Many libertarians (conservatives) in some cases reject religion altogether. Some attribute the concept of the Sabbath or Blue laws as religious and in accordance with denying the notion of separation of church and state. — christian2017
Sub Blue laws are based on practicality. Everyone needs a set day off and also a consistent day off every X days. People who work 2 or 3 jobs very often will work 8 days one week and 15 the next before having a day off. Sub Blue Laws are based on some state or federal paper work being filled out after 3 or so months of employment and then some minor coordination is forced on the employers of the employee. Its not completely simple but most laws aren't. I've met people who worked 300 days in a row. We can argue about welfare but the rejection of the sabbath concept has gone too far in America. Even the revolting French Revolutionists accepted a 10 day work week. 3, 7, 14, 21, 28 these are all acceptable numbers. The reason for multiples of 7 or less than 7 is due to government workers work on a 5 days of work and then 2 days off schedule and thus the rest of society would have to follow suit to the 7 day standard. Many of the problems of the poor can be solved through practical low impact legislation without imposing on the tax payer. — christian2017
Libertarians are noted to threaten departure from certain conservative values with violence. Now do you see what i'm saying? — christian2017
:rofl:Many libertarians (conservatives) — christian2017
Nonsense. The way you keep taxes low is keeping the government small - which is a fundamental tenant of libertarianism, not a concession a libertarian would have to make.Even a libertarian would have to understand some minor concessions would have to be made to their basic philosophy in order to keep their taxes low. Any member of a democracy or reprensentative democracy would have to accept this fact. — christian2017
I can see that being the case as the country is already pretty socially liberal. Religion is on the decline and out of our public school system, gay marriage, abortion rights, etc., but our economic freedoms are being threatened with the government overreach and expansion. It doesn't matter what party is in power either. This is why we need to either incorporate a third or more parties, or just abandon the party system altogether (I'd be more in favor of the latter). We should vote for ideas, not people or party.As for the fiscally conservative thing you are right, but that being said, i can promise you the number one issue for most libertarians in my area is fiscal conservatism. — christian2017
Even a libertarian would have to understand some minor concessions would have to be made to their basic philosophy in order to keep their taxes low. Any member of a democracy or reprensentative democracy would have to accept this fact.
— christian2017
Nonsense. The way you keep taxes low is keeping the government small - which is a fundamental tenant of libertarianism, not a concession a libertarian would have to make. — Harry Hindu
Some attribute the concept of the Sabbath or Blue laws as religious and in accordance with denying the notion of separation of church and state. — christian2017
Yeah. I don't know if you agree with the following but there is a difference between having a day off after 8 days and the next week or so working 14 days in a row. Having a set schedule (every 10 days as you said) is important for the psychology of a person. Being at the whim of all of your employers in terms of days off really messes with a poor person's emotional health. Government workers get saturday and sundays off every week, i'm not sure why a poor person can't consistently get every 10th day off. I like to do it in multiples of 7 because (14, 21, 28) it would be less cumbersome considering that is what government workers are on (7 days).
Perhaps this is what you were getting at. I just wanted to clarify the need for consistency. — christian2017
Sure. Majority rule, right?Nonsense, In any democracy or representative government all citizens are going to be somewhat effected by other people in the society. I'm not sure how you can argue with this. Do you know how democracy works? — christian2017
Sure, libertarians can see the benefit in supporting our infrastructure that enables more economic freedom. You seem to be confusing libertarians with anarchists. Libertarians are for limited government, not no government, and I don't know how you came to the idea that I assume poor people are lazy from anything that I have said. You must be getting this stuff from some authoritarian socialist handbook, or something. People can be poor for various reasons and support nets are fine, but need to be more strictly monitored.Believe it or not roads mainly help people who cars, but that being said roads should still be paid for by the government. Im not sure there is any point in argueing with you because you seem content with just assuming the poor are just lazy. Politicians can come up with creative ideas without imposing on the tax payer — christian2017
...unnecessarily so.Most laws (even laws that don't impose on the tax payer) are complicated... — christian2017
Why does the government need to step in when there are so many other options? Why is the answer to all social problems more government? Can you provide an example of a worker being uncomfortable at work? I don't understand what you mean - making the worker "comfortable". Should the company hire massage therapists for the workers? You know that the price of the goods or service you purchase from that company would go up, right? What is the problem and what is your proposed solution?if there is a way to increase comfort of a worker without imposing on the tax payer then that is what the government should do. Modern governments are going to be somewhat complicated whether people want to accept it or not. We shouldn't just assume everything has to be so simple. Simplistic thought very often leads to stupid decisions. Or we can just continue to assume the poor have a bad work ethic. Globalism, international investors and automation have had a very negative effect on the lives of Americans. — christian2017
I feel that local communities should be deciding how their land is used for the local community.How do you feel about restrictive zoning laws? Feel free to ignore my other posts for various reasons. — christian2017
How do you feel about restrictive zoning laws? Feel free to ignore my other posts for various reasons.
— christian2017
I feel that local communities should be deciding how their land is used for the local community. — Harry Hindu
Nonsense, In any democracy or representative government all citizens are going to be somewhat effected by other people in the society. I'm not sure how you can argue with this. Do you know how democracy works?
— christian2017
Sure. Majority rule, right? — Harry Hindu
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