← Back to context Comment by conanbatt 7 years ago Wouldn't liberals be pro-forfeiture? 14 comments conanbatt Reply GavinMcG 7 years ago No? "Liberal" doesn't mean "pro-government". What definition are you using that suggests they would? conanbatt 7 years ago Are conservatives pro-government? Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago Define "pro-government". cuckcuckspruce 7 years ago The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.That doesn't make that definition correct... Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago > The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.Could you be more specific? 3 replies → larkeith 7 years ago You may be conflating liberal (those who agree with the political ideology) with liberal (used inaccurately to describe supporters of the Democratic Party), though I doubt you would find significant support for civil forfeiture among either group. asdsa5325 7 years ago Why do you say that? elygre 7 years ago Why would they? Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago No...you're thinking of conservatives which tend to lean more authoritarian than liberals. RIMR 7 years ago No, because Liberals care about the entire Constitution, not just the second amendment. conanbatt 7 years ago All justices are constitutional, thats their job.
GavinMcG 7 years ago No? "Liberal" doesn't mean "pro-government". What definition are you using that suggests they would? conanbatt 7 years ago Are conservatives pro-government? Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago Define "pro-government". cuckcuckspruce 7 years ago The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.That doesn't make that definition correct... Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago > The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.Could you be more specific? 3 replies →
conanbatt 7 years ago Are conservatives pro-government? Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago Define "pro-government".
cuckcuckspruce 7 years ago The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.That doesn't make that definition correct... Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago > The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.Could you be more specific? 3 replies →
Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago > The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.Could you be more specific? 3 replies →
larkeith 7 years ago You may be conflating liberal (those who agree with the political ideology) with liberal (used inaccurately to describe supporters of the Democratic Party), though I doubt you would find significant support for civil forfeiture among either group.
Sohcahtoa82 7 years ago No...you're thinking of conservatives which tend to lean more authoritarian than liberals.
RIMR 7 years ago No, because Liberals care about the entire Constitution, not just the second amendment. conanbatt 7 years ago All justices are constitutional, thats their job.
No? "Liberal" doesn't mean "pro-government". What definition are you using that suggests they would?
Are conservatives pro-government?
Define "pro-government".
The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.
That doesn't make that definition correct...
> The colloquial definition used by most of the US citizenry and on television news programs on both 24-hour cable networks and broadcast television.
Could you be more specific?
3 replies →
You may be conflating liberal (those who agree with the political ideology) with liberal (used inaccurately to describe supporters of the Democratic Party), though I doubt you would find significant support for civil forfeiture among either group.
Why do you say that?
Why would they?
No...you're thinking of conservatives which tend to lean more authoritarian than liberals.
No, because Liberals care about the entire Constitution, not just the second amendment.
All justices are constitutional, thats their job.