• Ech
    link
    fedilink
    English
    57 months ago

    Yes, you did.

    basically liberal comes from neoliberal

    The word neoliberal comes from the word liberal, not the other way around. A small hint is the prefix “neo” (meaning “new” or “modified”) attached to the word “liberal”, which already existed.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        4
        edit-2
        7 months ago

        No. What YOU guys (non Americans) call liberals are essentially neoliberals.

        Liberals in America are a very different political ideology than in Europe. Liberals in America believe in strong regulation, powerful government, and broad freedoms for individuals while increasing both taxation and government services. They want to rein in free-market capitalism.

        Trolls on lemmy LOVE to exploit he nearly opposite meanings of the terms to try to convince low-info people like you that the bad guys and the good guys are actually the same.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          4
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          you described something your country have been trying and failing at for decades now, you guys love to grandstand about this but when push comes to shove, you are called liberals for a reason.

          one example: you are literally the only first world country without fair healthcare. ask yourself why you cant reign in private companies strangling it.

          and the “rest of the world disagrees therefore you are all trolls” must be a troll in and of itself, because i cant believe it.

          please don’t be mad at me. be mad at your representatives or something.

            • archomrade [he/him]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              27 months ago

              You keep insisting they are ‘generally opposite things’ but then identifying all the parts that overlap

              It’s not my fault your definitions are logically inconsistent, and I find it wild that you feel so strongly about protecting that label when there are others that seem fit you better.

              You keep popping up in political discussions here but then complain when people use academic language to describe political labels. There’s nothing more frustrating with a politically-obsessed user who refuses to engage with the topic on a level higher than ‘that’s just how it is in my experience’.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                17 months ago

                I don’t entertain bad faith discussions unless I think it’ll be funny. And switching back and forth between an academic definition and a layperson one, when the two definitions are wildly different, is bad faith.

                You see it with a lot of - isms.

                For example, how does feminism view few high rate of male suicides?

                Academic feminists: “this is obviously a crisis triggered in part by toxic masculinity but also a lot of environmental factors. We need to do more to support men and boys, to allow them to express their emotions in a healthy way.”

                Everyday feminists: “I’m not your therapist, sort your own shit out.”

                Saying that “feminism” cares about male suicides is bad faith. It’s not technically completely untrue, but it’s intentionally misleading.

                Christian theologians: “you should love your neighbor, even the sinners. You should be compassionate and understanding, and win them over to the grace of the Lord by being a beacon of morality and by helping them in their time of need.”

                Everyday Christians: “kill the removeds”

                Saying that Christians care about queer lives is bad faith.

                Etc etc

                So, I’ll always call out people who try to use academic definitions as a smokescreen.

                • archomrade [he/him]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  17 months ago

                  … I don’t think you’re making the point you think you are with those examples.

                  And switching back and forth between an academic definition and a layperson one, when the two definitions are wildly different, is bad faith.

                  You do realize that the core of the critique of ‘classical’ liberalism is the same being directed at ‘american’ liberalism, right? The enshrinement of property as an individual right is what’s being castigated with the comparison. If you find that to be an unflattering one, maybe you should ask yourself why it is american liberals are so careful not to step on private ownership in their pursuit of ‘improving the common good’.

                  • @[email protected]
                    link
                    fedilink
                    17 months ago

                    The enshrinement of property as an individual right is what’s being castigated with the comparison.

                    That’s what I mean about switching back and forth. No, it’s not. The great mass of uninformed idiots on lemmy does not know or understand economic theory beyond slogans.

                    People care about social issues far and away more than economic theory. Yes, there is overlap. But your average person just thinks “my life is bad and I want it to not be bad”, the end.

                    It’s similar to the right wing bigot pretending he has to vote for the fascists because they’re fiscally responsible. No, fuck you, that’s just cover.

                    Trolls on lemmy don’t give a fuck about private property ownership any more than the bigot cares about fiscal responsibility (honestly, I think you personally might, because you’re a True Believer, you poor bastard). Trolls on lemmy care about tearing down the system and will use any argument they can to further that goal.

      • Ech
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        7 months ago

        Your opinion doesn’t change how words work or where they came from.

          • Ech
            link
            fedilink
            English
            37 months ago

            You literally were. And there is a need to be “pedantic” when what was written was so wrong and problematic.

            If it was so different from what you meant as you claim, you could’ve edited it at any point here. But you haven’t done that, so it seems to be something you’re ok with saying even if it’s “not what you meant”.