Hum, well, rationally speaking "conservative" has some element(s) that the person has to meet to be a conservative, right? Whatever it means, it has to mean something. I thought that meant:
1.) Doesn't like taxes.
2.) Doesn't like public sector (government).
3.) Likes private sector (corporations)
I more or less thought that was pretty basic. No? Aren't those characteristics that conservatives share? I've never seen a conservative who was campaigning for taxes or for "big government."
Again, you're
only talking about one definition of conservatives. "Conservative" is a much older term than the kind of person you're describing, and therefore is much broader. Yes, that's generally what people mean in the US, right now, when they say "conservative", but reality is much more complicated than that. A person can be a social conservative but an economic liberal (authoritarians), or a social liberal but an economic conservative (libertarians), not to mention what the word can mean in other countries.
The fact of the matter is that this is a case of a fairly broad term getting applied to a fairly specific group out of convenience. The best general definition for "conservatism" I can think of is the one Wikipedia has: Idealizing the preservation of traditional aspects of society/government. "Small government" and private-business ideals are a sort of offshoot of that in American politics, but aren't part of the broader definition.
Have fun with this, I guess:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservativeone case I read about had a young couple whose relationship ended in angry terms. The woman attempted to capitalize on the the ruins of the relationship by accusing her ex-boyfriend of rape. There was plenty of evidence, of course - during the course of the relationship, various stains and other proof of intercourse had developed. It was ultimately the woman's own carelessness that brought the case down - she SMS'd one of her friends about the case and admitted that the sex was consensual and she was trying to net compensations and revenge on her ex-boyfriend.
Any decent court would throw that out anyway due to reasonable doubt. They were previously in a relationship and there was a breakup, so there's both a very good explanation for that "evidence" existing (consensual sex during the relationship) and an apparent motive to make it up. Proving that two people who dated had sex is by no means significant proof of rape.
This is not to say, of course, that all judges or juries are decent, especially when it comes to very emotionally-charged things like that.