Yes, I know. I think I commented at one point before my lengthy absence that I was a moderate right-winger in Europe, which would make me a moderate Democrat in the US. Or perhaps it's just plain Democrat nowadays with the further shift of the political spectrum we've seen of recent (fucking Obama).Simon_Jester wrote:You'd fit right in on the American left, depending on your notion of "fiscal discipline."
One point where I probably differ with many on the left is on the issue of "multiculturalism", or at least the implications of it. I am aware that this statement can be seen in a bad light, especially with recent events. So, to clarify: I have no qualms about diversity. I am concerned about the prospect of self-segregating communities that feel alienated from one another. I am also aware that this can be a self-fulfilling prophecy, especially with xenophobia growing louder - the blame lies with the majority as well as minorities. However, my position is that a healthy society requires amongst many other things, a uniform code of laws and compatible courts systems, and equal justice with no incentives for alienation between groups. Non-segregated education systems and and an absence of religious based laws, etc. are desirable also.
For examples: on one extreme, the emergence of Sharia courts in the UK. I don't approve of the idea that there are parallel court systems in one country, especially if they're keyed to cultural/religious groups (and yes, I know Sharia courts also judge civil cases as well as cases with non-Muslims; the point stands regardless). On the other extreme, there is the non-citizenship of many immigrants in France, even after multiple generations, leading to toxic tensions between ethnic and religious groups. If they don't want to extend citizenship to multi-generational residents, then they have no business pretending to be a society that allows immigration in the first place.