Ann Salisbury sends me a link to a list of questions by Dennis Prager designed to help you decide if you’re a liberal or not. The questions are definitely of the “Have you stopped beating your wife?” class; a few examples:
1. Standards for admissions to universities, fire departments, etc. should be lowered for people of color.
8. It is good that trial lawyers and teachers unions are the two biggest contributors to the Democratic Party.
9. Marriage should be redefined from male-female to any two people.
…you get the flavor.
My first response on reading it was to suggest a mirror-image ‘conservative’ test, equally BS-laden, that involved ‘maintaining Jim Crow, supporting corporate looting, pollution‘, etc. but that seemed cheap even for me.
And it occurred to me at Brian Linse’s party – when Howard Owens busted me yet again for agreeing with him on so damn many issues – that I ought to set out some foundational issues that I believe define me as a liberal.It’s actually pretty easy.
If you like the clean(er) air and water in our urban areas, thank a liberal.
If you like the idea that Condi Rice is the NSC advisor rather than an instructor at a segregated secretarial school, thank a liberal.
If you like the Internet, thank a liberal (DARPANet was created in no small part thanks to a government research grant).
If someone you know or love survived an auto accident recently, thank a liberal. (Seat belts, safety glass, crush zones, air bags – yes, I know that air bags and seat belts have killed some people, but all the stats I’ve seen are pretty suggestive that they have saved far more than they have killed – etc. etc.)
If you were able to own your own house without paying down 30% to get a 5-year mortgage, thank a liberal (30-year mortgages were a FDR innovation).
If you worked an industrial job for thirty years without being disabled, thank a liberal.
I certainly don’t believe that all regulation is good, that forms of regulation that were designed fifty years ago are the best we can do today, or necessarily that being pro-relgulation is necessarily what defines a liberal (conservatives seem to have no quams trying to regulate what we do in our bedrooms and what we can watch, read, and listen to). But there are some clear benefits to the ‘liberal regime’ and while we do need to change the bathwater, I’d like to keep the baby, if that’s OK with you.
There are probably some more…I’d love to get some suggestions. Maybe I can try and come up with something useful on this…