Is this tacit admission that liberals are extremists?
Of course not. Why would you think that?
They tend to fight for child killing.
They really don't. In point of fact, it's hard to find many people who oppose abortion out of hand. Mostly it's a matter of where the line should be drawn. For many who oppose it as an elective procedure the endangerment of the mother's life changes their position. For some it's late term pregnancies. For a few it's any point past conception. Some of that few are found in either camp, with Catholics comprising the majority of the liberal anti-abortion without exception grouping.
Liberals tend to support the right established by a conservative appointed Court, sadly (either). A lot of that support is conditional and some of it is wavering, which is why you have pro-life movements within the Democratic Party.
What you only just told me you'd proffered. I didn't recall anything outside of the issue by you but you gave the direct impression of a list to support your contention and the one isn't that. So I asked in case I'd missed it.
What could possibly be worse?
Does something have to be worse to be in the running? I think facilitating slaughter for no particularly good reason is pretty grotesque. That's what people who support the status quo or lesser law in relation to guns are doing, for one.
So I can hardly be called inconsistent for defining terms by their plain meaning except in the case of liberals. Especially when it obviously does not mean what it plainly says.
I'm not sure what that's responsive to, but it's been a busy day, so it could be me. Not sure how you sustain the last part. I don't believe you've done it, but if you can I'm game to read it.
They also call child killing a right.
No, the really don't. They call abortion rights what they are in this country. If they were convinced it was child killing they'd likely be on the right side of the point. That's part of the problem and name calling won't solve it.
I'm convinced the problem is that most of the largely conditional, even tenuous support for the thing is born of an emotional response to an emotion laden entreaty and a general confusion/lack of application of simple, clear, and compelling reason. I don't believe they've thought it through. Now you have the minority of zealots on the point who have and who I believe are at best deluded and at worst willful participants in a narcissistic evil, but I suspect most of those supporting the practice can be won over with consistent, civil, and compelling reason.
What people think about themselves is irrelevant.
Rather, it's everything to the person. What you or I think of anyone else is only relevant to us, but I suspect most people aren't as solidly in a camp outside of a general sense of alignment on guiding principles. A lot of qualifications after that.
They're illegal. Unless you're talking about soldiers.
They aren't made legally and are difficult to come by for a private citizen, but possible. It's complicated. Of course, with the bump stock and a semi-automatic it's a bit moot as points go.
Those aren't automatic weapons.
An AR-15 is a semi-automatic weapon. The bump stock isn't a weapon at all. It's a device that transforms a weapon like the AR-15 into a de facto machinegun. My nearest neighbor to the north has one. He's a responsible guy from a good family. He collects weapons because he likes to fire them and own them. It's his hobby.
What on Earth are you talking about?
I was demonstrating that simpler isn't necessarily preferable.
I mean exactly what I said before you started debating: Liberals rename horrific ideas with nice-sounding terms. Public education, pro-choice, gun control...
And I meant what I, as gently and civilly as I could manage it, implied, which is that you're wrong on the point. Public education and gun control are both good ideas and their defense is both rational and empirical in nature. Pro-choice is a horrible idea, but it's not nice-sounding, only indicative of the root of the error for those supporting it.
"Taxes" is not a nice term. It's not an example of what I'm saying.
The whole "nice" approach is too subjective to use meaningfully anyway.
Public education is a horrific idea.
So you said already, but saying doesn't make a thing so, let alone demonstrate it as an unassailable truth. And so I set out specifically why that isn't the case and why people on the whole, both conservative and liberal, differ with you.
In your mind perhaps, but not on the page. No quote, no link, only your declaration on the point.
You identify as a right winger. In general terms that aligns you with conservative camps, however qualified in particulars.
Another fundamental is that everyone will give an account for their life.
Another fundamental truth for some is that no one will exist beyond this life and therefore no one will give anything.
So outside of the empirical, fundamentalism is as individual as anything else.