Frequently this 'public debate' and 'both sides' stancing is made on topics for which there are not 'both sides' but one factually accurate, statistically correct, reputably validated, expert-verified side, and, well, ideological opposition to that. Hence the disdain for 'liberal fact checkers,' since the absence of ground to factual ground to stand on, it's easy to call the system rigged and its experts as ideological enemies, then make a mess of the discussion by flooding a discussion with whataboutisms that don't require any personal responsibility.
What does conservative even mean in 2021? Not trying to be rude or provocative, but I really don't know. To be frank, I've only ever known it as a byword for those who do not care and do not want to care about others (on both a personal and vaguely national level).
When I was a kid it was sold to me as those who are responsible with their money; "fiscal conservatives", but as I've gotten older and kept in touch with those same people it doesn't seem much like they're interested in the conservation or responsible use of money or any other resource. Largely, it seems like they are concerned with conformity, hierarchy, worth (the value of a life, et al.), and idk... this competitive mindset that all humans are dirtbags who would destroy each other without a firm hand guiding the ship of state. In one way or another, most specific issues seem to boil down to these things.
I ask because from the POV of anyone who isn't a modern "conservative", and I'm not really sure if that term is correct, maybe "reactionary" or "nationalist" or "in support of magnates/oligarchs/strongmen" is more accurate, it's essentially having a conversation in bad faith. There are problems with the USA--big, glaring, lethal problems that hurt and kill Americans on the daily. Do conservatives deny that? If they do, how do we even proceed to engage a group of Americans who think things are Goin' Greattm that actually we're in quite a dangerous and volatile situation in both American and International politics/history? If they don't, are they apathetic--they don't care as long as they get theirs? Or are they malicious--in support of destroying or oppressing what they perceive as "other", a group outside of those we consider to be "American"?
It's a difficult problem, because life really isn't that great for the vast majority of Americans and the current discourse is basically all backsliding into brutality and control or trying to prevent that. It's a difficult problem because all of the problems that are huge huge issues today are very important--but they're really just distractions for all peoples in the US to prevent us from asking our government, "Hey, why ISN'T our life better???" That's over simplifying it, but aside from absolute loony-bin radical right-wing agitators who will basically say anything to rile up a crowd, I have no idea what a "conservative" stands for or what they want, or why they're so opposed to others have better lives.
The conservative party is about owning the libs. There are meritable places for the concepts of fiscal conservatism and tradition, but the conservative party does not represent that, bear the title though they may. The glaring problems in America don't matter so long as the opposition is getting hurt- democrats, new money, poor people, minorities, women, whomever is Not Them. If you'll sup from my particular propaganda machine, I'll recommend the two episodes that Behind the Bastards does on Rush Limbaugh to demonstrate how we got here and understand what kind of poison our dads were all listening to on their morning commutes. Meaningless opposition is just all the party has left, so that's the behavior that their party drills into its constituents.
Unfortunately, the libs banked on life-saving medicine and proactive disease prevention as the healthiest messages to broadcast, so the opposition is digging for the conspiracy, outlier data point, or quack medicine to prove they have a point to make despite it being no point at all, having nothing to present when analyzed.
More or less unrelated to all of the above:
Republicans oppose raising the debt ceiling for expenditures already marked and passed in Congress- they've opposed raising the debt ceiling while Obama was in office, too, but had no issues supporting it with Trump in office (with support from the democrats as well, something something falling in line). It needs to happen regardless of the pending infrastructure bill, which is happening on reconciliation (and so is filibuster-immune), but the reconciliation infrastructure bill is likely not to be done before the debt caps out. To complicate that, the reconciliation bill is the only place to tack it in a way that republicans cannot filibuster it, since republicans have wholly sworn to oppose the debt ceiling bit with the threat of filibuster and it's not likely to find 60 senators willing to override that.
They're willing to tank the economy they pumped so much money into so long as it crashes down while a democrat is in office for party clout.