Sorry if this is an old question.  What is the difference between radical 
centrism and utilitarianism?

Kevin


  Note : One correction to the article, Matt Miller did not invent the phrase
  "Radical Centrist."  No-one can say for sure who did. It was used in a
  non-modern sense of Wallace in 1968 but some historians date the idea,
  at least in a germinal sense, to the 1920s, just after WWI. The phrase had a 
set 
  of meanings similar to how we use the terminology now in Marilyn Ferguson's 
  Aquarian Conspiracy of 1980. Really contemporary usage dates to 
  the late 1990s and became more-or-less clearly defined 
  just before RC.org was started in 2004.

  Billy

  -----------------------------------------------------------

  Views Hound

  How I became a radical centrist and why you should also become one
  I explain my unexpected and strange transformation from a right-wing 
ideologue to a passionate centrist. Please join us—you have nothing to lose but 
your dogma.
  By Jack Davis - Sunday 30 Oct 2011 
  The Case for Centrism
  I’ve followed politics for years, but for most of them, I was a dogmatic 
right-winger. This was not the product of deep thinking; it was probably the 
natural result of growing up in a conservative household. My parents hated 
liberals and leftists; they sincerely thought these people were out to destroy 
America. For most of my life I took a right-wing party line, going as far to 
join the John Birch Society! I never seriously examined my ideology. I knew 
that the people on the other side were ignorant and had the worst intentions; 
there was no point in talking to them.

  Incredibly, a baseball (really) book radically changed my thinking. I had 
been a fan of a writer named Bill James since I was in high school, many years 
ago. He wrote a book in 1994 called What Happened to the Hall of Fame, and I 
decided to check it out. Unexpectedly, he discusses his political beliefs on 
page 28. After reading this page, my thinking changed forever (really). He 
explained eloquently why he was a moderate. These are the five sentences that 
changed my ideology forver:

  It is my observation, listening to political partisans, that there is some 
truth in what everybody says, but that they will all distort the truth to 
defend their position.(emphasis added). In my judgment, everyone on the 
political landscape,from Rush Limbaugh to Howard Metzenbaum (former liberal 
Senator from Ohio) is right about some things; I will listen to any of them and 
think that there is some truth in what he or she is saying. But at the same 
time, they all B.S. They all wear blinders. They say things they know or should 
know are not true, but which they feel they must say to defend the extreme 
positions they have taken. (emphasis added).

  I thought about this for a few moments and realized he was exactly right. My 
thinking had been shallow and dogmatic. I had been certain about things I could 
not be certain about. I started reading books and magazines that I would never 
have looked at before— leftist magazines like Mother Jones, The Nation, and The 
Progressive., among others. After reading these magazines, I realized James was 
100% correct. The leftist writing I suddenly followed had some legitimate 
points that I had never before considered. To my family’s horror, I embraced 
(and still do) many items on the leftist agenda. National health insurance was 
no longer evil “socialized medicine,” it was the moral and sensible thing to 
do. The pro-choice side of the abortion debate really did have some merit, and 
campaign finance reform was absolutely necessary to control corporate power.

  At the same time, I also realized much of the leftist ideology was wrong. I 
could not justify racial preferences, abortion on demand, and very high tax 
rates, among other things. When I talked to liberals, I saw the same hostility 
and closed-mindedness I had seen on the right. I noticed many leftists didn’t 
even attempt to address conservative arguments —they simply impugned the 
motives of the other side: opponents of affirmative action or open immigration 
were racists, pro-lifers were making “war on women,” etc..

  It’s been almost ten years since I read James' argument and I am as firmly 
centrist today as ever. The phrase “radical centrist,” a term coined by a 
centrist pundit named Matt Miller, is the perfect label for me. I passionately 
oppose rigid ideology. It’s very hard for me to understand how anyone can be an 
ideologue, whether right or left. Every time I hear a right wing ideologue, 
e.g. Ann Coultertrade insults with a leftist ideologue, e.g. Keith Olbermann, 
the same thought comes to my head: You’re both right. Your opponent is 
ignorant, tendentious, and misguided—and so are you.


  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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