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Hardly surprising that an administration that built its brand on “post truth” has no interest in the good functioning of academic research


Generally speaking, conservatives are ambivalent on the topic of education and research. Why they may benefit from uneducated voters, they understand the value of qualified labour for their businesses.


Do you actually mean conservatives here, or Republicans?

I ask because the parties have functionally flipped at the moment. Democrats are doing whatever they can to keep what was already in place (i.e. "conserve") while Republicans are on a bit of a war path trying to change everything (i.e. "progress").


Not all change is progress. Make America Great Again is a fundamentally reactionary platform, and nothing about the goals of Project 2025 is "progressive". Cute wordplay, though, good job using denotation to oppose connotation.


"Progress" as a goal is only meaningful with a defined direction. But I disagree with you, definitionally any change is progressing towards something.

This is precisely the issue I have always had with considering oneself "progressive". The end goals you are aiming for are the important factor to call out, the fact that you are simply progressing means only that you don't want to stand still.


Progressivism and the idea of being "progressive" or "a progressive" are defined ideologies. Within the political spectrum they have their own meaning. Arguing semantics in this way is not particularly different than saying "I saw a Republican turn left coming out of a doorway, so are they really on the right?"


Mind sharing, or linking to, what the defined ideology is?

My understanding of progressivism, as it is commonly used in the US, is that its based on often unspoken assumptions that the goals being progressed towards are "good" or "right" and that others' goals, therefore, are not. That isn't really a progressive ideology in my opinion though, and sounds more like an elitist approach to authoritarian rule.


I'll assume you're asking in good faith, you could start by looking at the wikipedia page for progressivism, and continue from there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressivism


It was a genuine question, thanks for assuming that.

I still don't get what the underlying ideology is though (sorry if I'm being obtuse here).

> seeks to advance the human condition through social reform – primarily based on purported advancements in social organization, science, and technology.

"Advance" here has the same issue as "progressive" - it needs direction to be meaningful. This doesn't say what we would be advancing towards, though it does say a few ways we may be able to get there.

For comparison, liberalism and conservativism are much more clear.

Conservativism can be (very roughly) boiled down to "don't break a good thing." Said differently, keep a high bar for change and default to trusting the people before us got here for good reason.

Liberalism can be similarly boiled down to prioritizing individual freedoms and liberty.

With wither of those two there will be a slew of political initiatives or programs that are based on those principles, but the underlying principles are clear.

That's what I've yet to grasp with progressivism, when you peel away all the programs and initiatives what is the underlying principle and what is the specific direction to progress or advance towards? As far as boundary cases go, what does progressivism look like once that goal is reached - does it become conservative?


If you read just a bit further in that article it is rather specific:

> While many ideologies can fall under the banner of progressivism, both the current and historical movement are characterized by a critique of unregulated capitalism, desiring a more active democratic government to take a role in safeguarding human rights, bringing about cultural development, and being a check-and-balance on corporate monopolies.


Sure, that's still not really a clear ideological underpinning to me though.

Is the core that goal to progress away from capitalism towards more governmental control?

If so I guess that is at least defining a directional goal, but using the blanket term "progressive" there is effectively blocking out anyone who wants to progress towards a different goal.

It seems like federalist or anticapitalist would be much more clear. At least then the goals they want to move towards are the distinguishing factor rather than the act of changing from where we are currently.


I agree. Conservative is a slightly less manipulative term than progressive. Progressive implies "we're the goodies"; conservative "we want to keep the current state of things".


But the "Make America Great Again" movement is explicitly regressive because they want to return America to its "past glory". All of trumps messaging has been about how great the US used to be, before it was hijacked by communists/the left/transgenders, and that he will protect you from the cultural changes taking place. This is reactionary/regressive. You can play word games with "progress to the goal of returning america to the past" but it's just spin. People know what "progress" means.


I don't disagree at all, I think many of Trump's talking points could fit with a "regressive" label.

I don't think its really word games when talking about progressivism today. Trump could claim the banner of progressive in the sense that he's trying to progress towards a future he believes is better for all of us, while Democrats are attempting to conserve what they built. Personally I see that as a bullshit word game, but that doesn't mean the words are actually used improperly there.

If someone tells you they are progressive, what is the end goal you expect they mean? Its totally possible that banner is shorthand for a specific goal or direction and I just completely missed the boat there.


> Trump could claim the banner of progressive in the sense that he's trying to progress towards a future he believes is better for all of us

He could, but he hasn't.

> totally possible that banner is shorthand for a specific goal or direction

It is, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressivism


Except conserving the country's demographics, i.e. its population, on the fashionable assumption that peoples are interchangeable, and that what really makes a country is cartography and paperwork.


I'm not actually quite sure what the connection here was, but I am curious.

Are you arguing that Democrats are trying yo conserve the demographics of today? Or that Republicans are trying to conserve, or really regress back to, the demographics of the past?

As far as countries go, how do you define them if not with maps and paperwork? The distinction between countries and nations or nation states may be important here, I've always understood it to be that countries are all about borders and laws where nations and nation states are much more focused on the people.


> Are you arguing that Democrats are trying yo conserve the demographics of today?

Not at all - that would require closing the border.

> Or that Republicans are trying to conserve, or really regress back to, the demographics of the past?

Yes.

> As far as countries go, how do you define them if not with maps and paperwork?

I think we agree on this point. Yes, countries are defined with maps/paperwork/borders, but when I said "what makes a country", I meant it in the sense of what makes it unique or different, what gives it its character. Certainly territory is part of that, but the larger, much more important part, are its people, i.e. the nation.


My take is that the "Democrats" are doing their best to "conserve" the direction they were "changing" things towards, and the progress they made in that direction already. Whilst the conservatives are finally getting enough oomph and ability to stem and reverse the direction of the slow tide that the Democrats were dragging everyone towards.

Let's face it, we were squarely within crazy territory and that's why everyone is having a knee-jerk reaction. The left or democrats or "the woke" as they are named have taken us too far, and if you ask me, way too-close to a societal-level precipice.


There are other ways the parties have flipped in my view, but let's stick here for a moment.

What the Democrats are doing at the moment is pretty textbook conservative, preserving the institutions, customs, and values that exist today. And there's nothing wrong with that, best I can tell that's just how it goes when parties flip - you're in charge for long enough to make major change and when you lose power you cling on to holding your ground.

Republicans are doing more than just undoing some of the progress made by Democrats. They are doing some of that for sure, but they're also trying to define some new path that they think will be better by whatever metrics they care about.

Now for another example of the flip, Democrats leaned to state's rights as soon as the election was over. Republican states already seem happy to welcome federal intervention, for example with federal enforcement and military on the southern border.


No worries, the Republicans will burn it all to the ground including the rule of law. Whoever is lucky or has enough money to survive this…


Maybe traditional conservatives, but they're functionally extinct now, and the only time Trump supporters are "pro-education" is when they can rage about how DEI is ruining education. At least, from what I've seen so far.


Traditional liberals are also functionally extinct now, at least in the US.

We really need new terms for our political spectrum.


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Maybe a supremacist mindset is appropriate when the other side has deteriorated into something pretty close to nazism. It is actually not very hard to be better than nazism. Your 'flip around' statement actually makes zero sense and the statement you are responding to is pretty accurate.


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We've banned this account. You can't attack another user like this here, regardless of how wrong they are or you feel they are.

If you don't want to be banned, you're welcome to email hn@ycombinator.com and give us reason to believe that you'll follow the rules in the future. They're here: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.


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We've banned this account for repeatedly breaking the site guidelines and ignoring our request to stop.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


I'm inclined to agree on some points. You'll have a hard time communicating your ideas with this audience. Firstly, it is something that many here do not agree with or want to hear. Even the ideally formulated message containing these ideas will inspire a negative reaction. Understanding that, you will get more mileage by tailoring your message. Plainly saying these things is too blunt for most to even consider.




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