General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Now I am confused about DU (a different answer to cali's OP) [View all]mindwalker_i
(4,407 posts)Not necessarily for Democrats. So when an elected Democrat votes for things that seem, at least to me, to be against those democratic principles, we should give them hell. If we don't, then all our complaining about Bush et. all doing non-democratic things is hypocritical. Specifically, if we condemn Bush or Republicans in congress for voting for bills that harm workers in this country, saying that we condemn them because of those policies, then we go and support a Democrat that votes for the same policies, it indicates that we originally didn't oppose Republicans for what they supported. Instead, it shows that our objection was due to their party.
I don't like religion and, specifically, faith and belief because it shuts people off from absorbing new information. If, for example, one believes that everything revolves around the Earth, then they are unable or at least less able to understand that planets don't do that. People have models in their heads about how things work, and most of these are at least somewhat open to new data. Faith puts a whole new level on it, in that faith codifies some belief as "this is the way it is, cuz God said so and thou shalt not question it!
The problem with "believing" in the Democratic party is that it makes one unable to see when that "D" is obscuring behaviour and policies that are contrary to what we think are good policies. Also, believing in the party is an easy way to go that kind of shields people from having to examine our leaders' actions and to think through what they are doing. People who have "faith" are easily lead away from their own best interests, and isn't that what we complain Republicans do?