Parenting Porcupines

著者: Kasie Whitener Jessica Ethridge Melissa Couture Alex Thornton
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  • Libertarian Moms (and Dads) talk about raising our children by teaching them not to hurt people or take their stuff, how to think not what to think, and that taxation is theft. Unofficially associated with the South Carolina Libertarian Party. Politics, parenting, and free-range day-drinking.
    2020 Parenting Porcupines
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Libertarian Moms (and Dads) talk about raising our children by teaching them not to hurt people or take their stuff, how to think not what to think, and that taxation is theft. Unofficially associated with the South Carolina Libertarian Party. Politics, parenting, and free-range day-drinking.
2020 Parenting Porcupines
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  • All Big Tents Have Clowns
    2023/11/10

    Photo by Sachin Bharti on Pexels.com

    The Libertarian Party is a big tent. Someone told me last week he thinks everyone’s a libertarian, they just don’t know it. The Party appealed to me (Kasie) because it’s a place to be socially liberal (marry who you want, wear what you want, etc) and government-conservative (we don’t need laws for every damn thing, ya’ll). But here’s the thing: all big tents got clowns and ours like to show their asses.

    Twitter controversy, LPNH is ridiculous. Explain the basics.

    Our biggest problem in elections, cycle after cycle, is voters not knowing enough about Libertarian principles to support our candidates. When social media messaging like LPNH’s bullshit hits like it did this week, it’s the rest of us that have to sweep up the shrapnel.

    At a time when we need real leadership, what we have is memes and hot takes. Is social media really a place for leadership? For discovering new ideas and exploring potential political fixes?

    Every party has fringe members – the extra-woke left, the racist-as-hell right, and our big tent isn’t any different. But shouldn’t we be?

    Shouldn’t our principles about granting liberty to others as well as ourselves mean we’re tolerant of the worst of us? Or should those principles mean we don’t accept people who reject others on racist, homophobic, or sexist reasons?

    How do we get the right message out when so many wrong messages are louder? More obnoxious? More inflammatory?

    Read more on our blog

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    33 分
  • What we learned from campaigning
    2023/11/10

    Earned media is more valuable than paid media. But both are hard to get.

    Branding matters for consistency and professionalism. BUT great branding can’t cover up bad positions. And no by needs that many palm cards, handouts, banners, and other suchness. We need metrics for realistic purchases of these kinds of materials.

    What are the relevant milestones? Do we now know what to expect in engagement on social media, event attendance, etc? What are unrealistic expectations for engagement or attention?

    What do voters care about? How do you earn their trust enough to be able to ask them?

    What did we learn crafting positions on all these topics?

    How much support (money, volunteers, media coverage) do we need?

    If someone is thinking about running for office, why would you tell them NOT to? Why would you tell them they should?

    Read more on our blog

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    42 分
  • Don't Tread on my Uterus
    2023/11/10

    South Carolina is one of the States that has been in the news in recent months. With the overturning of Roe v. Wade there were several states who decided that they should legislatively place controls on the providing of abortion services. Many implemented bans after certain gestational benchmarks, but some states (ahem, South Carolina) took it to the extreme with attempts to completely ban abortions altogether. 

    Sadly, a chamber full of old white men were able to draft and pass legislation that is a gross violation of womens’ rights to make medical decisions about their bodies. Thankfully, the South Carolina Supreme Court recently ruled that such a ban violates the right to privacy for women, and they nixed the whole thing. Now, these statements are always ones that get folks worked up, so before we spiral into an abyss of hostility, let’s talk about this like reasonable people. 

    One of the things people often say is that the “purpose” of these bans is to “protect the sanctity of life” or the “rights of the unborn”. While it is certainly true that life is sacred, and we can have all sorts of conversations about when life begins, it is not the place of the government to be an enforcer of morality. There are instances when women are not given a choice in getting pregnant, and forcing them to carry a pregnancy to term is cruel. 

    For example, if a woman (teenaged or otherwise) becomes pregnant as a result of being raped would you stand face to face with her and tell her that she must carry to term a pregnancy that is the result of one of the most violent acts a human can take on another? Where do her rights begin in this situation? 

    OR- what if a woman finds out mid-pregnancy that the child she carries will almost certainly claim her life if she carries to term? Where do her rights begin in this situation? 

    Another reason many support these bans is because they are concerned with late-term abortions or partial birth abortions.The fact of the matter is that this is not the norm. Women are not just getting pregnant for fun, carrying a baby for 7-8 months, then having an abortion. I have been pregnant twice, and I can tell you that the idea of this happening with regularity is absolutely absurd. 

    Read more on our blog

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    35 分

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