View Full Version : which political party do you belong in?
bryantm3
06-22-2009, 01:39 PM
http://www.3pc.net/matchmaker/quiz.html
this is the best, most direct one i've found out there. instead of asking strange questions like "should children keep secrets from their parents?" and "is making peace with the establishment an aspect of maturity?", this quiz is concise and deals with the issues.
My top result was Libertarian, 76%.
cacophony
06-22-2009, 01:49 PM
i find it suspect. every question is about regulation. select "decrease" and you're shunted right into the libertarian pile. i also find some of the questions too concise. what about those of us who favor decreased regulation of pot but believe in maintaining the level of regulation on "other drugs"? the questionnaire deliberately skews itself by only calling out pot by name and therefore getting the emotional response. if it said "crack and other drugs" i guarantee the results for responses to that question would skew quite differently.
bryantm3
06-22-2009, 03:08 PM
agreed, it has its faults, but is there a quiz that doesn't?
dubman
06-22-2009, 04:26 PM
why is there a quiz?
bryantm3
06-22-2009, 09:29 PM
well, it's fun. it gives you interesting ideas about parties you hadn't thought of before: ie: the constitution party, green party, etc. it's not supposed to be entirely serious, like it'll determine the rest of your life.
perhaps it should be in noise then and not the world forum.........unless of course you have joined the CIA..............
I've given up on the idea of political parties. There's far more concern about partisan power issues than there is about what's best for the country, and I'm just sick of it. People complain that Obama is "too liberal" with this, or "too conservative" with that, or even "socialist" - I'm all for dropping these kind of thoughtless preconceptions and just looking at issues for what they are to determine what needs to be done to fix them.
So I'm party-less.
dubman
06-24-2009, 07:30 PM
I've given up on the idea of political parties. There's far more concern about partisan power issues than there is about what's best for the country, and I'm just sick of it. People complain that Obama is "too liberal" with this, or "too conservative" with that, or even "socialist" - I'm all for dropping these kind of thoughtless preconceptions and just looking at issues for what they are to determine what needs to be done to fix them.
So I'm party-less.
if someone told me this i'd let them have their moment and then break with "uh-huh, sooooo libertarian then?"
if someone told me this i'd let them have their moment and then break with "uh-huh, sooooo libertarian then?"Nope, not libertarian. The libertarian outlook on international policies in particular is simply moronic. What I said is what I mean. Every issue deserves it's own, thoughtful, productive approach, and just towing the party line does not cut it. And unfortunately, that's what the vast majority of partisans expect out of their politicians - towing the party line. It's kind of a cop-out.
stimpee
06-25-2009, 06:13 AM
I think this has as much relevance as a facebook "which one of the sex and the city girls are you?" quiz. but, it did get me thinking about the UK political system and that I dont feel any affinity anymore with any of the parties. I used to be a fervant Labour supporter back in the 80s and early 90s but I've lost the faith in all of the parties now, and especially the first-past-the-post voting system which really only favours Labour and the Conservatives. So, I thought about the Dutch system and that my vote would be better off there, but I think I'd have to give up British nationality in order to vote in the national elections and thats not something I'm prepared to go. looks like I'll have to settle for voting in local municipal elections...
cacophony
06-25-2009, 01:17 PM
if someone told me this i'd let them have their moment and then break with "uh-huh, sooooo libertarian then?"
haha! :D
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