English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

In other words, do you tend to mimic your parents political positions because you find them convincing or have you adopted an entirely different set of political views completely incongruent with theirs.

2007-03-08 08:36:36 · 24 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

24 answers

At first I always questioned why they voted the way they did, but as I got older and was more stable and on my own I realized the reasons and the difference. My parents aren't my enemy.

2007-03-08 08:47:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

no longer truly. My father's a conservative Democrat, inspite of the truth that he would not imagine of it in those words. He combines organization-pleasant economic beliefs with help for restricted social courses and a smooth technocratic distaste for democracy's excesses. My mom's an particularly liberal Democrat and rather open minded about maximum issues, yet she keeps some cultural elitism that bothers me. i'm a self-defined decentralist socialist. In practice meaning i imagine the u . s . could be chop up up right into a lot smaller and bigger achievable international locations, that truly some 'nanny state' regulations on own habit are stupid (I particularly don't have any issue with human beings having guns, case in point), and that democracy is largely accessible even as there is relative and critical equality of condition. This places me in a project the position i visit sympathize with anti-conflict libertarian kinds to boot as assorted leftist communities.

2016-12-05 10:29:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, but not quite. My parents are both conservative Republicans (with my mother being a closet feminist), but only really started having political discourse recently.
I myself am conservative, but somewhere between Libertarian and Republican.

Side note, I find it interesting that I've seen more Libertarians now (especially on yahoo! Answers) than I ever have in the past. I wonder if its the outrageously awful rants we see from both Democrats and Republicans...

2007-03-08 13:02:20 · answer #3 · answered by Henry 2 · 1 0

There never was political talk in our house until I started it.

My views are different then my dad's but the same as my mom's.

I will say though that my dad is more into politics then my mom so in that way I am more like him.

2007-03-08 08:40:55 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Its been a norm for a long time, even in Victorian times mother would influnce their son to vote as they would want b/c the mothers didnot have the right to vote yet. And now most of the time children do seem to follow their parent's views, i know i do.. but i'm more of a concervitive then even my parent

2007-03-08 08:53:13 · answer #5 · answered by Annie: Mommy to Sid and Liz 4 · 2 0

My parents laid the foundation for my political views but I pick as I will in political elections. My parents only vote when the General elctions are going.

2007-03-08 09:48:59 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The basic idea between my parents and myself are the same. But we differ greatly on Religious views.

2007-03-08 09:19:34 · answer #7 · answered by hera 4 · 1 0

My mother is more moderate like me, almost conservative, but not quite. My father is very liberal. I tend to be moderate less conservative than my mother, less liberal than my father. Really, the only reason my mother does not vote Republican is because of their hatefulness and anger towards others. Well, and the damage Bush has done. My father is much, much more tolerant.

2007-03-08 08:41:35 · answer #8 · answered by Groovy 6 · 0 0

My Mom and Dad were on opposite sides. I don't recommend that as an example for parenting.

However, it was like listening to Hannity & Colmes.

I am Independent.

2007-03-08 08:41:04 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Some of my views are the same as my parents and some are not. My children agree with some of my views and some they do not. It is called free thinking. Try it sometime.

2007-03-08 08:59:06 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

fedest.com, questions and answers