A "third way" between the stultifying debates had by the left and right wherein arguments are so structural as to be static. One magazine offering an alternative voice -- that of the Christian worldview -- takes Third Way as its title.
Another group in Britain is known as the Third Way (UK) (unrelated to Tony Blair's concept of the Third Way). This group was formed in 1990 and contained several former leading members of the British National Front. It claims to have disavowed racist politics and any form of fascism, and promotes economic decentralization (similar to distributism), Direct Democracy along Swiss lines, combined with support for ecological protection and libertarian views on some social issues such as abortion, gay rights, and marijuana. Critics of the group are divided some still regard this group with suspicion because of past ties to the National Front in the 1980s, and dispute their claims to have disavowed racism and fascism. Others accept that the group has changed over the years and point to its attempts to recruit from all ethnic and religious communities.
Former US President Bill Clinton is probably the most famous advocate of Third Way politics.
Jesus' way of dealing with conflict. Instead of fight or flight, Walter Wink writes about this third alternative, Righteousness, which levels the playing field between aggressor and victim, creditor and debtor, etc.
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[The Third Way Belarus], "http://www.3dway.org" - liberal internet community from Belarus.
ThirdWay describes itself as a Patriotic Centre party rooted in the culture and traditions of the British islands.
ThirdWay argues that its policies would benefit and empower all citizens and asks for support on that basis from all sections of the nationalcommunity.
Some critics, however, claim ThirdWay (UK) is a neofascist political movement, and continue to regard the group with suspicion due to the past ties of some of its leadership with the National Front, their populist cultural ethnocentrism, and their producerist rhetoric.