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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLiberal Label Gives Way To Progress(ive)
SAN DIEGO George Lakoff is a professor of linguistics at UC Berkeley who has used his skills to help the Democratic frame issues to their advantage. I got him on the phone in my attempt to solve one of the days great linguistic conundrums.
"Now, you're a liberal, right? I asked him.
I'm a progressive," he corrected me.
Political labels are blunt instruments. But we all use them. And theres been a lot of disagreement about what to call people who are left of center. Are they liberals or progressives?
People who work in journalism shy away from using the labels that politicians and advocates use to describe themselves. The problem is they typically choose words that lend them a righteous glow but are also partly or wholly inaccurate. Progressive seems to lend political views a too-positive spin. After all isnt everyone, including Rush Limbaugh, in favor of progress?
http://www.kpbs.org/news/2013/feb/14/liberal-label-gives-way-progressive/
Brickbat
(19,339 posts)Liberal it is.
frylock
(34,825 posts)FSogol
(45,491 posts)Duer 157099
(17,742 posts)Proliberate?
reformist2
(9,841 posts)Puzzledtraveller
(5,937 posts)I have been reading here and there about what "Liberal" used to mean and imply I don't think we should retreat from that but be proud of it. I admit I was brainwahsed into thinking it was bad but now I am changing my view.
JaneyVee
(19,877 posts)forestpath
(3,102 posts)frylock
(34,825 posts)I'm not advising anyone to take one side or the other, but I found the history of the terminology to be quite interesting.
Sandy Lakoff is professor emeritus of political science at UC San Diego. He said the word progressive, viewed over a hundred-year history, refers to a reform movement embodied by Teddy Roosevelt and the women's suffrage movement.
Liberalism, meanwhile, was not left wing. Far from it. Historically, it's the notion that people should be free from government interference
more like modern libertarianism. But Lakoff said during the 20th century the term evolved to mean that liberals were fans, not of Teddy, but of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
"In this country it meant New-Deal liberalism, if I can put it that way, or the extension of progressivism to include a major role for the state, said Sandy Lakoff.