Chris :
How did you come up with pink = red ?
 
A pinko is a Leftist who is half "white," that is, capitalist or  
liberal-establishment.
The Swedes, for example, are pink, not red.
 
The U of Chicago quad, for instance, was sometimes referred to as
"Pink Square" because of all the Socialists there, but it was not another  
Red Square.
Among the pinkos who used to call U of C  home was none other than 
Bernie Sanders now of Vermont.
 
Pink , yes,  red, no.
 
There is an important difference.
 
Billy
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
1/11/2012 9:17:28 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:

 
Commies,  now that is a good old word.  Synonym and adjective = pinko.  As 
in,  pinko commie.  Language straight out of All in the  Family. 
Chris 
 
 
From: [email protected]  
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David R.  Block
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2012 9:39 PM
To:  [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RC] Thoughts on this  tenet? *

Never have liked the  Commies. Particularly since they got "smart" and 
started naming things with  the word "Democratic" in there, like German 
Democratic Republic, when it was  everything BUT Democratic. Notorious word 
thieves, 
those Commies.  

David

“A society that does not  recognize that each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled to  follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot really  know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek  


On  1/11/2012 12:33 AM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
 
 

 
Yeah.   About  the word "liberal," that is kind of hard to completely 
demonize  since
 
there are the  Liberal Arts   --and in common speech, not questions of  
politics,
 
about various  things someone can be more liberal or more  conservative,
 
maybe about  tastes in clothes or attitude toward modern art, etc, so  you
 
are right about  that. Still "liberal" often is used as a cuss word by the  
Right
 
and when it is so  used the Left seems to have conceded.
 

 
"Socialist" is  another matter and precisely because of the old  USSR.
 
But in my case,  and a lot of other vintage Democratic Socialists of  yore,
 
we would have  loved to have driven Saabs or Volvos if we could  have
 
afforded to do  so, we always were angry at the Commies for  stealing
 
the word  Socialist since they weren't Socialists at all, they were  
Stalinists
 
or  Marxist-Leninist Bolsheviks, or etc. 
 

 
Those years are  long gone but I have never forgiven the Commies  for
 
their word theft  and still fight that fight.  Especially since the concept 
 and
 
the word predate  Marx by a good 25 years and the original "Socialists"  
 
include one of my  heroes, Saint-Simon. 
 

 
Don't fret about  now knowing too much about him, hell, most historians  
don't
  
know jack squat  about him either. 
 

 
Humor me , OK  ?  I'll return the favor some day when you need it  most.
 

 
Muchos  Gracias,
 

 
Guillermo    
 

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

 

 

 
1/10/2012  10:18:36 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   writes:

Covered  Socialist and Liberal elsewhere. Hope you find that. 

I don't like  losing words either, but we don't want anyone to think that 
TR is one of  today's progressives. 

David  
 
“A  society that does not recognize that each individual has values of his 
own  which he is entitled to follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the  individual and cannot really know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek   


On  1/10/2012 11:16 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:   
 
 
1/10/2012  9:00:34 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   writes:

 
You don't  like language "corruption." Fine. Then what are we to do with 
the KJV in  which Paul's vision has Jesus telling him "it is hard for thee to 
kicketh  against the pricks." Does anyone today know what that means? 
Without an  Old English dictionary, I doubt it. Throw out the KJV? The Fighting 
 
Fundies are going to be after you! :-)  


 
Actually this  is anything but a problem for me. Most of the time I read 
the NEB,  sometimes
 
the New  Jerusalem or Oxford. These are the best scholarly translations, 
and they  are
 
well done, at  least the editions before about 1985 or so.  The KJV is  
strictly
 
for language  as far as I am concerned. It is like Shakespeare. Simply  
inspirational.
 
Otherwise I  read the 3 translations, usually the NEB, well over 98 % of 
the  time.
 


Take  back the language? Great idea, how is that done? We didn't quite get 
here  overnight. We aren't going back overnight. 
 



 
We are now  on the verge of losing two perfectly good words to the Right,   
"Socialism"
 
and  "Liberal."  I feel like fighting to save those words also. On  grounds 
of historical 
 
meaning  and cultural relevance. But now it is the Left that has pretty 
much  given up
 
on the  fight.  If that's what they want to do, OK, I am anti-today's-Left  
anyway.
 
But the  classical US Left of the era 1900 - 1930 I feel like fighting for. 
 Today's Left
 
hates  that  Left and regards those people as backward and  unenlightened.
 

 
Being an  historian means that some issues that draw blank stares from most 
 people
 
are burning  issues to me  --and to many members of the AHA ( American  
Historical
 
Association  ). 
 

 
But you're  right, " We didn't quite get here overnight. We aren't going 
back  overnight."
 
That is  absolutely correct. 
 

 
Its like SMU,  no football program for decades, and now they're  baaaack.
 

 
Things like  that can happen if you work at it.
 

 
Billy
 

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


David
 
“A  society that does not recognize that each individual has values of his 
own  which he is entitled to follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the  individual and cannot really know freedom.”—Fredrich August von  Hayek  


On  1/10/2012 11:37 AM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:   
 
 
Hrummmmph.
 

 
There are  advantages to the word "progressivism." If we are serious  about
 
assuming the  mantle of Teddy Roosevelt then we need to find some  way
 
to work with  the word and, in the process,  break the identification the  
term
 
now has  with  ( the sad excuse for ) today's Left.  
 

 
That is,  partly what we have going-on  is a word war, or "War of the  
Words."
 
Creatures  from Mars arrive in UFOs to teach us how to use language  better
 
and  to  provide Earthlings with better conceptual and communications  
skills.
 

 
We are those  creatures from Mars.
 

 
Little Green  Radical Centrists.
 

 
So, let's not  surrender any "heritage vocabulary." It can only be a  fight
 
but let's,  win back all the good words that others have tried to  
appropriate
 
for nefarious  purposes.
 

 
If you were  an historian you might well be sensitive to this. Read texts  
written
 
in previous  decades ( historians read history just about every day ) and 
that may  
 
make absurd  sense if we define words in them in modern-day ways.  
 

 
"Don we now  our gay apparel," the Christmas carol ( one of about 20 with 
this problem  ) 
 
sounds  bizarre now. Solution,  fight to discredit homosexual use of  
"gay."  Similarly, 
 
in the era of  the Korean war, the USAF referred to Mig jets as "fagots"   
 
( can be  spelled with one or two Gs ). 
 

 
Republicans  like to demonize "liberal" and socialist."  Why should we  
accept
 
such word  poisoning ?  Both words have entirely good and noble  meanings.
 

 
All of this  said,  I also like your list of alternatives, evolutionary  
centrism,
 
activist  centrism, scientific centrism, etc, each of which can be  used
 
in the right  context to very goof effect.
 

 

 
Billy
 

 
===============================================
 

 
1/10/2012  9:16:13 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   writes:

 
 
On  Jan 10, 2012, at 8:42 AM, Chris Hahn wrote:


 
 
a  rational progressivism that supports testable change to improve the  lot 
of the entire populace, rather than the traditional American  progressivism 
which moves toward some moralistic  utopia.




 
 
I  like your concepts, but I don’t like the word progressivism.  It  will 
be too easily be confused with American progressivism which  already has a 
meaning.  Instead of rational progressivism, how  about “rational improvement”
 or “rational evolvement”?


 

 
I'm  with Chris; great insight, but potentially confusing  terminology.
 

 
How  about:
 

 
-  scientific centrism
 

 
-  progressive centrism (adjective instead of  noun)
 

 
-  progressive design
 

 
-  evolutionary centrism
 

 
-  activist centrism
 

 
-  improvisationalism
 

 
Not  quite there yet, but worth working on.  As usual, I prefer a name  
that is oxymoronic and paradoxical in order to inspire cognitive  dissonance. A 
good test would be whether it infuriates Solomon.  :-)
 

 
--  Ernie P.
 




 

 
Chris
 

 

 
From: [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   
[_mailto:[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) ] On Behalf Of Mike  Gonzalez
Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2012 9:32  AM
To: radicalcentrism
Subject: [RC] Thoughts on this  tenet?
 

 
I want to  home-in on this particular tenet and get to the heart of the 
point  (tempered optimism + our brand of centrism = rational  progressivism):

When pessimism infects centrism, it becomes angry  populism. When apathy 
blends with centrism, it creates the traditional  view of the lazy, valueless 
independent. What is needed, instead, is a  tempered positivity in 
scientific centrism, channeling the best aspects  of an ideology that believes 
in the 
application of workable solutions in  individual, piecemeal fashion to 
civil society. Consequently, a  rejection of pessimism and apathy in favor of 
sober belief in a  society's ability to improve itself is an essential aspect 
of centrism.  The result of this is a rational progressivism that supports 
testable  change to improve the lot of the entire populace, rather than the  
traditional American progressivism which moves toward some moralistic  
utopia.
 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of  the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >
Google  Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(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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