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Your view of your own political leanings (1 Viewer)

my political leanings as.

  • Left wing radical

    Votes: 12 11.9%
  • Moderate liberal

    Votes: 54 53.5%
  • Moderate conservatives

    Votes: 34 33.7%
  • Right wing radical

    Votes: 1 1.0%

  • Total voters
    101
I think you are over simplifying it. It’s not just saying left or right but creating some buckets within those groups. 


I think they're trying to over simplify it asking things irrelevant to the stated goal of what they're trying to discern. I was surprised at how terrible the poll was. I previously held a much higher opinion of Pew. 

 
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I think they're trying to over simplify it asking things irrelevant to the stated goal of what they're trying to discern. I was surprised at how terrible the poll was. I previously held a much higher opinion of Pew. 
Then why does the idea of America’s place in the world keep coming up on this board with rather predictable sides taken by certain posters who we know lean strongly in certain directions?  You don’t think there is a connection between the level of patriotism/American exceptionalism and political leanings? 

 
Then why does the idea of America’s place in the world keep coming up on this board with rather predictable sides taken by certain posters who we know lean strongly in certain directions?  You don’t think there is a connection between the level of patriotism/American exceptionalism and political leanings? 


I think the "Liberals think America Sucks" and "Conservatives think America is Exceptional" is inaccurate and lazy. :shrug:  

 
We all hate generalizations because somebody is getting unfairly painted with someone else's views.

For whatever it's worth, here explains how different groups answered that one.

Stark differences among typology groups on U.S. global standing. When asked whether the U.S. is superior to all other countries, it is among the greatest countries, or there are other countries that are better, there is relative agreement across six of nine typology groups: About half or more in this very ideologically mixed set of groups – including Establishment Liberals and Populist Right – say the U.S. is among the greatest countries in the world. Faith and Flag Conservatives are the only group in which a majority (69%) says the U.S. stands above all other countries. Conversely, Progressive Left (75%) and Outsider Left (63%) are the only typology groups in which majorities say there are other countries better than the U.S.

 
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I think they're trying to over simplify it asking things irrelevant to the stated goal of what they're trying to discern. I was surprised at how terrible the poll was. I previously held a much higher opinion of Pew. 
Of those that stated their results, are there any that you think are really wrong?   I don't see any that look out of line.  "Ambivalent Right" would be my pick for about half the posters here, and about half of those would say they are center left and most would be called far left by a few here.   

When taking the survey ("Democratic Mainstays") I thought the questions were a bit funny, but my results and those that I have read seem pretty close to me. :shrug:    

 
:hifive:

A lot of the responses here are going to shatter some perceptions of vocal board residents :lol:

By the way....I HATE questions like this:

Because you know the subject of cyber security inside and out doesn't mean you are equipped to write effective policy around it :wall:  
Then vote accordingly....

 
By the way....I HATE questions like this: :lol:

Because you know the subject of cyber security inside and out doesn't mean you are equipped to write effective policy around it :wall:  
This is pointless conversation. You're just responding without actually answering the question.

Let's ask you this then...

Who IS best equipped to write effective policy around cybersecurity?

 
Of those that stated their results, are there any that you think are really wrong?   I don't see any that look out of line.  "Ambivalent Right" would be my pick for about half the posters here, and about half of those would say they are center left and most would be called far left by a few here.   

When taking the survey ("Democratic Mainstays") I thought the questions were a bit funny, but my results and those that I have read seem pretty close to me. :shrug:    
As I mentioned earlier, I think it painted me more liberal than I am. I'm not happy with the Biden admin and I don't agree with liberals on a lot of economic (and now social) policies. 

 
This is pointless conversation. You're just responding without actually answering the question.

Let's ask you this then...

Who IS best equipped to write effective policy around cybersecurity?
I feel like the roll of experts is to advise elected/appointed leaders who should then set policy based upon the advice received and their judgment. In theory.

 
I feel like the roll of experts is to advise elected/appointed leaders who should then set policy based upon the advice received and their judgment. In theory.
I guess this depends on how precisely our language is.  Are "Policies statements that define the framework for decision making? Consisting of the limits and obligations that have to be considered while making effective decisions?"   Generally speaking, this would be legislation created by elected officials.   

Then the experts in the various administrative departments turn those policies into rules and regulations and procedures "that define the exact way in which a certain activity is to be performed. "    

Or is all of that "policy"?

 
I guess this depends on how precisely our language is.  Are "Policies statements that define the framework for decision making? Consisting of the limits and obligations that have to be considered while making effective decisions?"   Generally speaking, this would be legislation created by elected officials.   

Then the experts in the various administrative departments turn those policies into rules and regulations and procedures "that define the exact way in which a certain activity is to be performed. "    

Or is all of that "policy"?
I'm just riffing on a Friday night, but I'll  buy what you are suggesting in that a lot of what is meant by policy is something that should percolate up from the legislative branch, but I was speaking more informally that people who create policy and make decisions (legislators and executives) should be well-informed by experts, and clearly there is a path for advisors to crossover from advisor to advisee (in case that needs to be said).

Hello, I was told there would be pie.

 
That's why there are 15 other questions, I guess.
and there’s multiple types of liberals and conservatives. It seems naive to pretend there isn’t a piece of the conservative movement that is extremely patriotic to a possible fault and that there’s also a piece of the liberal movement that is extremely unpatriotic to a fault. I think isn’t determining whether you are conservative or liberal but more so being used to determine which bucket you fall into based on the other questions. Really it’s just comparing how you answer to how 10,000 other people answered and then giving you the group your answers more coincided with. Perhaps Joe disagrees with the actual groups themselves? 

 
I'm just riffing on a Friday night, but I'll  buy what you are suggesting in that a lot of what is meant by policy is something that should percolate up from the legislative branch, but I was speaking more informally that people who create policy and make decisions (legislators and executives) should be well-informed by experts, and clearly there is a path for advisors to crossover from advisor to advisee (in case that needs to be said).

Hello, I was told there would be pie.
What I thought is that 90% of those that answered this were mixing it all together at which point the experts are the best to create policy.  That is how I figured this was meant.  But as someone that occasionally gets dragged into Policy and Procedures meeting (where 50% of the discussion isn't the topic at hand but what is policy, what is procedure) the experts advise elected officials answer you gave would have been better, but I figured that is not how the masses answered.   Then again maybe the point of the question is to separate who knows the difference and that helps bucket you.  

Yep it is Friday.  I think I am confusing myself with that paragraph.

Oh, and slide some of that pie over here.

 
As I mentioned earlier, I think it painted me more liberal than I am. I'm not happy with the Biden admin and I don't agree with liberals on a lot of economic (and now social) policies. 
It’s certainly not a perfect tool but it’s probably more accurate than someone just self identifying. I think self identifying is part of out problem right now. Many pick the side they think they should be on based on their social circle or some other sense. People are tossing whole massive swaths of the country into the most extreme versions of that ideology. I thought this was helpful for people to see the complexity of the community and where there is right-left overlap in some surprising spots.

 
Just remembered I was all-in on the Jim Webb presidential campaign train back in 2015/16. I love this guy and I think my opinion of him articulates my political inclination perfectly and succinctly.

 
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It’s certainly not a perfect tool but it’s probably more accurate than someone just self identifying. I think self identifying is part of out problem right now. Many pick the side they think they should be on based on their social circle or some other sense. People are tossing whole massive swaths of the country into the most extreme versions of that ideology. I thought this was helpful for people to see the complexity of the community and where there is right-left overlap in some surprising spots.
I'm not as negative on it as others, and the Establishment Liberal label is fine for me (rated myself moderate liberal). I think I'm just an outlier in that 'bucket' since it's defined as "holds liberal views on nearly all issues" and I "approve of the job Biden is doing". Those are two big whiffs. 

Of course, it's only 16 questions so we shouldn't expect pinpoint accuracy even if each question is well crafted. I appreciate you posting it. 

 
This is pointless conversation. You're just responding without actually answering the question.

Let's ask you this then...

Who IS best equipped to write effective policy around cybersecurity?
Policy should be written by policy writers in heavy collaboration with experts in the field from a multitude of perspectives.  Today, if we're lucky policy makers write policy based on the lobby giving them the most money.  Hopefully that lobby has some expertise, but it's likely NOT going to be a multitude of perspectives.

No idea what the bold means....we weren't having a conversation.

 
It’s certainly not a perfect tool but it’s probably more accurate than someone just self identifying. I think self identifying is part of out problem right now. Many pick the side they think they should be on based on their social circle or some other sense. People are tossing whole massive swaths of the country into the most extreme versions of that ideology. I thought this was helpful for people to see the complexity of the community and where there is right-left overlap in some surprising spots.
I thought the tool was fine....that one question is the only one that bothered me.  I understood the point of the others.  And to be honest, that question caught my eye because this is one of the things I have identified as a critical problem in our policy making process in this country....the people writing the policy.  It's something I've gone on and on about on the pages of this board for years.  Our policy makers aren't as bright as they want to think they are and it shows time and time again in the product they produce whether it be things not thought through completely or things skewed to industry instead of the people.

 
I think the "Liberals think America Sucks" and "Conservatives think America is Exceptional" is inaccurate and lazy. :shrug:  


Totally.    Most of my family are what I would call liberal but not hard line left.  

My aunt who has never voted GOP flies the USA flag proudly every day and has actually been harassed by some of her neighbors. Bizarre times.

 
and there’s multiple types of liberals and conservatives. It seems naive to pretend there isn’t a piece of the conservative movement that is extremely patriotic to a possible fault and that there’s also a piece of the liberal movement that is extremely unpatriotic to a fault. I think isn’t determining whether you are conservative or liberal but more so being used to determine which bucket you fall into based on the other questions. Really it’s just comparing how you answer to how 10,000 other people answered and then giving you the group your answers more coincided with. Perhaps Joe disagrees with the actual groups themselves? 


I'm talking about the question:

Which of these statements best describes your opinion about the United States?

The U.S. stands above all other countries in the world

The U.S. is one of the greatest countries in the world, along with some others

There are other countries that are better than the U.S.


I'm not sure that's the same as being what you wrote above as "patriotic" or "unpatriotic".

I'm sorry too as I didn't realize you were the one that posted the poll. I didn't mean to be rude saying I thought the poll was terrible. I just thought the questions were exceptionally poor (like this one) for trying to answer the question it was asking. And some of the definitions borderline ridiculous like  "holds liberal views on nearly all issues" and I "approve of the job Biden is doing" as @Captain Cranks mentioned above.

Mostly, I find it fascinating as the poll plays into our human need to label and put everyone in a box. Which I hate. But still thought it was super interesting. 

 
Joe Bryant said:
I'm talking about the question:

I'm not sure that's the same as being what you wrote above as "patriotic" or "unpatriotic".
That is the question I was referring to as well. It's something that gets argued on this message board all the time. I don't get the issue there. It is not a test of whether one is liberal or conservative. Most groups across the board answer the question in the same way. 

 When asked whether the U.S. is superior to all other countries, it is among the greatest countries, or there are other countries that are better, there is relative agreement across six of nine typology groups: About half or more in this very ideologically mixed set of groups – including Establishment Liberals and Populist Right – say the U.S. is among the greatest countries in the world. Faith and Flag Conservatives are the only group in which a majority (69%) says the U.S. stands above all other countries. Conversely, Progressive Left (75%) and Outsider Left (63%) are the only typology groups in which majorities say there are other countries better than the U.S.

Joe Bryant said:
I'm sorry too as I didn't realize you were the one that posted the poll. I didn't mean to be rude saying I thought the poll was terrible. I just thought the questions were exceptionally poor (like this one) for trying to answer the question it was asking. And some of the definitions borderline ridiculous like  "holds liberal views on nearly all issues" and I "approve of the job Biden is doing" as @Captain Cranks mentioned above.

Mostly, I find it fascinating as the poll plays into our human need to label and put everyone in a box. Which I hate. But still thought it was super interesting. 
I didn't take any personal offense. You can not like the results but it's just a collection of data based on statistical analysis of thousands of voters. It doesn't mean everyone in those boxes will feel exactly that way. It just shows which types of people you are likely to have the most agreement with. It is putting one into a range of voters that they likely have a lot in common with. It's no different than using data to model predictions for fantasy football. Sure some of the predictions will be wrong but it's an attempt to find the most likely outcomes based on similarities among a large sample. We will always have those Arian Foster types that just don't make sense. We will always have some people with unique and totally unpredictable political views. Somewhere there is probably an older white woman in Texas who votes Republican, is deeply religious, anti-abortion, pro-gun but who thinks Joe Biden is actually doing a fine job. It defies all probability but like you said, labels don't work perfectly. 

As for why I thought this was more interesting and helpful is that it opened up more boxes/labels instead of just saying left, right, moderate. It gave far more context, showed that many groups on opposite sides actually share some opinions. It also shows we should be careful judging "the other side" because that other side is very diverse. We can also have conservatives who vote Democrat, Democrats who aren't actually that liberal on many social issues, etc.  As for why put labels on people at all? That is what one has to do with data. Otherwise it's just millions of random numbers and opinions, it will have little value or ability for us to understand the political make-up of the nation. 

 
I have always identified as fiscally conservative and socially moderate-to-liberal. Pretty much always voted  republican until 2016. 

Voted moderately liberal because I will never vote Republican again until this current version of trumpism/magaism is gone.

 
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That is the question I was referring to as well. It's something that gets argued on this message board all the time. I don't get the issue there.


Thanks. We just differ then on how we see "patriotic".

And it's no problem, we can disagree there. 

 
As for why I thought this was more interesting and helpful is that it opened up more boxes/labels instead of just saying left, right, moderate. 


It created a few more boxes. Then put people in them in a smaller box. And gave sweeping (and in my opinion goofy) descriptions of the small boxes like "holds liberal views on nearly all issues" and I "approve of the job Biden is doing".

Again, I get why people love that stuff and I don't mean to be so critical of the poll you suggested. 

But I, 

1) Generally hate the putting people in boxes and labels thing. Especially small boxes.

2) Think this one did a particularly bad job in how they did the thing I already don't like. ;)  

 
Zero right wing radicals. Interesting.

I put left wing radical for myself, but would really need another tier between that and moderate liberal to accurately describe myself.

 
I termed myself moderate liberal because I wanted to stray from the word 'radical', but that Pew Research poll probably correctly pegged me as 'Progressive Left'.  Pretty accurate, although the Biden  and democrat love are definitely something I'm not on board with. I actually was registered as Independent from my military time until retiring in Florida in 2002. But since then, lots of personal experiences down here have pushed me way left, although I still didn't change from independent until Bernie Sanders went against Hillary to oppose Trump.

  I've actually bled for my country (Khobar Towers) so I feel I can be patriotic and love it, but still recognize that countries like Sweden/Norway/England/Netherlands have been dream assignments for me.  Thus I can 'beef' about the US being WAY behind on some systemic/cultural issues that concern people that look like me.

  I grew up in a military and law enforcement family from Philly so that colors my perspective immensely.  Having been taught how to interact in certain situations has been ingrained since before I hit 10 years old.  That knowledge has kept me out of countless negative or potentially dangerous situations, but I can tell you that there have been dozens of other unavoidable ones that did not occur in those other countries.  And it wasn't merely because I was a member of the military.  I think Democrats always bring knives to a gun fight and just assume that African Americans will vote their way.  The majority of the current Republican party scares me and my family to no end. Although I may disagree with their general policies, Liz and Kinzinger have at least shown me some integrity and commitment to the greater good that I remember from my active duty days.

 
I feel like Elon Musk in reverse.  Hard to answer these type polls when you've voted libertarian more often than D or R at the top of the ticket.

 
I feel like Elon Musk in reverse.  Hard to answer these type polls when you've voted libertarian more often than D or R at the top of the ticket.
Yeah the traditional left-center-right specturm is really inaccurate and not that helpful IMO. However, if we are assuming that is what's used for this poll, I would say a libertarian falls under right wing radical given the options here.

 

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