• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    5
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    As I understand it, that’s some Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson shit.

    Back in the 70s liberal/liberalism meant pretty much the same thing in the U.S. as elsewhere. Nixon even called his reelection something along the lines of “a victory for western liberal democracy.” Part of liberalism is a focus on rights of the individual, including civil rights. Civil rights and many other liberation movements of the era used the language of that aspect of liberalism.

    Enter a bunch of religious assholes of the time. They loved all the pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps, right to private property, greed, etc. of individual rights but had a big problem with women wearing pants and expecting to be able to go to work without being sexually assaulted, gay people existing openly and breathing, and probably the civil rights movement too but it was going out of style to be open about that. They started using liberal/liberalism in a denigrating way to describe feminists, LGBT people, and any other group that got their puritanical knickers in a twist.

    After a couple decades the terms were completely divorced from their original political theory definitions which would, I think, have Republicans considered more liberal than Democrats. But I suppose that could depend on which aspects of liberalism you give more weight to.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -24 months ago

      Exactly. As a libertarian, I call myself liberal, because that’s exactly what that word has meant historically. I absolutely hate the DNC and RNC because I find both to not be liberal in the sense that I mean it. The DNC seems adamant about taking away my rights so it can “protect” me or whatever, and the RNC wants to take away my rights to enforce some weird religious set of morals. These days, I qualify it with “classical liberal” to indicate that I don’t mean the current usage of “liberal” (i.e. “progressive”), but instead mean the traditional idea of liberalism, i.e. individual rights. I don’t even particularly like the Libertarian Party in the US, especially recently with the weird right-wing takeover.

      I am fiscally conservative and socially liberal (again, in the classical sense, meaning negative rights, not positive rights).