HE'S A COMMUNIST!omar273 said:In the political view question in the user profile, where is socialism?? Surely that's a major political force?
But the problem is on a sliding scale views which are diametrically opposed such as libertarianism and fascism are both lumped together as far right, technocratism has no real place etc etcnwatts said:I don't. It should be a sliding scale from left to right, and then a "do you believe in God?" check box. Because I could agree with some libertarian ideals but not identify myself as libertarian (such as the recent gun debate in ncap). A sliding scale means you can identify yourslelf on the political spectrum but not assign yourself to a particular ideology.
Hrm i'm not sure liberterianism is on the "far right", but i do see what you mean. I just don't like the definitive nature of lumping people in ideological groups.withoutaface said:But the problem is on a sliding scale views which are diametrically opposed such as libertarianism and fascism are both lumped together as far right, technocratism has no real place etc etc
Scratch that, just completed the test again and my result was as follows:emjayel said:Alternatively people could post their results from http://www.politicalcompass.org/
I hover around the 'm' in 'Dalai Lama' on here: http://www.digitalronin.f2s.com/politicalcompass/images/internationalchart.gif
Libertarianism supports individual liberty, with staunch support for individual rights and ownership, but is economically capitalistic.yy said:what's the difference between anarchism and libertarianism? is anarchism all liberal while libertarianism is socially liberal and economically conservative?
Generator said:Ah, do I really have to point out that this isn't the thread or the sub-forum for such a debate?
Libertarianism uses the concept of negative liberty in conjunction with the market.yy said:what's the difference between anarchism and libertarianism? is anarchism all liberal while libertarianism is socially liberal and economically conservative?