If you're a "centrist" and you only ever repeat right-wing talking points like "the economy" and criticize left-wing policies like social welfare...

Then you're not a centrist, you're just a right-winger who doesn't want the bad reputation associated with it.

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@joepie91 Incidentally, there's psychological studies showing that right-wingers tend to have stronger tendency to both see themselves as centrists, and to think that one should be a centrist.

@riley @joepie91 this doesn't shock me. so much of right wing rhetoric revolves around asserting that their views, idea of the world, etc are the default, nnatural, unchangable, widely held by the 'silent majority' and any evidence to the contrary is just the result of secretive conspiracies.

@riley @joepie91 especially since conervatism is all about preserving or returning to an imagined status quo, defining anything that goes against their worldview as inherently political. to them their beliefs are apolitical, so clearly they are centrists. not the far left like those commie nazi bastards or far right like those nazi commie bastards

@joepie91
Question, not argument/disagreement: what would such a person be missing?

I'm not sure because I don't know much about #centrism other than it isn't for me.

@MutualityWSDEs Generally speaking, "centrism" is some sort of position where one is "critical of both sides". That can take a few different forms, but a lack of alignment with any one "side" is the main characteristic.

(I think this is still a morally bankrupt view to hold, but that's besides the point here.)

If one is always criticizing left-wing policies while parroting right-wing ones and calling them 'neutral', then they're not critical of both sides, and therefore not centrists.

@joepie91
Yes - this makes a lot of sense, particularly in relation to the group you described in that they seldom say anything critical about the other side, only the left which they term 'hard/extreme/far left' perhaps implying they somehow represent healthy leftism in their (actually nonexistent) critique of the right.
In the context of UK establishment electoral part of the left (called 'Labour), they only ever attack the 'far left' and extreme and obviously egregious elements of the right.

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