brentsg wrote:On the first part, I guess I would disagree. I suppose that it's all perspective and opinion.
Just for starters, find me the left-wing equivalent of Michael Savage or Glenn Beck or Ann Coulter (to name just a few), who says things as downright venomous as they say on a daily basis and still either gets invited back onto the "liberal" cable news shows to promote her new book or is simply given his own show. Or, if the media situation doesn't interest you for some reason, make a me a list of elected liberal officials who were able to run, on the record, with something as ridiculous and fear-mongering as the "death panel" smear, and continue to earn praise for their "truth-telling bravery". Are there kooks on the left? Of course, but I'm sorry, they're nowhere near as numerous, extreme, or accepted by the mainstream as the kooks on the right.
The second gets into one evil justifying another, which is just a silly discussion.
I'm not "justifying" anything - what I'm doing is asking why so many conservatives have adopted such an obvious double-standard when it comes to fiscal responsibility. Bush lost this economy more money on far more frivolous endeavors than Obama ever will, but back then you couldn't get enough of it - to be frank, so did Reagan, back in the day (and the only President who ever came remotely close to balancing the budget since then was Clinton). So why all the howling about "thinking of the children" all of a sudden? You couldn't have cared less about them when your guy was in office.
Now they would like to silence the opposition, and I hear the same talk about dissent being traitorous. I agree that it's silly in either regard.
Where in heaven's name are you hearing this? Who's silencing anyone, or accusing anyone of treason? You guys are the ones showing up to health care town halls with assault rifles and tossing bricks through legislators' windows, not to mention stoking talk of secession.
Last time I checked differing opinions were ok and shouldn't make one want to hurl.
Opinions are one thing - the acknowledgment of facts is another. If your viewpoint differs from mine on something that is actually a matter of opinion, that's fine - however, not all things are matters of opinion. How much the health care bill will cost and who will pay for it is not an opinion - it's a bunch of hard numbers. The long record of Republican obstructionism come hell or high water, even to stuff they supported under their own Presidents, is not an opinion - it's a verifiable historical record. "Obama's a Stalinist" is not an opinion - it's an obvious lie. And all three deserve to be called, and treated as, exactly what they are.
Opposing opinions don't "make [me] want to hurl" - factual topics being treated like matters of simple opinion are another story.