Son of Thatcher
Member
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2016
- Messages
- 75
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2016
Don't get me wrong. I didn't mean to imply that you are hypocritical. Rather, I was suggesting that despite left-wing rhetoric, many on the Left are hypocritical as evidenced by their actions, not necessarily my assumptions.I'm happy to criticise Shorten too, there's no hypocrisy here. Also I don't see where I assume your views, other than in your capacity as a member of the the Liberal party.
To your last paragraph, this isn't really true in principle but might be if your definition of left-wing is Clintonite neoliberals. Still I'd say the deregulation of the finance sector, abolishment of the fiduciary rule and other measures which ease the ability to prey on vulnerable people tip the balance in the favour of the Right.
I would agree that being Conservative doesn't mean maintaining the status quo, it does have ideology (traditional values, free market)
Well just saying that it isn't true doesn't make it so. The fact of the matter is wherever you have a concentration of power, whether it be in government or labour, it just breeds corruption and avarice. If you equate a free market with 'tipping the balance in favour of the Right' then you are correct. However, a truly free market is not what we've been seeing; all we have seen is this mixed-up cronyist system. In a free market, the onus is on the individual to make the right decisions, with businesses penalised by their customers (or lack thereof) for potentially predatory practices. Anything more just advantages the very systems you're trying to contain by making it more difficult for smaller firms, which often lack access to the resources required to navigate through the smokescreen of legislation and regulation. Ultimately, this lack of competition helps big business.
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