The other day someone sent around an e-mail suggesting that
violence could solve many of today’s massive social and economic problems. From a certain perspective, that is
correct. The idea that “violence never
solved anything” is, frankly, just plain wrong.
Violence solves a lot of problems.
It just usually leaves you with much bigger problems than you started
with.
Dan'l Webstah |
Once
ordinary, everyday people have been economically empowered, the political power
and social power necessary to engage in acts of social justice will follow, and
the system can be restructured in a manner consistent with the demands of human
dignity. And by “people” we do not mean the collective, the State, the
community, or however else someone disguises collectivism, but every individual
child, woman, and man.
It is critical to keep in mind that we cannot do wrong in order to do right. You cannot empower some people at the expense of others, or by attacking or abolishing the institutions of the common good such as life, liberty, or property.
It is critical to keep in mind that we cannot do wrong in order to do right. You cannot empower some people at the expense of others, or by attacking or abolishing the institutions of the common good such as life, liberty, or property.
Pius Ex Eye |
The
end does not justify the means, nor is it in any way moral to sacrifice the
life, liberty, property, or reputation of a single innocent person to gain even
the greatest good. The common good, that
vast network of institutions within which people work to become more fully
human, is not something to be manipulated in furtherance of personal or
individual interests. As Pius XI pointed
out, “[T]he common good of all society will be
kept inviolate. By this law of social justice, one class is forbidden to
exclude the other from sharing in the benefits.” (Quadragesimo Anno, § 57.)
We cannot be like Caiaphas and decide that it is expedient that a single man should suffer so that the nation (i.e., our personal interests) should not perish. Our presumption must be that someone is innocent until and unless proven guilty. Not suspected, not suggested, not anything except actual, verifiable, and tangible proof of wrongdoing that is contrary to human law.
Unless we KNOW someone is guilty, and can PROVE
it in a court of law, then we cannot convict him or punish him in any
way. This is why something like calumny is a mortal sin that “cries to
heaven for vengeance” and demands reparation. It is also, ironically, the
most difficult for which to make reparation. Once we have destroyed
another’s reputation — and accusing someone of crimes or sins we cannot prove
is damage — we can never call it back or undo it.
We may dislike someone or some group intensely, and firmly believe that everyone in that group should be killed or have his or her liberty, property, or reputation taken away, but without proof that a law has been broken, and that a particular individual is personally guilty of a specific crime, we are worse than that person could ever be if we go after him or condemn him unheard or without evidence. By trying to enforce our personal opinion as to what constitutes God’s Will, we have put ourselves in the place of God. But we are not God. Human law is our concern, not divine law.
That being the case, it would be much better to suggest to people that they set
aside their hates and even their preconceptions, and investigate a practicable
proposal that has the potential to empower every single human being with
capital ownership, and thus the power to resist the growing intrusion of the
State into every aspect of civil, domestic, and even religious life. This
is outlined in the foreword to the Just Third Way Edition of Fulton J. Sheen’s Freedom
Under God, and presented in detail in Capital Homesteading for Every
Citizen.
In our opinion, it would be better to recommend that people investigate the claims of the Just Third Way objectively and read these books, than to advocate violence or incite to violence — and spreading hate about “the politicians,” “the banksters,” “the Jews,” “the rich,” “the neo-cons,” or any other of today’s popular whipping boys, does nothing except inspire people to violence and make it more difficult to discern a feasible political and economic solution when it does come along.
We cannot be like Caiaphas and decide that it is expedient that a single man should suffer so that the nation (i.e., our personal interests) should not perish. Our presumption must be that someone is innocent until and unless proven guilty. Not suspected, not suggested, not anything except actual, verifiable, and tangible proof of wrongdoing that is contrary to human law.
Better that one man suffer than I not get my way. |
We may dislike someone or some group intensely, and firmly believe that everyone in that group should be killed or have his or her liberty, property, or reputation taken away, but without proof that a law has been broken, and that a particular individual is personally guilty of a specific crime, we are worse than that person could ever be if we go after him or condemn him unheard or without evidence. By trying to enforce our personal opinion as to what constitutes God’s Will, we have put ourselves in the place of God. But we are not God. Human law is our concern, not divine law.
Hobbes's "Mortall God": The State |
In our opinion, it would be better to recommend that people investigate the claims of the Just Third Way objectively and read these books, than to advocate violence or incite to violence — and spreading hate about “the politicians,” “the banksters,” “the Jews,” “the rich,” “the neo-cons,” or any other of today’s popular whipping boys, does nothing except inspire people to violence and make it more difficult to discern a feasible political and economic solution when it does come along.
To
demonstrate your support your rejection of violence in thought and word as well
as deed as an acceptable or viable alternative to acts of social justice,
consider showing up at the annual Rally at the Fed in Washington, DC, on
Friday, April 11, 2014.
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