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When Fred Met Tim: Evaluating Thompson on Meet The Press
The National Review ^ | Sunday, November 04, 2007 | Jim Geraghty

Posted on 11/04/2007 6:37:35 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

I had said Fred Thompson could do him a lot of good if he passed “the Russert primary” with flying colors.

His campaign had been dismissing the Washington press corps, and implicitly running against the media, refusing to do the things candidates traditionally do (enter early, do five events a day, appear at the New Hampshire debate instead of the Tonight Show). But every once in a while a Washington media institution really does matter, and Meet the Press is one of them. Simply because Tim Russert, without commercial interruption, will throw hardballs and curveballs for a solid half hour, and standard delaying tactics won’t work. Also, his research staff can find every awkward quote from 1974 that every candidate dreads. Generally, a candidate who can handle Meet the Press well can handle just about any other live interview.

This morning I had caught a brief snippet – his discussion of Iraq - and thought he was striking out. I thought the reference to “generals we respect” was so odd, I wondered if he had forgotten David Petraeus’s name.

Having just watched it on the DVR, I thought it was a very, very solid performance. Ground rule double.

My initial shallow thought was that Thompson still looks a bit on the gaunt side. Then, during the interview:

“You’ve lost a lot of weight. Is it health related?”

“Coming from you, Tim, I’ll take that as a compliment.” Ouch. Thompson says no, it’s not health related, it’s just that his wife has him on a diet to watch his cholesterol. He says he had additional tests for his Lymphoma in September and was the results were all clear.

Every once in a while Thompson slipped up - I think he suggested that oil was selling at “nah-eight hundred dollars a barrel”, and I’m wary of his quoted statistic that car bombs in Iraq are down 80 percent – but overall, Thompson was measured, modest, serious, and completely at ease. After a couple of debates, it’s odd to watch a man not trying to squeeze his talking points into an answer, and instead speaking in paragraphs, conversational and informed.

Jen Rubin wrote, “He does not answer questions linearly with a direct answer to the question but rather talks about the subject matter. Some find this thoughtful and other think he is vamping and unfocused.” His talk on Iran was a perfect example, in that Thompson’s position isn’t terribly different from the rest of the field – he doesn’t want to use force, but he’ll keep that option open - but as he talks at length about the risks and benefits and factors that would go into a military strike, the audience, I think, will feel reassuring that if Thompson needs to face that decision, he will have weighed each option carefully.

That voice is fatherly, reassuring, calm. The contrast to Hillary couldn’t be sharper.

I’m going to say ‘well-briefed,’ but I know that will just spur one of the Thompson Associates to call me to tell me that’s not a sign of others briefing him, that’s a sign of Thompson’s own reading and study of the issues.

I was about to say that he was almost too conversational, that he could have used one quip or pithy summation at his views, and then, finally, at the tail end of his question on Schiavo, he summed up, “the less government, the better.”

I’m hearing that David Brody listened to the section on abortion and Thompson’s expression of federalism in this area, and has concluded, “all he needs now is to buy the gun that shoots him in the foot.” Look, if Fred Thompson isn’t pro-life enough for social conservatives, then nobody short of Mike Huckabee is. If Huckabee gets the nomination, great, I’d love to see Hillary Clinton go up against the Republican mirror-image of her husband’s rhetorical skills. But it feels like the past few months have been an escalating series of vetoes from various factions within the GOP. I’ve seen more amiable compromises on the United Nations Security Council.

Let me lay it out for every Republican primary voter. You support the guy you want, you rally for him, you write some checks, you vote in the primaries… and maybe your guy wins, maybe he loses. If the guy who beats your guy is half a loaf, you shrug your shoulders, hope your guy is his running mate, and get ready for the general. Life goes on.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections; US: Alabama; US: Tennessee; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abortion; election; electionpresident; elections; fred; fredthompson; gop; religiousright; republicans; thompson; valuesvoters; wot
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To: SuziQ

I never said to throw women in jail...but obviously it needs to be criminalized. I aggree, doctors should go to jail long term for committing abortions...I think for life.


321 posted on 11/05/2007 10:34:30 PM PST by fabian
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To: SuziQ
The man is consistent...for all the smack-talk about him on abbortion his voting record speaks for itself.


Could use some FReeper help here:
Need Some FReeper Help
322 posted on 11/05/2007 10:59:21 PM PST by FlashBack (Need Some FReep Help: Vote for Gene Hinders at www.racingjunk.com Oct.15-Nov.15 2007)
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To: John Valentine
I may have you at an extreme disadvantage. I have seen, up close and personal, Hunter, Thompson, McCain, Romney, Giuliani, and Huckabee. Of this group, Hunter and Thompson, fine men and good conservatives, lack the energy and enthusiasm to compete in a national campaign. I do not like this any more than you do. I hate losing more. If you want another Bob Dole situation, pick Hunter or Thompson. If they should win the nomination, only a Herculean effort by a united Republican Party will win the election.

Their campaigns depend on a divided party to win the nomination. On the other hand, Mitt Romney has the policies, charisma, a track record of winning in a liberal state and the money to win. His run for the nomination emphasizes strength and unity. After winning the nomination, ne has promised to run a Presidential campaign in every state, ceding nothing to the Democrats, they will have to defend a broad front.
NO other candidate has done this.

323 posted on 11/06/2007 3:25:48 AM PST by mission9 (Be a citizen worth living for, in a Nation worth dying for...)
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To: mission9

I can’t imagine a scenario where Mitt Romney wins the general election. They guy is completely off-putting in his mannerisms and in his speech. To say nothing of his baggage.

I suppose with a slick enough ad campaign that creates a synthetic “Mitt Romney - presidential candidate” might garner some votes, where will the enthusiasm come from?

He just doesn’t generate any with anyone I know.


324 posted on 11/06/2007 4:02:10 AM PST by John Valentine
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To: John Valentine

It is odd to me that we share the same view on Romney. I try to work up an enthusiasm for him but he just falls flat on me. And it isn’t his Mormonism. Something about hhim actually repels me. His manner is robotic or without some essential warmth. He comes across as a used car salesman with bad hair.

I wish I liked him because he was by all accounts a good governor. But I cannot see him in the WH.


325 posted on 11/06/2007 4:17:37 AM PST by cajungirl (no)
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To: fabian

Soooo,,your contention is FRd is having to much sex and it makes him weak on pro life issues??

I am speechless, really.


326 posted on 11/06/2007 4:18:42 AM PST by cajungirl (no)
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To: cajungirl
It is odd to me that we share the same view on Romney.

Why do you find that odd? I find it odd that he has supporters.

327 posted on 11/06/2007 4:32:05 AM PST by John Valentine
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To: John Valentine
Mitt will probably be making an appearance in your area. Take it up with him personally. I have, I find him warm and energetic. I have seen him stand on a chair to talk to a crowd. Now Fred... Well, he will make a nice grandfather, but he needs a handler to lead him off stage.
Mitt is making many more visits with voters, Fred is the youtube candidate.

Get your facts straight.

328 posted on 11/06/2007 4:36:38 AM PST by mission9 (Be a citizen worth living for, in a Nation worth dying for...)
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To: puroresu
Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. ~ from the Declaration of Independence

Man, you don't just drink the Kool-Aid. You're drunk on it.

Thomas Jefferson was writing a document that he knew would have a residual audience composed of people very much like you. You'd think that after 240 and some-odd-years that viewing the need for some government -- a very limited government -- would be acceptable. The problem is that you and people like you are accustomed to an expanding government, you're drunk on it, and cannot see a society being governed through any other lens except the one that sees the need for more of governance; it shows in your responses to me. You and people like you are the problem, in my opinion, no matter which side of the spectrum you hail from.

Excellent! Then you should have no problem with America having a Muslim majority.

If they were Muslims of the non-theocratic mold who cherished liberty and didn't seek to impose their views on others, then I would prefer them in the majority. I do not fear people for their backgrounds and ethnicities alone.

Now, your response might be, we won't let them legislate their values. In that case, you're imposing your values on them.

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. ~ from the Preamble of the United States Constitution

The Preamble was the whole purpose behind the U.S. Constitution. One of its basic tenants was to secure liberties by providing a very simple framework for establishing a limited government so that paternalists would not legislate at the federal level. I say the constitution should protect me from having legislation enacted that erodes my liberties. You say that my view is, in turn, not protecting the liberty of others to erode all liberty. Who do you suppose is most out of step with the concept of being an American, you or I?

You see the problem?

I believe I do see it. Do you see it?

Uh, it would be cheaper than foreign aid to just add Mexico, Haiti, and nearly all of Africa as states? How do you figure that? You do realize (don't you?) that if we did that, the newly admitted states would immediately vote in a socialist government in the United States.

Don't you think that we would should be very discriminate on who we admit. And don't you think that, given the framework -- a framework largely ignored because of people who think as you do -- that any state admitted would have only a certain number of representatives.

The real difference between libertarians and Marxists isn't that the former are for less government and the latter are for total government. Both advocate policies which lead to total government. The difference is that Marxism intends for that to happen, while libertarians fumble their way into it because they don't understand human nature.

Based on our dialog with each other, I'm willing to concede a little on this point. It is not because we don't understand human nature, though. We understand it alright, we just are not doing a very good job of changing the desire of mankind to enslave itself. I still think that striving for liberty -- in the face of human nature and his quest to be tightly governed -- is a worthy goal.

A society with traditional Judeo-Christian moral values will need less government on average.

This is ignorant on two fronts. First, Jesus was sent specifically to reform the Chosen People who had ruined God's Word with corrupt governance and perverted religious beliefs, so scratch the Judeo portion. And many of today's Christians spend far too much time in the Pentateuch, really, where you will find much of the source that led to the perversions. Many (but certainly not all) of today's Christians are the Pharisees of yesterday.

So you support government that doesn't intrude into "at least some matters"?

When I wrote that a government has to intrude into some matters what I meant was that some government is necessary as to protect people from causing injury to one another. When one or more people trample the liberty of another, society has to have a method adjudicate the matter. However, contracts, prearranged mediation, and pre-agreed-upon judges would also go a long way in limiting the power and influence of a judiciary.

329 posted on 11/06/2007 4:41:05 AM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: John Valentine

Well, I guess my reaction is so unlike others around here. I also find it odd that Massachusetts of all states elected him. I don’t know how he got elected.


330 posted on 11/06/2007 4:49:58 AM PST by cajungirl (no)
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To: rebel_yell2

I haven’t moved one inch.


331 posted on 11/06/2007 5:26:23 AM PST by EternalVigilance (The GOP is now being chaired by the political directors at NBCBSABCNNFOX..)
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To: mission9
...but he needs a handler to lead him off stage.

I think you are referring to an even in Florida with a confusing stage exit where Fred wasn't aware he could not exit the stage to his right, and had to recross the stage to exit to the left. If this is what you are referring to, shame on you. This could happen to anyone who was not properly briefed by the producers.

332 posted on 11/06/2007 5:35:08 AM PST by John Valentine
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To: cajungirl
I also find it odd that Massachusetts of all states elected him. I don’t know how he got elected.

Because usually, MA liberals like to keep their own money, if they can. Even though they yammer about taxing the rich, they don't think they ARE the rich. Ironic, isn't it? Mitt campaigned as a non-threatening Republican. He assured the Dems that he wasn't going to rock the pro-abortion, pro-homosexual boat, so he wasn't a threat. His opponent was an extremely vocal liberal feminist, and she just turned a lot of people off.

The main reason we have a Democrat governor again is because he was a black man running against a white Republican woman who inherited the job when Mitt left, and liberals in MA fell all over themselves to show just how tolerant and non-racist they are by voting for him. Never mind the fact that he's a complete goober, we have him now.

Fortunately, my family doesn't have to put up with him for much longer. As soon as we get our house remodeled and sold, we're outta here, and heading back home to MS!

333 posted on 11/06/2007 6:14:44 AM PST by SuziQ
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To: LowCountryJoe
:-) I appreciate your willingness to debate, and I admire your commitment to your beliefs, even if I disagree with them. I think you arrive at them out of a desire to do good, but ultimately libertarianism is fatally flawed. I've about said everything I can on this subject without repeating myself ad infinitum, so you can respond to this post if you want and have the last word.

Thomas Jefferson was writing a document that he knew would have a residual audience composed of people very much like you. You'd think that after 240 and some-odd-years that viewing the need for some government -- a very limited government -- would be acceptable. The problem is that you and people like you are accustomed to an expanding government, you're drunk on it, and cannot see a society being governed through any other lens except the one that sees the need for more of governance; it shows in your responses to me. You and people like you are the problem, in my opinion, no matter which side of the spectrum you hail from.

I don't think Thomas Jefferson would have had any problem whatsoever with my position on the issues. He would no doubt find it unfortunate that the federal government has expanded to the point that people who believe in limited government are forced to fight fire with fire to survive. But he would have found it preferable to submitting to federal supremacy. Jefferson was an intelligent man who understood that nothing in life works out precisely as intended and that political theory can only go so far. He struggled with the idea of slavery, as an obvious example. Read American Slavery, American Freedom by Edmund Morgan to see how many early Americans struggled with that issue. On the one hand, slavery obviously restricted the liberty of a large portion of the population. However, the fear was that if they were freed and given the rights of citizens, they would form a voting block that would eliminate liberty for everyone. Life is full of these paradoxes. Would we have our Bill of Rights if we had had universal suffrage in early America? Almost certainly we would not, because the people who weren't allowed to vote were the constituencies for big government. Rather than having ten amendments limiting government, we'd have had ten amendments authorizing government controls and promising handouts.

Well, we now have universal suffrage. That alone radically changes the concept of limited government, and makes it more difficult to maintain. It brings into stark reality more than ever the need for a society based on moral values, because without it, look what happens. Take a look at what's happened to blacks and women as a result of the sexual revolution of the sixties. The black family has been destroyed. There are millions of women out there with kids who have been abandoned by the father. And, by the way, the number of so-called unwanted babies actually goes up, not down, when abortion becomes legal. These constituencies vote overwhelmingly for socialist Democrat candidates. What do you propose to do? Strip them of their voting rights? Convince them to vote for limited government when they "need" big government? It's not going to work. Once you have an immoral, or even amoral, society, you're going to end up with masses of people who demand big government.

If they were Muslims of the non-theocratic mold The Preamble was the whole purpose behind the U.S. Constitution. One of its basic tenants was to secure liberties by providing a very simple framework for establishing a limited government so that paternalists would not legislate at the federal level. I say the constitution should protect me from having legislation enacted that erodes my liberties. You say that my view is, in turn, not protecting the liberty of others to erode all liberty. Who do you suppose is most out of step with the concept of being an American, you or I?

No, what your position is doing is unilaterally disarming us from doing what is necessary to stop big government from expanding. Imagine a planet so far from other planets that no one believes it's possible for them to be invaded. So they ban the military on the grounds that it's unnecessary. But one day, new technology is developed which allows far away planets to invade. Someone suggests that an army needs to be raised to repel the invaders. But the "purists" say that would violate their historical ban on having a military. The result is that the planet is conquered and all of their historical traditions are destroyed.

Libertarians do the same thing. Leftists seize powers from the states using the federal government. Conservatives say that we must go to the federal level to fight this. Libertarians then chime in and say, no, going to the federal level would violate the states' rights concepts of the Founding Fathers. The result is that leftists continue to strip authority from the states until there's nothing left.

It would be wonderful if we could leave things like same-sex "marriage" and abortion completely to the states, but we can't. The left will never stop trying to take these issues from the states unless and until we put a constitutional block in the federal constitution to stop them. And a states' rights type amendment, while doing some good, would ultimately fail because the leftists would engineer local judicial fiats in the individual states, and libertarians would join leftists in creating the very type of degenerate atmosphere that would allow those rulings to stand. In Massachusetts, for example, social liberalism has enough people dependent on government that even the elected politicians can get away with murder.

Don't you think that we would should be very discriminate on who we admit. And don't you think that, given the framework -- a framework largely ignored because of people who think as you do -- that any state admitted would have only a certain number of representatives.

Obviously I think we should be very discriminate regarding whom we admit. However, you said admitting these places would be cheaper than foreign aid. It wouldn't, of course, but why would you want to admit a country in need of foreign aid as a state in the first place? I think we're all well aware that these new states would only have "x" number of representatives sent to Congress, but that would be "x" number of additional votes for socialism, unless we admitted places like Singapore or Japan or Taiwan, but those places wouldn't want to become a part of the United States. The only place I can think of that we might be able to safely add is the Canadian province of Alberta. I'd gladly add them, and they'd probably be glad to get out of Canada since the social liberals up there are crushing them and their local rights.

Based on our dialog with each other, I'm willing to concede a little on this point. It is not because we don't understand human nature, though. We understand it alright, we just are not doing a very good job of changing the desire of mankind to enslave itself. I still think that striving for liberty -- in the face of human nature and his quest to be tightly governed -- is a worthy goal.

You're not going to change mankind's desire to enslave himself. The fact that freedom is a historical aberration which can only be maintained by eternal vigilance should prove that. And eternal vigilance is incompatible with social liberalism. This is why socially liberal places become so passive and socialistic. It's why men such as Madison, Burke, and Tocqueville understood that there was a difference between the American Revolution and the French one. They understood that only a moral people can remain free. We can't have a society where homosexuals march nude down the street, pelting women and children with condoms and waving plastic sex organs in their faces, and remain free. People so lacking in personal responsibility that they feel they "need" abortion aren't going to remain free.

Libertarianism is based on a completely flawed concept of human nature. It assumes that man is by nature responsible, when in fact he is not. It assumes that someone who is irresponsible enough to contract AIDS during a wanton orgy in a bathhouse, would be the type of person who wouldn't demand that the taxpayers pay for his medical care. Guess what? He isn't going to be that kind of a person. Before the ink was dried on Roe vs. Wade, the pro-aborts were demanding taxpayer financing of abortions. Before the ink was dried on the Lawrence sodomy ruling, the gay lobby was demanding passage of a federal anti-discrimination law, and were hauling dating services such as e-Harmony into court with the demand that the government force them to provide same-sex match-ups.

This is what libertarianism leads to. You get rid of one law restricting irresponsible conduct, and the result isn't more freedom; it's the enactment of ten new laws forcing everyone to pander to the newly liberated deviants. It's anarcho-tyranny.

This is ignorant on two fronts. First, Jesus was sent specifically to reform the Chosen People who had ruined God's Word with corrupt governance and perverted religious beliefs, so scratch the Judeo portion. And many of today's Christians spend far too much time in the Pentateuch, really, where you will find much of the source that led to the perversions. Many (but certainly not all) of today's Christians are the Pharisees of yesterday.

Well, I'm not going to get into a theological discussion with you on this. But I would note that all those corrupt practices you note in the Old Testament sound a lot like libertarianism and liberal moral relativism. Satan told Eve she didn't have to listen to God, she could decide for herself what was right and what was wrong. Moses came down from the mount and found the Israelites having an orgy around a molten calf, and Aaron's lame justification was that it was what the people wanted to do. And the result of this behavior wasn't "freedom". It was a series of corrupt, despotic kings and ultimate destruction.

When I wrote that a government has to intrude into some matters what I meant was that some government is necessary as to protect people from causing injury to one another. When one or more people trample the liberty of another, society has to have a method adjudicate the matter. However, contracts, prearranged mediation, and pre-agreed-upon judges would also go a long way in limiting the power and influence of a judiciary.

Well, best of luck trying to create a libertarian utopia. You're gonna need it.

Arigato gozaimasu!

334 posted on 11/06/2007 7:21:12 AM PST by puroresu (Enjoy ASIAN CINEMA? See my Freeper page for recommendations (updated!).)
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To: fabian

I think the reason Fred seems a tad weak on abortion and homosexual issues is that he’s hung around with too many Hollyweird actors.


335 posted on 11/06/2007 7:28:05 AM PST by puroresu (Enjoy ASIAN CINEMA? See my Freeper page for recommendations (updated!).)
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To: cajungirl

why are you speechless about the fact that many men simply get too much sex and that demasculates them? It is a fact...I don’t know if that is what has taken the strength out of Fred’s fight for the unborn, but certainly something has.
I think Romney would be a fine president and his hair looks good too...


336 posted on 11/06/2007 9:21:03 AM PST by fabian
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To: fabian

You are putting me on, right?

Why don’t we have a poll among FR men; Does Sex make a man weak?

But you are a joker I do believe.


337 posted on 11/06/2007 9:23:09 AM PST by cajungirl (no)
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To: LowCountryJoe
Yes, exactly! However, not everyone believes that a fetus is a somebody I happen to believe it and you I'm assuming you do as well. But here's the rub, not everyone believes the same as you and I and we have to deal with that reality or we get nowhere. And our (well, not mine) efforts to use government to dictate behavioral change becomes just as off-putting as their efforts to be selfish and/or in denial.

They are murderers, not poor misunderstood people that made a little mistake.

Well, I know that you believe that homosexuality and abortion are two things that we should not be tolerant of and that both plague our society. I'll agree on one of those with you but I certainly do not see homosexuality, by itself, as a behavior we should seek to become intolerant of.

True as far as abortion goes as it is murder. I'm in favor of punishing all murderers and I would never suggest we become tolerant of murderers.

By the way, do you advocate for adoption and for providing financial incentives to mothers of the unborn who contemplate abortion? More so than your advocacy in deriding homosexuality, say?

Why would I answer any questions concerning my advocacy when you feel so free to simply make up things about me whole cloth. Provide a quote where I have derided homosexuality. I think it's an unhealthy choice but it's not an important issue to me nor do I think that there is a government solution.

Let's be real clear here...no one is talking about children that have already healthily exited the womb. The issue here is that some women do not view the life of a fetus as a living child or they are too selfish to admit to or acknowledge that there is life.

Their excuses for their behavior are simply excuses. If a child is born 3 months premature via c-section then your hypothetical doesn't exist. If the mother went into the incubator and smothered her baby she would be charged with murder. If the same woman had gotten an abortion the day before she would be practicing "choice". The illogic and lack of protection to the child based on simply being inside or outside of the body is sophistry.

Yes, piousness, toward homosexuals, in fact.

Prove it or stop saying it.

Both. Don't we all post so that the interactive experience is shared and discussion can evolve by many participants? I know that that's one of the reasons I post.

I try to respond directly to the poster that I am conversing with otherwise I may accuse them of something they never wrote.

I've covered this above but forcing them to submit to beliefs that you and I happen to share when the area is a very gray one to many, is not a concept of liberty either.

This isn't a "belief" it's simple reality. There are serial killers that don't see anything wrong with killing others. We don't say "the poor dear just has differing beliefs from us", we say "The person is obviously nuts, lock them up and throw away the key".

And you're assuming that there are no consequences for deciding to abort? Don't you believe in Judgment Day?

That is exactly what I am assuming as I am Agnostic. Were I a believer I fail to see how it would make any difference as the concept you outline would cover any and all crimes. We have a justice system that punishes people here and now. We don't leave it to the afterlife.

No, it does not. Liberty comes with consequences for making inappropriate decisions, not cooperating with others, and for intruding on the liberty of others. Consequences for your actions is a good definition of responsibility.
338 posted on 11/06/2007 10:09:02 AM PST by Durus ("Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." JFK)
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To: Jedidah
Drinking Coffee  “Let me lay it out for every Republican primary voter. You support the guy you want, you rally for him, you write some checks, you vote in the primariesÂ… and maybe your guy wins, maybe he loses. If the guy who beats your guy is half a loaf, you shrug your shoulders, hope your guy is his running mate, and get ready for the general. Life goes on.”Would that all FReepers who love their country would adopt this common-sense approach this election year.

Reminds me of the following comment I read somewhere:

The adult thing to do is support your favorite candidate in the primaries, and back the winner in the general election.  Childish behavior is to take ones vote and go home if that candidate is not your favorite.  It is extremely rare when procrastination proves to be the correct path of action.  Why have primaries and a general election?  Let's just ask a couple of narrow minded folks who the only candidate they will vote for is, and simply anoint them.

prə-'kras-tə-ˌnā-shən: intransitive verb : to put off intentionally the doing of something that should be done.  For the person procrastinating this may result in stress, a sense of guilt, the loss of productivity, the creation of crisis, and the chagrin of others for not fulfilling one's responsibilities or commitments. While it is normal for individuals to procrastinate to some degree, it becomes a problem when it impedes normal functioning. Chronic procrastination may be a sign of an underlying psychological or physiological disorder.
339 posted on 11/06/2007 10:15:54 AM PST by HawaiianGecko (There are scandals that need to be addressed. Republicans address them, Democrats re-elect them.)
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To: Durus
Prove it or stop saying it...I try to respond directly to the poster that I am conversing with otherwise I may accuse them of something they never wrote.

I see where I went wrong now. I mistakenly thought that I was responding to someone else. When you butted in way back, I wasn't following who was who; my apologies.

340 posted on 11/06/2007 11:12:21 AM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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