Progressive: Difference between revisions

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Progressives support things like a strong [[social safety net]], [[universal health care]], personal [[freedom]], a mixed [[capitalist]] and [[socialist]] economy, and other liberal policies that have proven to improve [[happiness]] in the countries that have implemented them.
Progressives support things like a strong [[social safety net]], [[universal health care]], personal [[freedom]], a mixed [[capitalist]] and [[socialist]] economy, and other liberal policies that have proven to improve [[happiness]] in the countries that have implemented them.


The term must be used to draw the distinction between the mainstream democratic party in the US, which does not advocate strongly for these things. And lacking an actual social democrat party, the term progressive is the best descriptor we have.
The term must be used to distinguish progressives from the mainstream democratic party in the US, which does not advocate strongly for these things. And lacking an actual social democrat party, the term progressive is the best descriptor we have.


Progressives also tend to be more [[secular]], and share many of the beliefs that go along with that. Even though these are [[spiritual]] beliefs rather than [[political]] ones, the two are correlated. This is why the term "secular progressives" is often used in this [[wiki]] to describe the group who shares these two core beliefs.  
Progressives also tend to be more [[secular]], and share many of the beliefs that go along with that. Even though these are [[spiritual]] beliefs rather than [[political]] ones, the two are correlated. This is why the term "secular progressives" is often used in this [[wiki]] to describe the group who shares these two core beliefs.  

Revision as of 23:50, 3 January 2024

Progressive is used as a shorthand for the mainstream social democratic political view that is center-left in most democracies but considered far-left in the US.

Progressives support things like a strong social safety net, universal health care, personal freedom, a mixed capitalist and socialist economy, and other liberal policies that have proven to improve happiness in the countries that have implemented them.

The term must be used to distinguish progressives from the mainstream democratic party in the US, which does not advocate strongly for these things. And lacking an actual social democrat party, the term progressive is the best descriptor we have.

Progressives also tend to be more secular, and share many of the beliefs that go along with that. Even though these are spiritual beliefs rather than political ones, the two are correlated. This is why the term "secular progressives" is often used in this wiki to describe the group who shares these two core beliefs.

Believers of a religion can identify as "Christian" or "Muslim" or "Buddhist" and instantly convey gigabytes of information about their beliefs, as well as become part of an in-group. Secular progressives are just a loose affiliation of correlated political and spiritual beliefs, not a religion or even a political party.

metaculture attempts to define the core belief system that underlies secular progressivism and present it in a way that makes it easy to understand and communicate to others.

It would be nice if progressives even attempted to define their own beliefs. Instead they allow right wing propaganda networks to fill the search results for "what is progressivism" and similar terms with inflammatory strawman characterizations of their beliefs. If you don't define your belief system then your opponents will do it for you.