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For example Mr Brooks uses correlation to equal cause and effect. Statistically speaking, this may not be the case and much care needs to be used when making such claims which I did not see in the article.
"Fourth, the income inequality frame needlessly polarizes the debate. There is a growing consensus that government should be doing more to help increase social mobility for the less affluent. Even conservative Republicans are signing on to this. The income inequality language introduces a class conflict element to this discussion."
doublespeak.
Every time I hear someone speak truth and then replace it with another lie I think of how the Christians convinced the Romans that zues didn't exist because christ is the real God.
The Romans never thought "Zeus" existed; among their pantheon the Romans worshipped Jove.
The reason why Christianity was able to convince the Romans that their gods weren't real was, in large part, because Roman society, like ours, had become agnostic in their beliefs, by the time of Christ. The Christians were able to put forward a religious philosophy that "fit" events in the real world, with proposed solutions that were rational per that same real world, and fulfilled the needs of the cynical Roman public.
The same attitude can be found among the Romans with regard to citizenship, industry, art, morality, etc... just as you can find the same ambiguous attitude among modern Americans.
The base of the party wants more government the center right portion doesn't want it.