Back when I first started forming political opinions I was a huge leftist. After browsing Sup Forums more, and finding /new/ (rip in peace), I became more right-wing. I went full white nationalist for a while but then I got a bit more realistic about things, I got more educated and more down to earth. Since /new/ came back to life and Sup Forums took Sup Forums by storm(front) I remained more conservative than liberal, but began to diverge on social and economic issues.
Slowly, over time, I have actually become more liberal, and despite reading Sup Forums basically every day I would say I'm more liberal than the average Sup Forums user. I am liberal on most every social issue, am pro-choice, not religious. However I am still conservative on other issues such as immigration and the role of government.
I think Sup Forums has been very important in making me a politically educated individual and despite how retarded most of the posts here tend to be, there is definitely a running theme here of engagement in politics. Everyone here wants to enact change, everyone wants to make a difference.
Even if those changes are things like "kill all the niggers", isn't it better to be like that than to be the average dumb, uninformed American who votes based on party lines? Isn't it better to have real convictions about things, even if they're considered wrong or immoral, than to have no beliefs at all?
In my view, it is. And even though I don't hold those racist views that are so common on Sup Forums, I respect those on Sup Forums who do, if they earnestly try and enact ideologically driven change in this country, even if I don't agree with it. The /cfg/ thread is a perfect example of this. When Syria General helped to call an airstrike on a terrorist base, that was a perfect example.
Americans need to wake up, and take hold of the reins of this country. The future belongs to those who do. Sup Forums taught me that, /new/ taught me that, and I will never forget it. That's what Sup Forums means to me.