As the capitalists and socialists continue their past
savings-based “tastes-great-less-filling” argument that manages to avoid any of
the real issues (such as why do both insist that only past savings can be used
to finance new capital formation), the stock market is wavering.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Different Strokes for Different Popes
There’s a lot of fuss being made both inside and outside the
Catholic Church about Pope Francis’s “simplicity” compared with Benedict XVI’s more “imperial” trappings.
Why this is relevant to anybody outside that particular religious body (or even
within it, for that matter) is something of a puzzle. You’d think people would have something
better to do with their time, but let’s take a look at this. Somebody thought enough of this to write and
article on it, so we can get a little mileage out of it ourselves.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Bono and You, Too, IV: A Deeply Spiritual Materialism
As we saw in yesterday’s posting, one of the problems with
organized relief for “the poor” is that it gives the people whose job it is to
“help the poor” a vested interest in making certain that there are always “the
poor” there to “help” — especially if it is a government program. Nevertheless, as Pope Leo XIII pointed out,
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Bono and You, Too, III: The Highest Charity
Yesterday we noted that the usual sorts of foreign aid to
alleviate poverty do just that: they alleviate it, they do not, despite the
rhetoric, end it. Bono of the Irish rock
group U2 seems to understand this. While
he is by all accounts astonishingly generous both in giving and in raising
money to help the poor, the sick, the naked, etc., he seems to realize that, necessary as this sort of thing is,
it is not a solution.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Bono and You, Too, II: Does Charity End Poverty?
In last Thursday’s posting we viciously attacked rock icon Bono
of the Irish group U2, a name that sounds like the Hun invading. We reported that
he had mentioned in an interview with somebody-or-other that capitalism has
lifted more people out of poverty than even the most massive foreign aid. We also squealed on him by noting that he has
actually said Good Things about America and Americans. Obviously the man is a complete nutcase.
Friday, August 23, 2013
News from the Network, Vol. 6, No. 34
Those of you who have been paying close attention to this
blog and a little bit of buzz around the internet know that CESJ is planning on
republishing a “long lost” book by the late Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen,
considered by many to be the first “televangelist.” In what no doubt surprises many, Sheen was
also a strong advocate of widespread capital ownership — and therein lies a
tale.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Bono and You, Too, I: Is Bono, uh, “Kidding” Us?
Bono of the Irish rock group U2 (who has nothing to do with
Cher) strikes us as someone who is both extraordinarily charitable and possesses
a certain hardheaded practicality (in a good way). His list of charities is “impressive,” to put
it mildly. We don’t agree with some of
them, but unlike some celebrities and most media figures he has on occasion
admitted to making mistakes.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
How Not to Answer a Question
A couple of weeks ago somebody posted a . . . “meme” we
think it’s called? on our FaceBook page.
That doesn’t sound right, but it doesn’t matter. It’s not the point. The little poster showed Superman having a
cup of joe and asking Batman, “How can you start the day without coffee?” to
which Batman, of course, replies, “I’m Batman.”
You can see it for yourself, here.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
The Slavery of Past Savings, II: Some Basic Finance
Anything that has a present value can be put into a contract
as “consideration” — the inducement to enter into a contract. Past savings obviously have a present value,
for the marketable goods exist, and claims on them can be drawn or issued and
used as “money.” Money, of course, is
anything that can be accepted in settlement of a debt, or “everything that can
be transferred in commerce.” All money
is thus a contract, just as in a sense all contracts are money.
Monday, August 19, 2013
The Slavery of Past Savings, I: How to Finance Growth
Last week a member of the network forwarded a link to an
article on cooperatives. The article
details many of the advantages of worker ownership, but then dilutes the effect. It does this by making an unconscious
assumption that has had a very negative effect on economic growth in general,
and widespread, democratic ownership of that growth in particular. This assumption is what ESOP-inventor Louis
O. Kelso and Aristotelian philosopher Mortimer J. Adler called the “slavery” of
past savings.
Friday, August 16, 2013
News from the Network, Vol. 6, No. 33
Breathe easy. The CIA
has just released a report on “Area 51” in Nevada. In a stunning revelation, it has absolutely
nothing to do with extraterrestrial beings.
Instead, Area 51 was used to test the U-2 spy plane . . . which has
nothing to do with Bono (or Cher).
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Dos and Don’ts of Urban Renewal
Evansville, Indiana, has reached a deal to construct a $74
million convention center that is expected to revive the downtown area and
bring in new business and infusions of cash.
This is pretty much the standard pitch when something of this scale is
planned, whether a convention center or a sports arena.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Abortion, Slavery, and Private Property, III: Scott versus Sandford, 1857
Scott v. Sandford
in 1857 — the notorious Dred Scott case — effectively shifted the determination
of who is a person (and thus who has rights) from human nature itself to the
State. As Chief Justice Roger Brooke
Taney declared, no black man, free or slave, could ever be a person as that term
is used in the Constitution.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Abortion, Slavery, and Private Property, II: Cotton is King
The invention of the cotton gin changed everything as far as
slavery in America was concerned.
Suddenly, where it took one slave ten hours or more to pick the seeds
out of a single pound of cotton, a team of three slaves could process fifty
pounds in the same amount of time — more than 1,500% increase in production . .
. and that was the early model.
Monday, August 12, 2013
Abortion, Slavery, and Private Property, I: The Economics of Slavery
The connection between abortion, slavery, and the decline of
private property is not accidental. Life,
liberty, and property are, after all, the great triad of natural rights named
in the Virginia Declaration of Rights in 1776.
Jefferson omitted property from the Declaration of Independence a month
later probably because of “discomfort” over slavery. It was, after all, a bit tricky to be
demanding full rights for free men and, at the same time, denying any rights at
all to half a million others.
Friday, August 9, 2013
News from the Network, Vol. 6, No. 32
The news is a little thin this week, possibly the “dog days”
or the “silly season” for news — or maybe it’s the lull before the storm. President Obama keeps running around trying
to find some new cause to divert attention away from far more pressing
problems. A lot of talking, but very
little walking, so what else is new?
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Shakespeare Speaks! (Again)
Yesterday’s posting, “Was John Paul II a Socialist?” excited
a little comment. After posting it, I
began to have second thoughts about some of the things I said. All were true, of course, and can be
substantiated from independent, third party sources. Members of the CESJ “core group,” however,
pointed out that some of what I said was not entirely appropriate.
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Was Pope John Paul II a Socialist?
Someone recently sent us a link to an article from the Houston Catholic Worker, Volume XXVI,
No. 2, March-April, 2007, “How an Unknown Text Could Throw New Light on John
Paul II’s Views on Economics.” The
article was reprinted with permission from Catholic
Life of Cheshire, England.
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
An Interesting Approach, But It’s Not Us
In The Transcribed
Adventures of Nick Danger, Third Eye, “Nancy” (Betty-Jo Biolofsky) has
managed to get hold of some incriminating photos with which the villain, Rocky
Rococo, has been blackmailing her and her husband. She quickly leafs through them and then
exclaims in a shocked voice, “It’s not us!”
Then, in a calm, interested voice, she continues, “It’s an interesting
approach, but it’s not us!”
Monday, August 5, 2013
Long Live Dead Animals!!
A while back in an article on the dangers of immigration we
saw a sign on an ethnic restaurant advertising some kind of vegetarian fusion
cuisine, a tofu taco or something. That
was shocking enough, but even more shocking was the attitude that “foreigners”
(dirty or otherwise) are somehow a threat to the American Way of Life.
Friday, August 2, 2013
News from the Network, Vol. 6, No. 31
"I am the State thy God, and thou shalt have no other
gods before Me." This is the
logical outcome of viewing the State as a "Mortall God," as
totalitarian philosopher Thomas Hobbes put it in Leviathan. Not surprisingly,
Keynesian economics is based on that of Walter Bagehot, whose political
philosophy was derived from that of Thomas Hobbes.
Thursday, August 1, 2013
The “New” Glass-Steagall
A
week or so ago somebody brought to our attention a proposal by Senator
Elizabeth Warren. No, it had nothing to
do with the oddity of a culture that insists on “gender inclusive” terminology
for pretty much everything that doesn’t matter, but says nothing about calling
relatively young ladies “Old Men” or “Tribal Elder,” which is what “senator”
means in Latin.