freedom
Michael W. Smith – There She Stands
How To Talk To A Liberal: Questions You Can’t Answer
The other day I got into a debate with a liberal on twitter (shocking I know). This guy had responded to one of my posts regarding Tea Party opposition to military intervention in Syria, saying that such a position was illogical and implying that those who held it were despicable human beings. He then began grilling me with all kinds of foreign policy questions, from events in Reagan’s time to Bush’s War in Iraq.
Now I’m no foreign policy expert; in fact I know precious little about the intricacies of dealing with other nations. So I’m left with a classic debate scenario: the unanswerable question. How do you respond to a question when you don’t know the answer?
The simple solution is, you don’t. You can’t know everything, so the proper response is to take control of the situation by admitting that fact up front.
@Pro_Freedom_ I’m not read up on either incident up to this point so I can’t give an accurate answer.
— Kelly Campagna (@warriorwoman91) September 7, 2013
Even if the opponent continues to push it this should still be your answer. Doing so takes the issue off the table so that you don’t have to step into the trap set for you to make a statement that you will not only regret but probably disagree with later.
@Pro_Freedom_ Again my specialty is not foreign policy; my knowledge largely focuses on domestic.
— Kelly Campagna (@warriorwoman91) September 7, 2013
So the next time you find yourself asked a question that you don’t know the answer to, just remember my favorite go to response: I don’t know.
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Ben Shapiro Talks Politics to Young Americans Foundation
Reagan and Obama Face-off in the Ring – I Want Your Money Movie Clip
Mark Levin Has Fun with a Liberal
Mr Smith Goes to Washington-“Lost Causes”
Keynesian Economics, and Why It Fails
Keynesian economics. You’ve probably heard the phrase before; it’s usually touted by liberals as the ultimate example of perfected economic policy. My college professor explained that Keynesian economics is the idea that the government should spend extra money when the economy is down in order to stimulate it, then cut back on spending when the economy is good. FDR used this model with his New Deal programs, as has the current president with his 2009 Stimulus Program (though both without ever cutting back on spending).
Well my 18-year-old brain was essentially mush at the time I entered college–not completely, but just about. I bought this ideology hook, line, and sinker…then. Now after 4 years of my own study in the school of common sense I’ve realized that my beloved college professor left half the story out of the lecture. The only way that government has any money is by taking it out of the private sector with the down economy, thereby making the problem worse. Certainly large government picks and chooses who gets the money as it sees fit, but it cannot produce more money–only a thriving private sector can do that.
With all this talk of governments spending money, Keynesian economics begins to sound very much like redistribution of wealth (see theft). Well here’s the bombshell: it is. Keynesian economics follows the same idea that the government knows how best to spend money, and if it can only spend enough it will eventually stimulate a struggling economy. The big problem is that government spending has the exact opposite effect, dragging a slow economy into a worse and worse state. So it really doesn’t matter if you call it Keynesian, or redistribution, or Marxism–they all have the same economically destructive effect.