Sparrow
Veteran
If it's in the Daily Mail it must be true and balanced? .... if thirty years out of date
Highlight 1 (firearms): No, not really. The 'debate', such as it is, very rarely attracts highly polarized attention outside the USA.This post ended up a little longer than I had planned. I apologize.
This thread has been a marvelous read. We can glean some truisms from it.
So it seems, at least in the U.S. that the label "liberal" or "progressive" is assigned to a group who thinks things are broken and wants to fix them. We assign "conservative" to those who think things are fine and we don't need to spend money to advance progressive causes. Interesting.
I've noticed a recurring theme. First is that there is an issue (typically in a vacuum) that someone (usually with some financial or other stake in the decision) identifies as needing to be "fixed." Second, all of the "fixes" seem to offend someone. There is an opposing group (typically with a financial interest in continuing the status quo) who identifies each of the fixes as worse than the problem. One of the groups needs to amass enough political clout to steamroller the other's position.
Prohibition doesn't work. In the U.S. do-gooders tried that with the 19th Amendment (booze prohibition) and that lead to shooting wars between the government "revenuers" and the clandestine makers of booze. And the pubic continued to consume alcohol because it wasn't ready not to. Further, entire criminal enterprises sprang up to distribute booze tax-free and made HUGE windfall profits. That sounds amazingly familiar to the international drug trade today. We humans don't learn from history very well apparently.
Hunting for most today is no longer providing food for survival; it is tied to environmental concerns (or monied interests.) Firearms ownership and "gun violence" is currently the topic of discussion world-wide, when the real discussion should be about the root cause of those issues: interpersonal violence and how it has become so pervasive internationally; and the general deteriorating public mental health and how to treat those mental health problems.
There are no quick fixes and there are no stand-alone issues. Society is a complex system and every legisative intrusion into that system wreaks havoc somewhere else. Priorities change and political parties change positions on issues (he TVA nuclear power plant as an example.)
And yet, the debates rage with both sides so entrenched in their own dogma that they can't see that the other side may have valid points as well.
There are many things that need to be done in society, but the first is re-teaching the art of debate and compromise. In the U.S. at least, if there's no agreement in government then government is supposed to be impotent. One side isn't supposed to be able to stack the deck and steamroller the other. Laws are only valid when a majority of the populace agree with them. Good legislation comes from debate and compromise on issues. We haven't seen that in twenty years now, which is why we're in the state we're in.
We complain about Wal-Mart becoming the retail big dog, but who shops there? Everyone. The redistribution of wealth has driven society since the dawn of time. Barbaric societies conquer "civilized" societies for their wealth. In "civilized" societies, individuals want to gather as much as they can, which leads to institutions gathering the majority of the wealth leaving the majority of the populace in poverty. At some tipping point the masses violently reclaim the wealth and the wealthy are powerless to stop them. A current example is in North Korea where we see the ruling family (to stay in power) manipulating the press and feeding the populace propoganda telling the people that the ruling family (who live like royalty) that they are being protected from the outside bullies. That phenomenon has contributed much to the "Arab Spring." We saw similar behavior quashed in China in Tienanmen square some years ago. It's happening in Western nations too, we're just ignoring it.
We also need to examine very closely what factors are contributing to the demise of our environment, both physical and social and debate what actions need to be taken to stem both the unrelenting degredation of our physical environment, and our deteriorating social atmosphere. Those are neither progressive nor conservative issues; they're human issues. Unfortunately I fear that as a species we don't even possess the vocabulary with which to debate the issues, much less have solid solutions. In a society that has Psy attending the White House Correspondent's dinner... and makes heros out of outrageous bail bondsmen, professional wrestlers, and housewives with no integrity... well, draw your own conclusions.
Sorry... I wasn't very clear there, and I was addressing predominantly those issues in the U.S. However, in the expanded context of "arms trade" and which country is arming which other country with the intent to do violence toward someone, it's international.Highlight 1 (firearms): No, not really. The 'debate', such as it is, very rarely attracts highly polarized attention outside the USA.
I had more in mind the attempted legislation of morality and actions that someone perceives, because of their religious or political beliefs, as wrong. The 19th Amendment prohibiting alcohol manufacture and consumption in the U.S. for example.Highlight 2 (havoc): There are degrees of havoc. Some of the 'havoc' turned out to be pretty trivial when it was tried, e.g. socialized medicine in every country except (once again) the USA.
Highlight 4 (Wal-Mart): No. Not everyone. There are many who will never voluntarily enter a Wal-Mart if there is any alternative. I am among them. And, intriguingly, this relates to photography. From all I've heard and read, and from my limited experience (I've not set foot inside one for years), they are terrified of photography. Why? What are they so frightened about? Never mind the legal point that they can ban anything they damn' well please. Focus instead on the simple question: what are they so frightened of?
Cheers,
R.
In affluent countries, violent crime has been decreasing more or less steadily, and substantially inexplicably, for 20 years (but see the lead hypothesis, http://www.motherjones.com/environm...73295366201&action=collapse_widget&id=6314187 ). FAR more people die in traffic accidents or (in the United States) from shootings than from terrorism, and yet, anti-terrorism spending is orders of magnitude greater than spending on road safety or gun safety. In other words, yes, it is to a very great extent a matter of perception, not of reality.i do not think people are any more violent than they ever have been. we just hear about every violent incident immediately, so it SEEMS worse. in my opinion . . . .
Try and take a picture while you're inside the store. Better still, try to take two or three.walmart is terrified of photography, roger?
film photography just is not a money maker any more for walmart. walmart still does big business printing digital photos, making dvds, etc., over here at least.
Sorry... I wasn't very clear there, and I was addressing predominantly those issues in the U.S. However, in the expanded context of "arms trade" and which country is arming which other country with the intent to do violence toward someone, it's international.
I had more in mind the attempted legislation of morality and actions that someone perceives, because of their religious or political beliefs, as wrong. The 19th Amendment prohibiting alcohol manufacture and consumption in the U.S. for example.
I was describing the figurative "everyone" rather than the literal and I agree with your point; but as to your question of whom they are afraid, I haven't a clue. Why do most major art museums not allow photography of any kind? I just don't know.
Good on you! I've been approached, and told I can't take pictures, just for having a camera around my neck.The "outrageously dressed/strangely behaving walmart customers" logic is something that had not occurred to me, but it sounds feasible.Ooooooooooooooooh. i've done it without getting caught, roger. i'm guessing the corporate attitude is the result of the cottage industry of people videoing and shooting outrageously dressed/strangely behaving walmart customers, then posting them online. because of the demise of small, rural stores, country folk abound in walmarts in the hinterlands. it can be quite a show ...
Ooooooooooooooooh. i've done it without getting caught, roger. i'm guessing the corporate attitude is the result of the cottage industry of people videoing and shooting outrageously dressed/strangely behaving walmart customers, then posting them online. because of the demise of small, rural stores, country folk abound in walmarts in the hinterlands. it can be quite a show ...
We assign "conservative" to those who think things are fine and we don't need to spend money to advance progressive causes.
Para 3: Control. Everyone likes to be in control.
Cheers,
R.
While I tend toward a position left-of-center (at least socially, at least within the context of American politics), I'm not among those that seeks to undermine those who disagree, and in this case, I'm inclined to defend them, to an extent.
I think you'll find precious few Americans who label themselves as "Conservatives" would say that "things are fine". It may be more accurate to say that whereas the "Liberals" see government as a solution to the problems the country faces, the "Conservatives" see that same government as the root of those same problems. This is especially true (to my thinking) at the current time, where the oval office is occupied by a progressive. This makes it much easier for those on the other side of the aisle to lay the blame squarely on the government. Just a few years ago, when Mr. Bush sat behind the desk, the same contingent was forced to spread the blame a bit. When the House & Senate were predominantly democrat, they got the blame, when that wasn't the case, the blame shifted outward to various special interest groups.
This being said, the reverse is also true, and while Bush was in office, those on the left had the convenience of a single target for blame, and even things that Bush had nothing to do with were attributed directly to his administration, so it's not a problem that only works one way (though people on both sides would love to convince us otherwise).
As others have said, to produce photography that supports a conservative view, it might be easiest (and most intuitive) to expose the side-effects of the "liberal government overreach" that your progressive counterparts so often like to villify.
Fascinating indeed, and I hope that I may build on your useful expasion of my thought with this:. . . control, . . . the holder of those beliefs believes that it is his/her duty to project those beliefs . . . no longer share commonality of belief and unfortunately rather than seeking compromise . . . .
Fascinating stuff.
your post and mine taken together show clearly how labeling is ineffective and seriously inaccurate.
How often is 'multiculturalism' everything but what it says? "Yes: we'll accept you, as long as you subscribe to OUR values." Skin colour? No problem. Sexual orientation? BURN THE HERETIC.
I have seen it asserted that the more essentially meaningless restrictions a religion imposes -- not eating beef or pork or beans (all are or were forbidden at one time or another); or eating fish on Fridays; or dressing a particular way; this reinforces the feeling of 'us against them'.