The two-party setup in the United States has severely divided our nation. Having names and labels for different political persuasions can be helpful, but they have too often led to pigeonholing and name-calling which hampers a free exchange of ideas. "Republican" and "Democrat", "conservative" and "liberal", "right" and "left" have degenerated into terms used to ostracize and vilify the opposition and to stifle discussion of topics deemed politically incorrect. A private citizen or political candidate who opposes the war in Iraq should not be dubbed a "radical leftist" any more than a private citizen or political candidate who advocates illegalizing abortion should be denounced as a "right-winger".
Moreover, the true meanings of the terms "conservative" and "liberal" have been obscured. In modern parlance, a "conservative" is someone who defends fundamental moral values and wishes to preserve traditional national ideals, and a "liberal" is someone who disputes fundamental moral values and wishes to radically change our country around. But these meanings are inadequate. The words originally referred to political approaches, not to a person's moral values or lack thereof. "Conservative" basically means someone who applauds the status quo, while "liberal" means someone who wishes to effect change. Neither conservatism not liberalism is good or evil per se; it depends on what specific policy you wish to maintain or to alter. Continuing a bad policy such as torture of terrorist suspects is just as detrimental to our national well-being as changing a good policy such as the ban on federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research involving abortion would be. Beneficial policies need to be maintained and harmful policies need to be changed. Thus in the original sense of the words, few if any human beings could be described as completely conservative or completely liberal.
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