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It's hard to say for sure right now as I feel I've been changing politically recently, at least insofar as attempting to open myself to more perspectives. I'd say my natural inclinations are fairly socio-economically liberal, I don't fear government institutions so much as I feel they often need to improve or change dramatically to work better for the will of the people, I often sympathize with immigrants, having played their role in the past (and technically right now, although an American living in Canada isn't some terrible plight), celebrated the legalization of gay marriage, have respect and appreciation for the natural world, etc. I believe strongly in the power of science and logic over superstition, and think that while it's impossible to claim that race is purely a social construct (it's the product of populations being physically isolated from each other, even if it's only skin-deep), culture, family, tradition, nationality and religion reveal far more about our differences and similarities than the blanket term "race," and focusing on it as some all-important definer of the self is shallow and meaningless.

That being said, I do truly feel like I fall more in the center than I ever thought. These days everyone's widening the political divide, and I often find myself in intellectual battles with my political peers as I try to humanize and rationalize the other side. I try very hard to look at issues from multiple perspectives, avoid labels, see trends and changes instead of static differences, respect free will, and distance political disagreements from emotion. It's been healthy to study ideas from perspectives that don't aline with my own. This probably comes from being a Unitarian Universalist and transcendentalist at heart, and holding strong to the values of personal individual worth.

There will always be certain things I have a strong moral leaning on, and I don't think it's wise to change strongly-held views just because it's unpopular. But I think it's important to always respect your political adversaries and evaluate everything from all sides.