ZZ-Tops89 said:
sorry to kill the win. I'll grant your points about the starting point used, the problem is that the only way to avoid a contradiction is to use a sort of neutral eye to observe the issue and find the problems with the two sides. My point is essentially the same point you make in your second paragraph, and that as a result if you view the issues from the neutral position both sides are problematic with regards to conflicting views on the role of government.
Centrist isn't neutral, it's just centrist. A view that there's no existing "stance" on an issue is not inherently more valid. You view yourself as being an impartial observer, and thus able to see the contradiction, but the contradiction only exists from your perspective. It could be that you have the "right" perspective and the members of the parties are wrong, but there's no empirical evidence for that. Hard-line neutrality is just as biased.
Let me put it this way: on the issue of gay marriage your "neutral" view would be that the government has no stance on something; one side is trying to make it legal, and one side is trying to make it illegal. Except we have to take into account what actually happens when the government has no position. If the government did nothing on the issue of gay marriage in either direction, it wouldn't exist. The Republicans, then, are trying to remain consistent with what would happen without government interference. The Democrats are consistent with what "should" happen with government interference.
A centrist perspective is a fine one, but it's simply a perspective. There may be an objectively "correct" view, but you've made no argument that your view is the right one. You see the fact that there is contradiction if viewed from your perspective as evidence in and of itself of the existence of actual contradiction, but that itself is contradictory in its own way if viewed from another perspective.
All three viewpoints are consistent from their own beliefs, and inconsistent from either of the other two's viewpoints. You're being circular in your argument, defending your viewpoint by presuming the existence of the inconsistencies which only exist from your viewpoint. Here's what it ends up in syllogism form
There are inconsistencies which can only be seen from a certain perspective and
The perspective which can view these inconsistencies is best
Therefore: the viewpoint ZZ-Tops holds is the best
And
ZZ-Top's viewpoint is the best
In ZZ-Top's viewpoint, there are inconsistencies,
Therefore: there are inconsistencies.
Do you see the internal issue? In order to prove your viewpoint to be best, there must be inconsistencies; in order to prove the existence of the inconsistencies, your viewpoint must be best.