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Notes -
I sometimes call myself a centrist, even though I don't like the term because it's too redolent of 2-dimensional thinking and has too much baggage. When I do call myself a centrist, it's only because it's a convenient shorthand that other people quickly understand, not because I ever care about being in the center.
One thing's for sure. I am not some kind of hybrid of a leftist and a conservative. Lakoff is wrong about that. Indeed, leftism and conservatism both repel me.
I'm just someone who happens to have a bunch of political opinions and preferences, and some of them overlap with leftist ones, and some of them overlap with conservative ones, and some of them overlap with neither. My worldview is not any less consistent than the leftist one or the conservative one.
The whole idea that centrists are biconceptual is just wrong. Some self-identified centrists might be like that, but it is not true of centrists in general.
Unsurprisingly, I think that my views are better and more correct than the views of either leftists or conservatives. So to use an arrogant analogy: a man who thinks that 2 + 2 = 4 is not a mix between a man who thinks that 2 + 2 = 3 and a man who thinks that 2 + 2 = 5.
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