>>384
Having taken the test, which styles itself as a "five-dimensional" quiz, the five dimensions in order of the labels seems to be
1) Economic equality
2) Government power
3) Foreign policy
4) National responsibility alongside other nations
5) Cultural permisiveness
So the >>378 ends up being huge on economic equality yet strict on cultural behavior, and I as >>383 end up being huge on group identification yet laid back with the cultural activity of those within my group
Richard Spencer over at Radix Journal mentioned in an interview he did with lana Lokteff of Red Ice Radio how one of the reasons he stopped being a conservative was that he got sick of the "idea clusters" that exist on the mainstream political spectrum. Things like:
>If you're against gay marriage, you're also against taxing capital gains
>If you're in favor gun freedom you're against abortion
>If you believe in global warming you have a problem with school prayer
>If you think the Iraq War was good then you want to privatize Social Security
and so on. These sort of online quizzes that seek to identify different "dimensions" of political thought are thus helpful for allowing people to break out of these clusters. They're also useless for the sake of defining who your friends and foes are, because there is no simple axis of allegiance.