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The Water Cooler
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The Welfare Myth
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<blockquote data-quote="RidgeHunter" data-source="post: 1976966" data-attributes="member: 4319"><p>Agreed, but not nearly to the same extent. Even the most brain-dead liberals I know can articulate in some manner that they believe social justice should be a component of government. </p><p></p><p>The average republican can articulate he <em>kinda</em> believes social justice shouldn't be a component of government...<em>sometimes</em>. Or he can articulate it shouldn't be while totally contradicting his statement with his actions and lifestyle. Even the current republican platform and candidates positions are vague and ambiguous on this subject. The democrat's is simple: they believe in social justice and related entitlements and a mixed economy. Ain't nobody voting democrat that doesn't know they party position on social justice and government economic involvement and agree with it. I couldn't tell you the Republican position because they don't seem to know it themselves.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RidgeHunter, post: 1976966, member: 4319"] Agreed, but not nearly to the same extent. Even the most brain-dead liberals I know can articulate in some manner that they believe social justice should be a component of government. The average republican can articulate he [I]kinda[/I] believes social justice shouldn't be a component of government...[I]sometimes[/I]. Or he can articulate it shouldn't be while totally contradicting his statement with his actions and lifestyle. Even the current republican platform and candidates positions are vague and ambiguous on this subject. The democrat's is simple: they believe in social justice and related entitlements and a mixed economy. Ain't nobody voting democrat that doesn't know they party position on social justice and government economic involvement and agree with it. I couldn't tell you the Republican position because they don't seem to know it themselves. [/QUOTE]
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