There was once a movie (likely a TV Movie made called (The Pirates of Silicon Valley) which was about Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and the rest. So, likely Republicans look at progressive inventive Creative people as pirates rather than creators of something useful. So, this might be the conservative point of view that anything that rocks the boat and creates any kind of Change at all isn't good. Of course, this is basically what Conservative means if you define it:
Yes. There it is: Not liking or accepting changes or new ideas (perfectly defines present Republican Conservative points of view)
adjective
con·ser·va·tive
\kən-ˈsər-və-tiv\
Popularity: Top 1% of lookups
Simple Definition of conservative
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: believing in the value of established and traditional practices in politics and society : relating to or supporting political conservatism
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Conservative : of or relating to the conservative party in countries like the United Kingdom and Canada
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: not liking or accepting changes or new ideas
Full Definition of conservative
- 1 : preservative
- 2 a : of or relating to a philosophy of conservatism b capitalized : of or constituting a political party professing the principles of conservatism: as (1) : of or constituting a party of the United Kingdom advocating support of established institutions (2) : progressive conservative
- 3 a : tending or disposed to maintain existing views, conditions, or institutions : traditional b : marked by moderation or caution conservative estimate>
4 : of, relating to, or practicing Conservative Judaism
con·ser·va·tive·ly adverb
con·ser·va·tive·ness noun
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Sat, Feb 27, 2016, 3:13AM EST - US Markets are closed
Do all the Republican presidential contenders hate Apple?
The major Republican candidates for president have been taking shots at Apple (AAPL) for resisting a court order to help the FBI unlock a terrorist's iPhone, with Donald Trump going so far as to call for a boycott of Apple.
At Thursday night's debate, Senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz along with Ben Carson joined in on bashing the most valued U.S. company for opposing the FBI. "Apple doesn't want to do it because they think it hurts their brand," Rubio said. "Well, let me tell you, their brand is not superior to the national security of the United States of America." Cruz and Carson made similar remarks.
But that hasn't stopped the candidates' campaigns from relying on Apple products. Trump, Cruz, Rubio and Carson all sent tweets from an iPhone or iPad over their official accounts in the past two days. The social networking service records the software used to send every 140-character burst, often also revealing the type of hardware device the sender used.
Trump's tweet on Thursday with a picture of him signing his tax return was sent from the Twitter (TWTR) app on the iPhone.
At Thursday night's debate, Senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz along with Ben Carson joined in on bashing the most valued U.S. company for opposing the FBI. "Apple doesn't want to do it because they think it hurts their brand," Rubio said. "Well, let me tell you, their brand is not superior to the national security of the United States of America." Cruz and Carson made similar remarks.
But that hasn't stopped the candidates' campaigns from relying on Apple products. Trump, Cruz, Rubio and Carson all sent tweets from an iPhone or iPad over their official accounts in the past two days. The social networking service records the software used to send every 140-character burst, often also revealing the type of hardware device the sender used.
Trump's tweet on Thursday with a picture of him signing his tax return was sent from the Twitter (TWTR) app on the iPhone.
Donald Trump's tweet about his tax returns was sent from the Twitter app on an iPhone.
Most of the tweets on the accounts of Cruz, Rubio and Carson were sent via software such as Tweetdeck, which is commonly used in professional social networking campaigns. But each candidate also sent a tweet from an Apple device.
On Wednesday, Rubio and Cruz both responded to praise from followers with tweets from an iPhone or iPad.
A tweet sent by Senator Ted Cruz from the Twitter app for the iPad.
Ben Carson sent a tweet from the Twitter app for the iPhone.
The candidates' positions come as Apple made a court filing challenging the FBI's demand that the company create new software to weaken the security of the iPhone belonging to deceased San Bernardino shooter Rizwan Farook. Apple's filing said such a demand goes beyond the scope of current law and violates its First and Fifth Amendment constitutional rights.
Public opinion polls have differed over which side has the most support. A Pew Research poll released on Feb. 22 found 51% of people agreeing that Apple should unlock the San Bernardino iPhone and 38% opposed, with 11% undecided. But a Reuters poll released Feb. 24 found 46% favored Apple, 35% sided with the FBI and 20% said they were unsure.
On the Apple vs. the FBI question at the debate, after Rubio responded, Cruz and Carson made similar statements: "Apple should be forced to comply with this court order," Cruz said. "Apple doesn't have a right to defy a valid court order in a terrorism investigation."
"I would expect Apple to comply with the court order," Carson said. "If they don't comply with that, you're encouraging chaos in our system."
Yahoo Finance asked the Trump, Cruz, Rubio and Carson campaigns for comment. This story will be updated with any responses.
Only Ohio Gov. John Kasich took a different tack on the Apple question at the debate. Instead of blaming Apple, he took aim at the president, saying the nation's leader should force the two sides to come to a compromise.
"The problem is not right now between the administration and Apple," Kasich said. "You know what the problem is? Where's the president been? You sit down in a back room and you sit down with the parties and you get this worked out."
Only Ohio Gov. John Kasich took a different tack on the Apple question at the debate. Instead of blaming Apple, he took aim at the president, saying the nation's leader should force the two sides to come to a compromise.
"The problem is not right now between the administration and Apple," Kasich said. "You know what the problem is? Where's the president been? You sit down in a back room and you sit down with the parties and you get this worked out."
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