ScottSD said:
Based on some of the comments made on here, it looks like the liberals/progressives think that conservatives don't care for the down trodden. You know, because they typically don't want big government social programs.
Everyone, is what you think?
Can anyone remember (I can't) the title of the thread we had, oh, sometime over the summer I think (?), in which this particular issue was pretty thoroughly explored? I want to refer you to that thread Scott, I just can't remember which it IS, sorry
But the upshot was something like this:
Conservatives kept exclaiming that it was terrible that gov't programs were floating people who should be swimming for themselves, so to speak.
Liberals (I hate using these broad categories, b/c there really are a lot of *important* differences that these two terms obscure and blur, but I hope I can be forgiven for summarizing the thread in these terms) kept exclaiming that there are lots of people who through no fault of their own, *can't* swim, either permanently or just at the moment, and genuinely deserve help.
We all nattered back and forth at each other somewhat inconclusively for, like, I dunno, twenty-some pages

and then it seemed to become clear that the real situation is more like:
BOTH Conservatives AND Liberals agree there is a lot of poor 'filtering' of the recipients of gov't aid, and that many people recieve it who oughtn't, and that this is a real problem that should be more vigorously addressed.
BOTH Conservatives AND Liberals agree that there are some folks out there who genuinely need and deserve gov't programs to help them out in some particular ways, and that it is GOOD to have such gov't assistance.
The disagreement on the thread seemed to be on just two main things:
1) A difference in emphasis. Conservatives spend lots of time
talking about the unfairness of some people gettin' things they don't need, whereas liberals spend lots of time
talking about the unfairness of some people needing (genuinely) things and being left in the lurch by gaps in private aid and gov't programs.
2) A difference in how half-full or half-empty you see the glass, in terms of whether gov't programs are laudably performing a valuable role for many people even tho yes, regrettably there are also some cheaters, or whether gov't programs may help a few who genuinely need it but are *mostly* just supporting parasites.
Based on that thread (and to an extent others), it seems to me that there really is not much disagreement in *principle* between the two sides, it is basically a (partly legitimate, and partly based-on-gut-feeling-not-actual-data) disagreement over the IMPLEMENTATION of ideas.
(edited to add: to answer the original question more directly, Scott, speaking as a non-conservative [but not really a liberal either, call me an independant thinker], in that thread I'm mentioning and in other previous ones here and on other forums, it sure did seem VERY MUCH to me that conservatives WERE saying that it was fine to throw the baby out with the bathwater, and that the gov't had no real obligation to help the needy. Truthfully, this IS what it sounded like. I found that thread quite enlightening, because once the conservative contingent was finally CLEAR (sound familiar?) on what aspects of these programs they were for and against -- once someone finally *articulated* that they do favor the gov't helping out those who *genuinely* need it -- the whole thing looked quite different in a retrospective light. So now, while I still think that some, not all, conservatives are sometimes, not always, underestimating the number and seriousness of people out there who truly deserve a bit of help, I at least now DO think that most conservatives here DO "care for the downtrodden" to a reasonable degree)
JMHO,
Pat