The Political Compass

21
dontfeartheringo wrote:What kind of commie put this thing together?


When I originally took the test at school, back in the Eighties, our teacher told us that the test originated in the US order to detect commmunist sympathies and was used to by employers to screen potential workers. I don't know how true that is, or in what area the tests were used, but the I distinctly remember the questions being more or less similar.

In that way, it could be seen to categorise a range of political thought too convientiently, due to its reductive nature. I wouldn't take it too seriously. But it definitely helped 15 year-old me orientate my sympathies.
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The Political Compass

22
sparky wrote:I am bemused as to why you are so offended by what is nothing other than a simple indicator. Of course it is binary. If you can devise a test that takes only ten minutes to complete that provides a significantly more nuanced measure of one's beliefs over such a broad range of issues, then I take my hat of to you.

Moreover, it is just a bit of fun. Why so offended? You're right that it is simplistic and binary, but it does mark out clear differences. The one friend to whom I sent this today had a significantly different result to most of those here. If it was as rigged as you claim, then this would not happen.


I'm hardly offended by the test, I just call it like I see it....take it for a bit of fun then.

When I say it can easily be rigged, I didn't mean by the creators, I mean by test-takers. It is easy to see where the lines for such binaries as "authoritarian" or "libertarian" are, and just as easy to cross them as you see fit.

Johnny13 has it right: in reality are exceptions to everything, and variables. But there, you're either pro-taxation, or anti. Pro-globalisation for business, or for humanity (you can't be anti-globalisation? how about anti-corporate subsidy?). They define nationalism as inherently authoritarian. How ridiculous.

I took the test, "for fun". But browsing through that site, I think they're more serious about it than you are.
Last edited by unarmedman_Archive on Wed Jul 30, 2008 10:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
"The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter."
-Winston Churchill

The Political Compass

26
unarmedman wrote:[Johnny13 has it right: in reality are exceptions to everything, and variables. But there, you're either pro-taxation, or anti. Pro-globalisation for business, or for humanity (you can't be anti-globalisation? how about anti-corporate subsidy?). They define nationalism as inherently authoritarian. How ridiculous.


They do go some way in explaining that, but I take your point:

Political Compass wrote:Firstly, a few words about popular political terms.

Once you accept that left and right are merely measures of economic position, the "extreme right" refers to extremely liberal economics that may be practised by social authoritarians or social libertarians.

Similarly, the "extreme left" identifies a strong degree of state economic control, which may also be accompanied by liberal or authoritarian social policies.

It's muddled thinking to simply describe the likes of the British National Party as "extreme right". The truth is that on issues like health, transport, housing, protectionism and globalisation, their economics are left of Labour, let alone the Conservatives. It's in areas like police power, military power, school discipline, law and order, race and nationalism that the BNP's real extremism - as authoritarians - is clear.

This mirrors France's National Front. In running some local governments, they reinstated certain welfare measures which their Socialist predecessors had abandoned. Like similar authoritarian parties that have sprung up around Europe, they have come to be seen in some quarters as champions of the underdog, as long as the underdog isn't Black, Arab, gay or Jewish ! With mainstream Social Democratic parties adopting - reluctantly or enthusiastically - the new economic libertarian orthodoxy (neo-liberalism), much of their old economic baggage has been pinched by National Socialism. It's becoming the only sort of socialism on offer. Election debates between mainstream parties are increasingly about managerial competence rather than any clash of vision and economic direction.

In the United States, the voices of dissent over unfettered market forces (ie extreme right economics) are heard from social authoritarians like Pat Buchanan as well as social liberals like Ralph Nader.

As an example, take a look at the ground that the main English parties in the UK's 2003 local elections (May 1) occupied in reality. The difference between the BNP and the Greens in economics isn't great, but there's a huge gap on the social scale. Neither scale, however, reveals enormous distances between the Conservatives and New Labour.
Last edited by Cranius_Archive on Wed Jul 30, 2008 10:14 am, edited 2 times in total.
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The Political Compass

27
sparky wrote:Now now dftr, no need to go into past history... Minds change and all that. I still voted for Blair after the Iraq War started.


LADY MACBETH
Out, damned spot! out, I say!—One: two: why,
then, 'tis time to do't.—Hell is murky!—Fie, my
lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard? What need we
fear who knows it, when none can call our power
to account?—Yet who would have thought the old
man to have had so much blood in him?

Doctor
Do you mark that?

LADY MACBETH
The thane of Fife had a wife; where is she now?—
What, will these hands ne'er be clean?
...
Here's the smell of the blood still. All the
oils of Arabia will not sweeten this
little hand. O, O, O!

How is sunny Athens today? Nice, I hope!


Image


Edit: you know, for quite some time I misread your forum name as don't feather ringo, which is a sad reflection on my perverted mind.


Image
Last edited by dontfeartheringo_Archive on Wed Jul 30, 2008 10:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Redline wrote:Not Crap. The sound of death? The sound of FUN! ScrrreeEEEEEEE

The Political Compass

28
Cranius wrote:They do go some way in explaining that, but I take your point:


You're right, they do. And that's fine - if folks can take that into consideration. And European definitions of liberal/conservative/etc. are pretty different from the states.

The test has its limitations, and it recognizes them.

But then you got people like MrFood all "oh shit oh shit I'm a little higher up maybe I'll get banned!" and I'm reminded people don't know limits very well.

btw, how did you delete your dbl post? I couldn't do it.
"The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter."
-Winston Churchill

The Political Compass

29
unarmedman wrote:When I say it can easily be rigged, I didn't mean by the creators, I mean by test-takers. It is easy to see where the lines for such binaries as "authoritarian" or "libertarian" are, and just as easy to cross them as you see fit.


Yes, it does require the user to answer in good faith. I think that most will, though.

I think that it might be useful in tracking how one's own tendencies change with time. I might take it again in a couple of years, once I've had time to forget the questions.

We seem to be getting a range of responses now, which at least proves that it performs some kind of differentiation.

dontfeartheringo wrote:
How is sunny Athens today? Nice, I hope!


Image



Oh my god!
Gib Opi kein Opium, denn Opium bringt Opi um!

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