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What things determine what political ideology you believe in
Is it your parents and family that have the biggest influence?
Is it your education and how teachers present certain info? Is it your socio-economic standing either growing up or currently? Does the media and who you feel you can trust to tell you what is really going on influence people? Do your friends or religion impact your feelings on issues? Could anonymous people on the Internet change your mind, or make it easier to find more people that agree with you? Is it a few life experiences either positive or negative that change how you think government should be run? Is it your interactions and feelings towards other people that make you think they should be responsible for themselves or should get helped out? And the big question, do you think the DNC and GOP (in the USA) know this info and are implementing policy to try and get more voters? I thought of this question while listening to someone talk about charter schools and why public schools that had unions weren't as good in America as the charter school model. Now that is a debate for another thread, but I felt if they were trying to convince me, why wouldn't they try and convince the kids that are going to the charter school that they are better than the public school kids. It appears that once people define who they are, it takes a lot to change that. They listen and watch news reporting that re-enforces their beliefs, they make friends easier with people who share their beliefs, and they don't want to be wrong. For me, even though I was 5 or 6, I knew my parents and grandparents didn't like Reagan. They had pictures of Kennedy still. My Dad was neutral and kpt his politics to himself, but I would say he is a Bill O'Reilly kind of guy on the middle-right, but left on some issues. I've had friends with various views on all the issues, but I usually keep my views to myself. I don't feel like I fit in with any one political party. I look like a republican, live like a green, and feel that the democrats have the right ideas for running the government. I still listen to multiple news sources, but I think some of them are trying to warp the news to what they think their viewers want to hear instead of the simple truth. They have too many people with lots of opinions instead of facts on what is actually happening. But as I get older, I feel stronger about what I think is the right direction for this country to go in. However if I had a business, or had a trust fund, I may feel differently. |
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As for friends, I do have discussions about politics, religion, and philosophy, but I don't have any undue sway over my friends nor them me. In other words, they don't impact my feelings on issues so much as information they convey. Quote:
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I don't think any one thing can possibly account for why anyone sees the world as they do. It can only be a combination of life-long experience. Though I would suggest that at different parts of your life different elements can have a stronger influence (depending on your circumstances). For example, a child can be hugely influenced by their parents or other important adults (teachers, religious leaders, etc.).
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Grew up with parents who voted Republican (though mostly out of habit, I think. They weren't super religious or socially conservative).
I identified as conservative in high school, but moving from small town PA to Chicago for college opened my eyes to many different kinds of people and situations that skewed me more liberal. I'm not a text book liberal/democrat, though many here (and on other boards) like to paint me that way. |
eyes, ears, brain. it's pretty simple, really.
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^ Yeah, what she said.
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^^ Olberman? Don't you mean Colbert Report?
Socio economic status. Need more be said? |
i dont think this is a straightforward matter at all.
take for example the first parameter in the op--parents. think about the number of ways in which "influence" can be defined. think about the range of reactions that such influence can engender. think about the many ways in which a response which begins, say, as a reaction against can modulate over time. where does the notion of "the world" that people have come from? what conditions the sense of "fit" that might obtain between that sense/those senses (because they are not necessarily internally consistent) of "the world" and political statements? (and what is a political statement? is it normative? descriptive? is there a difference? what is it?) what makes you think that socio-economic situation is some kind of objectivity? situation in relation to what? do you imagine socio-economic situation is measurable by, say, income level taken in isolation? on what possible basis? does that mean income level is not relevant? on what possible basis? it just gets worse. thinking about this tho. maybe something will occur to me. or someone else, really. |
On the lighter side.
Its simple...ask yourself one question....is there a rep for that? Do you want to belong to a party with these reps? |
The GOP has issued a survey to ask what you think about important issues in the country.
I promise, the questions aren't slanted or biased in any way whatsoever. RNC | 2009 REPUBLICAN PARTY CENSUS DOCUMENT Yep, totally objective. |
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BTW, love the motorboating avatar. |
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