- Joined
- Mar 29, 2014
Last time I took the test, I was in the green quadrant near the center.
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New England?Look on my views, ye Mighty, and despair!
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I don't think the Authoritarian/Libertarian split is very accurate for my views; I'm fairly libertarian towards social issues but not economic. The big issue that should send that dot northward is that I believe strongly that we should have single payer health care. However, I feel that the left/right split is pretty accurate. It might be a bit too far to the left but I have no quibbles with it.
(PS. Anyone want to guess what region I'm from?)
Your explanation of the employment versus inflation question sounds very correct to me. Employment would push it left, lower inflation would push it right.
As for the patriotism question, agreeing would push you south, disagree would push you north. Because nationalism is high up on the north side, while more mutalism and cohabitual pluralism type stuff is down on the south side. I wonder who our first user to break the X axis will be and go authoritarian? If anyone at all.
The point is to be vague and generalist in the questions. They're trying to make it as black and white as possible, when most people would probably be in a shade of gray. The reason for doing so is logical, but it's still one of the reasons that I dislike this test.Then there are questions you cannot answer with the choices given. Like the first one about globalization. Should it benefit people or corporations? Really? In the free market corporations only survive when they benefit the people. Perhaps the asker is eluding to there being no free market.
I, too, would like to see this.Regardless of which, I feel too @Cowlick to complete this test.