Gosh, JB, back to name calling again. Next up will be another joke about Hiroshima or the like? And you use my paraphrasing of
your comment as the definition of crazy. That's pretty well wacko right there. I'll go back to ignoring you, if it's not too upsetting for you.
There is no way to avoid governmental/political influence on family structures. When child hears Daddy calling President Obama a derogatory name, that influences family values just as much as the brand of car the parents are loyal to. That loyalty or belief gets passed on to further generations.
You just made an argument for the opposite here, family values influencing personal politics.
How can one political party be worse than another when it comes to family values? That just seems to be true depending on which party affiliation you are.
Like I said, they are both bad. But any party that calls for an expanded government will win that competition by default.
What politically created pseudo-values are you talking about? If anything, the family values demonstrated in movies and on TV have a huge impact on real family values.
I agree. And much of what you see on TV or in movies is politically motivated, even if not consciously. People tend to adopt attitudes they are bombarded with - that could be from family and friends, or from media. Since I raise a family with someone who has very different attitudes than I was used to, I was forced to re-examine many of my assumptions about family values and child-rearing. Sometimes I discovered I had no good reason for those values - they were just what I grew up with, and what were commonly practiced in the US. Then, when I took the time to research things, it suddenly wasn't so cut and dry.
The media serves as an echo chamber for ideas that are often promoted by an interest group or by flawed research and a government agency that uses that to justify enhanced powers.
By the way, I know there are some very nice people who work for the government. Many of them agree with me about government overreach. Others, though they are well-intentioned, are so immersed in the system that they can't see how flawed it is. They recognize when someone goes overboard, but they believe that those people are the exceptions in a generally good system, rather than the natural product of a system that enables poor behavior.
Call me cynical, but governments are incapable of having the citizens' best interests at heart. For one, governments don't have hearts. For another, governments inevitably become about their own survival. On a small scale, the 2 concerns can be merged, as voters will only allow responsive governments to survive. On a large scale, governments don't have to worry about a few voters. Good intentions of individuals aside.