treehat: Block print of a tree. (Default)
treehat ([personal profile] treehat) wrote2006-11-08 03:14 pm

Whee!

The Dems control the House, might control the Senate (with some luck), Rick Santorum got kicked out, and Rumsfeld (Secretary of Offense) is resigning.

I am downright giddy. I haven't been this happy in, well, I can't honestly remember.

I can't stop smiling and I'm fighting against the increasing urge to dance around the house in jubilant liberal victory.

It is a good day.

Re: 3 examples:

[identity profile] rkniner.livejournal.com 2006-11-10 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Link? Sure: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberal (that can be pulled from the source code of my comment, sorry I forgot the link)

As for "Conservative", I get a disambiguation page, but like how Liberal redirected to Libreralism, I decided to look at Conservatism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservatism):
Conservatism is a political philosophy that necessitates a defense of established values. The term derives from to conserve; from Latin conservāre, "to keep, guard, observe". Since different cultures have different established values, conservatives in different cultures have different goals. Some conservatives seek to preserve the status quo, while others seek to return to the values of an earlier time, the status quo ante.

And since that definition really doesn't say much, lets look at the definition of American conservatism:
American conservatism is a constellation of political ideologies within the United States under the blanket heading of conservative. Included are fiscal conservatives, free market or economic liberals, social conservatives, and religious conservatives, as well as supporters of a strong American military, opponents of internationalism, and proponents of states' rights.

(For reference, economic liberalism is the school of liberalism that believes the "equal opportunity to succeed" is best represented by a completely free market.)