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I unironically say this (well, things to this effect) all the time. Despite having individually quite radical policy prescriptions, I still call myself a "centrist." Not because I am in the exact center of the overton window, but because I the people I affiliate myself with are more defined by their pragmatist actions rather than their ideological ends. I have much more in common with a fascist running on a platform of orderly public transit scheduling, and anarchists peacefully protesting for more bike lanes, than with conservatives and liberals that engage in performative hysteria online without actually making any attempt to change anything. It's a matter of ingroup/outgroup genetics. Everyone wants good things instead of bad things, but only a particular type of people want to perform iterated, gradual tests paired with introspective reflection to figure out if the actions they're taking are actually effective at moving them toward what they believe is good.
Actually, this specific phenomenon is what's currently china-pilling me. Seeing tourist videos about china, I'm more and more convinced that I'd actually like the chinese people a lot if I went there in person-- even if ideologically and geopolitically I'm never going to be anything but strongly opposed to them.
Can you explain what those radical policy prescriptions are? I feel that depending on how radical those prescriptions, the revolutionists might have a point when claiming that only revolution can bring them about.
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