"Today"= 18 Months Ago
"Today"= 18 Months Ago
You either dont believe in these things or you’re not as right as you think you are.
Maybe I’m not understanding. You’re a right wing person that recommends we dont look at right wingers in the US for reference? I guess I just start at Nazi then?
I’m recommending everyone to not look at the US as a reference for a sane and nuanced political system. In Europe we’re generally not A or B, although you can definitely say you’re left or right you don’t have to be either the left or the right.
I hold values which are generally right leaning, as well as left. But overall I vote blue, not red (which would be the other way around in the US, for whatever reason).
If you look at the strong right party Kristdemokraterna in Sweden you’ll find that they support Swedens current abortion laws, which allows for it. Even though they’re strongly for traditional family values and overall a strong right political ideology.
In contrast, the Swedish Vänsterpartiet (literally the left party) with roots in communism, have voted the same way as the far right party Sverigedemokraterna with its roots in nazism and white supremacy. (Just to clarify, Sweden does not only have these two “extremes”. The Riksdag has a total of 8 parties as of today.)
Things are more nuanced outside of US politics. I know what beliefs I hold and live by. I don’t necessarily think those should be put into law (I support the liberty for women to chose whether to abort or not. If I were put in the situation that my wife got unexpectedly pregnant, I would never support aborting.)
Ah, not a piece of confusion here, the US is a good example of when people with right leaning views actually have control the government, there is no left to compare to.
Also, am I reading that you wouldn’t support your wife’s right to choose an abortion? But do you support her decision to choose, which is what I read the current laws states?
I disagree with him but I don’t think those are contradictory. A watered down example: I don’t like hot dogs in my macaroni, but I respect other people’s right to have them. If you ask me if I want them I’ll say no, but I won’t tell you not to.
A more ethics one than preference: I think it’s wrong to cheat on a romantic partner. It’s a bad thing to do and people shouldn’t do it. However, I would staunchly oppose a law that said people couldn’t. People should have the freedom to do the wrong thing as suits them (boundaries and edge cases not withstanding).
People respecting that other people may have opposing beliefs about how to act and respecting that is what we want, not homogeneous beliefs.