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http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Jun ... g.doc.html
Abstract Permalink (redirects to informaworld.com):
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699930802110007
PDF of author's galley proof:
http://files.yoelinbar.net/disgust_conservatism.pdf
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
You have too much time on your hands if you invested any contemplating that.tunnelcat wrote:I've had my suspicions that this was true about conservatives...
I must be outside their research parameters or just a gross liberal (although I'm not that liberal, just weird). Very little disgusts or grosses me out.Lothar wrote:Consider that females tend to be less conservative than males, and also more easily disgusted.
They are, aren't they? Think about all those dirty hippi-type liberals in their socialist communes!Lothar wrote:"Conservatives are more easily disgusted" could be rewritten as "Liberals are less concerned with health and hygiene".
Naw, just happened to get a heads up about it from a gay friend of mine. Much more personal to her.Will Robinson wrote:You have too much time on your hands if you invested any contemplating that.
Me too. Particularly the questions in Appendix 2. I mean, "someone left some poop in the toilet" is supposed to be a good gross-out question? Haven't these people ever changed a diaper before?tunnelcat wrote:I must be outside their research parameters or just a gross liberal (although I'm not that liberal, just weird). Very little disgusts or grosses me out.Lothar wrote:Consider that females tend to be less conservative than males, and also more easily disgusted.
IIRC, the original study only showed a significant connection on 3 issues: gay marriage, abortion, and taxes. Having a disgust reaction to homosexuality pretty obviously correlates to opposition to gay marriage, and I suspect considering sex to be a reproductive act ties into that, which explains the abortion correlation. So the only really interesting result is that "lower taxes" correlates strongly with disgust reaction.A lot of the study was focusing on homophobia.... It does appear though that if a male has a disgust reaction to homosexuality, there is a high probability that he leans toward conservative values
I think it meant the 'taxes' caused a conservative disgust reaction, so conservatives always strive to 'lower taxes'. The wording is kind of confusing I think. I'll reread it when I get on the other computer. However, we all know that liberals usually LIKE taxation because it funds social programs.Lothar wrote:So the only really interesting result is that "lower taxes" correlates strongly with disgust reaction.
I'd be really curious to see how various people on the DBB answer their questions.
Nope.tunnelcat wrote:I think it meant the 'taxes' caused a conservative disgust reactionLothar wrote:So the only really interesting result is that "lower taxes" correlates strongly with disgust reaction.
I'd be really curious to see how various people on the DBB answer their questions.
Hmmmmmmm, isn't that essentially saying the same thing? If you want less of some 'thing', it must indicate that you don't particularly like that 'thing', so you want less of it around. What's the connection or logic between wanting lower taxes and disgust?Lothar wrote:People with stronger disgust reactions (to the disgust questions in the appendix) wanted less taxes.
No.tunnelcat wrote:Hmmmmmmm, isn't that essentially saying the same thing?Lothar wrote:People with stronger disgust reactions (to the disgust questions in the appendix) wanted less taxes.
I guess that it just points out a strange connection that needs to be looked at separately. I guess it does make some logical sense if you look at the way conservatives think. They desire a society with no government restrictions in their lives, a 'winner take all' or 'dog eat dog' world view, the promotion of an unregulated free market, having absolute, unrestricted freedoms and the ability for unrestricted individual (or corporate) wealth growth. Taxes fall 'outside' that world view.Lothar wrote:What the study actually says is "disgusted by poo, monkey meat, or barf = want less taxes". That's strange and surprising. There weren't any questions about whether taxes were disgusting.
I think you've managed to sum up an existing pathology fairly, TC, but you're wrong in calling that conservatism (or tacking that onto everyone who calls themself a conservative). I know where you get the idea, and I've heard/read such feelings from people who think they're conservative, but the truth is they're ignorant--they cling to a fragment of a philosophy like it were the whole, they're ignorant of taxation and government, and they aren't able to reason it through.TunnelCat wrote:if you look at the way conservatives think. They desire a society with no government restrictions in their lives, a 'winner take all' or 'dog eat dog' world view, the promotion of an unregulated free market, having absolute, unrestricted freedoms and the ability for unrestricted individual (or corporate) wealth growth. Taxes fall 'outside' that world view.
The new U.S. government needed some form of revenue, they couldn't just operate without some form of funds, so guess what the first type of federal 'tax' was in 1789, tariffs. That doesn't sound like our forefathers were completely conservatively principled to me. They were smart enough to realize that a civilized nation needs a central government to be able to function as a unified whole. Otherwise you'd get a bunch of disorganized little fiefdoms and states that would be powerless against a more unified aggressor nation.Sergeant Thorne wrote:Our country was founded on very conservative principles, and that included taxation. That said, I would strongly argue that the citizens of this country are overtaxed, and a degree of that is certainly due to government overstepping its mandate and being larger than the constitutional interests of the citizens call for, as well as being improperly managed by people who probably wouldn't survive in a competitive economic environment (wasteful and inefficient).
Not quite true. The first 'income tax' was levied in 1860 and 61 to pay for the Civil War.Kilarin wrote:Uhm? What exactly do you mean by taxation? There was no income tax until after the 16th amendment.
Basically you're talking about some of the same things that were written about in the Federalist Papers. But you need to go read the Federalist Papers, because you seem to think that the creation of a federal government was at all at odds with the existing individual state governments. The idea was not that the concept of a central government was better than many individual governments on the whole, but that there were certain reasons (I can't think of any that do not concern foreign relations) to have the individual states united under one entity.Tunnelcat wrote:The new U.S. government needed some form of revenue, they couldn't just operate without some form of funds, so guess what the first type of federal 'tax' was in 1789, tariffs. That doesn't sound like our forefathers were completely conservatively principled to me. They were smart enough to realize that a civilized nation needs a central government to be able to function as a unified whole. Otherwise you'd get a bunch of disorganized little fiefdoms and states that would be powerless against a more unified aggressor nation.
International war is one of the most sound reasons to levy a national tax. Only a fool would scoff at the notion. Whether the war is, or is not in the interest of the country is another matter.Tunnelcat wrote:Hmmm, war. I guess that's an "OK" conservative reason to levy taxes. Taxes are 'good' when they pay for war, but are 'bad' when they pay for the social welfare. 33% of the taxes taken in pay for our national defense, while 24% goes to Social Security.
so.. what you're saying is when a war happens, it's a good idea to impose a new tax, because there's a war going on?Sergeant Thorne wrote: International war is one of the most sound reasons to levy a national tax.
Yes, but how much or what percentage do we as a people of this nation need to cough up in order to feed the military/industrial complex that has taken over our national defense? We're no longer paying to fight just a war, but to feed a giant sucking monster that has no oversight or restrictions on cost and that even goes out LOOKING for wars to start so as to justify the money it spends or desires on fancy war hardware. They'd rather spend money on expensive killing machines than get and train more able men to fight wars anymore.Sergeant Thorne wrote:International war is one of the most sound reasons to levy a national tax. Only a fool would scoff at the notion. Whether the war is, or is not in the interest of the country is another matter.
The government is only inept because the people running it don't give a damn about it's efficiency or purpose. That's the reason that government is screwed up, lack of determination to make it function for the people, not the politicians or corporations. I agree that welfare is just a crutch that serves no purpose to society, but support to our elders and poorer members of society are in the long term best interests of any society. Not everyone can work and retire rich in old age like all you free market prophets like to espouse.Sergeant Thorne wrote:And this is not Violence (War) vs Well-Being (Social Welfare) as you so stupidly put it. What a naive way to present it! The difference is the difference between asking a people to pay for the defense of their country as a whole against foreign powers, and asking them to pay other people's way in life. One is in their interest, and the other is in no one's interest but the career politicians. Welfare has fairly well documented negative effects on the human condition, and it is equally well proven that the government is inept in its attempts to target needs and meet out assistance. ...WTF.
True, thank you for the correction.TunnelCat wrote:Not quite true. The first 'income tax' was levied in 1860 and 61 to pay for the Civil War.
But this is an INHERENT problem with government. It's always someone elses money.TunnelCat wrote:The government is only inept because the people running it don't give a damn about it's efficiency or purpose.
Two charts that I think are both very significant to this questions.TunnelCat wrote:Yes, but how much or what percentage do we as a people of this nation need to cough up in order to feed the military/industrial complex that has taken over our national defense?
and this is the reason why they have such an easy time justifiying a new tax. if the money were coming out of THEIR pockets (which they damn well make sure it's not), the whole thought process would be radically different.Kilarin wrote: But this is an INHERENT problem with government. It's always someone elses money.
Well, it DOES come out of their pockets, they've just rigged it so that they don't have to cough up as much all us common peon serfs. Most of the people that run the government have got it made in spades and know all the ins and outs of tax dodging (they do write the lawsFerno wrote:and this is the reason why they have such an easy time justifiying a new tax. if the money were coming out of THEIR pockets (which they damn well make sure it's not), the whole thought process would be radically different.