Quote:
Originally Posted by Bobo Fett
I'm wondering if you missed what I was actually asking, which was the difference between "capital L" liberal/liberalism, and regular liberal/liberalism. You provided a definition, I said that just sounded like liberalism, and you've provided a passage that describes liberalism. Nothing in the article says anything about "capital L liberalism", and I find myself no wiser as to what is meant by "capital L" other than the obvious example of when one is a member/supporter of a literal Liberal party, like we have here in Canada.
If anything, it more describes US conservatives than liberals.
Things like property rights, consent of the governed, individual liberty, freedom of speech, market economies, and constitutional government are all GOP talking points that the typical liberal would eschew.