have become more Socially Authoritarian or Libertarian, Economically Left or Right. If you've undergone any radical reappraisal, or shift in your viewpoint?
Everyone is brought up with their parents beliefs and eventually has to decide if will remain true to them.
For me personally, I've always been extremely socially libertarian and remain so. It's a given with how I was brought up, middle class, both parents holding uni degrees etc...
From early high school, up to my early uni days, I would have said I was a communist.
I guess the charges many people make, that the public school system is run in such a way as to indoctrinate children in socialism and marxism is basically fair. You're taught many times who Karl Marx was and what communism and marxism stand for, but you're never taught why we believe these are wrong, and I was never once taught in 13 years of education, why we believe in free markets and why they work best.
I saw that there were problems in society, and unlike my classmates, I didn't blindly accept the status quo for no reason. The only debunking of communism I ever got in school, from teacher or student, was "under communism, why would people work as a doctor when they would get paid the same as a bum who cleans toilets", which wasn't exactly overwhelming in it's academic rigour. So I latched onto the best utopian ideology that was offered to me,
I thought the way the West tried to defend the ideology of capitalism, with often repeated simple buzzwords like "freedom", were meaningless platitudes, freedom for some, oppression for the many. I really hate my educators and parents for teaching me so little. Why did nobody ever take me aside and politely try to educate me in liberalism?
It was only once I got to uni, and someone actually explained to my why the market works, my beliefs changed quickly. It made so much sense and fitted quite perfectly with my existing assurances of the need for social liberalism.
Everyone is brought up with their parents beliefs and eventually has to decide if will remain true to them.
For me personally, I've always been extremely socially libertarian and remain so. It's a given with how I was brought up, middle class, both parents holding uni degrees etc...
From early high school, up to my early uni days, I would have said I was a communist.
I guess the charges many people make, that the public school system is run in such a way as to indoctrinate children in socialism and marxism is basically fair. You're taught many times who Karl Marx was and what communism and marxism stand for, but you're never taught why we believe these are wrong, and I was never once taught in 13 years of education, why we believe in free markets and why they work best.
I saw that there were problems in society, and unlike my classmates, I didn't blindly accept the status quo for no reason. The only debunking of communism I ever got in school, from teacher or student, was "under communism, why would people work as a doctor when they would get paid the same as a bum who cleans toilets", which wasn't exactly overwhelming in it's academic rigour. So I latched onto the best utopian ideology that was offered to me,
I thought the way the West tried to defend the ideology of capitalism, with often repeated simple buzzwords like "freedom", were meaningless platitudes, freedom for some, oppression for the many. I really hate my educators and parents for teaching me so little. Why did nobody ever take me aside and politely try to educate me in liberalism?
It was only once I got to uni, and someone actually explained to my why the market works, my beliefs changed quickly. It made so much sense and fitted quite perfectly with my existing assurances of the need for social liberalism.
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