Rollercoaster fans should really be loving the stock
market. Just this morning it was down a
couple hundred, then up, and then down again. . . . Workers in an ESOP that
have independent appraisals of the shares in their accounts are probably
feeling pretty smug right about now — they are insulated to some degree from
the antics of the speculators on Wall Street; an offer that differs materially
from the appraised market value of the company is very carefully vetted, and the share valuation is not quite as
subject to manipulation; can you say “DOL Investigation”?
Friday, January 30, 2015
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Standards, VII: Restoring a Standard
People today tend to think there was something inherently
wrong in the German people that they allowed Hitler to come into power. From a purely economic and financial
standpoint, it’s not all that hard to understand.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Standards, VI: Getting Back to Money
Having allowed our readers to refresh themselves with a
brief hiatus before completing this blog series, we return to our discourse on
the importance of standards, especially when dealing with money and
credit. Possibly to oversimplify, there
may be no greater single problem today in the economic and financial sectors
than the fact that the concept of standard has ceased to have any meaning.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Why We (Don’t) Need Inflation
Yesterday’s Wall
Street Journal had an interesting article on how surpluses of basic
commodities, while they are bad, can be good for some brave investors (“Rout
Signals ‘Buy’ to Some: As Surpluses Grow From Oil to Copper, Investors Risk
Pain Now for Gains Later,” The Wall
Street Journal, Monday, January 26, 2105, C1, C6.) There are so many things wrong with just the
headline, to say nothing of the article, that we hardly know where to begin.
Monday, January 26, 2015
CESJ Core Group Meets “Pope’s Rabbi”
Thanks to the
extraordinary initiative of two CESJ stalwarts, Ms. Harriet Epstein of Northern
Virginia, and Dr. María Teresa Rosón de Pérez Lozano, professor of Commercial
Law at the Pontifical Catholic University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, we were
able to get a group together to attend an event in Washington, DC, to celebrate
the fiftieth anniversary of Nostra Ætate,
the 1965 encyclical on relations with non-Christian religions. The event was co-sponsored by the Archdiocese
of Washington, and the Jewish Community of Greater Washington.
Friday, January 23, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 4
According to President Obama’s State of the Union Address
this past Tuesday (which we missed to attend a talk on the fiftieth anniversary
of the issuance of Nostra Ætate, the
encyclical on Catholic relations with non-Christian religions, below), everything
is great, great, great. The economy is
booming, evidently there’s no terrorist threat, and so on, so forth.
Thursday, January 22, 2015
What’s Wrong with the Pro-Life Movement?
We interrupt our regularly scheduled series of postings on
standards (and lack thereof) in modern society to offer a few comments about
what we think is wrong with the Pro-Life movement. Lest you be turned off already, please note
that we fully support the goal: an end to abortion. We just want to offer a few comments and
observations on how the effort might be more effective and less confrontational
. . . at least, up to a point.
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Standards, V: When Governments Get Interested
So far in this brief series we’ve covered the why, what, and
application of standards, and what can happen when you don’t have any. Today we’re going to look at what happens
when people manipulate standards to their own advantage, especially the
monetary standard.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Standards, IV: Lack of Standards
We’ve been looking at standards, what they are, how they
apply, even why we should have them.
Today we look at the sort of thing that happens when you don’t have
standards, or you remove them, i.e.,
drift (or jump headfirst) into relativism.
Monday, January 19, 2015
Standards, III: Applying Standards
Last week we looked at two questions: 1) Why have standards?
and 2) What are standards? We discovered
that we have standards so that everybody knows what everybody else is talking
about or dealing with, and a standard is something established or correct, a
way of determining if something measures up (or down) to a pre-determined,
objective amount, quantity, degree . . . whatever — it’s something that’s the
same for everyone, and it stays that way.
Establishing and maintaining standards is so important that most nations
delegate the power to set and enforce standards to the State.
Friday, January 16, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 3
The stock market has been all over the map this week. This demonstrates that areas or groups many
people consider to be trendsetters, indicators, leaders, and so on, so forth,
are in reality nothing of the sort. We
include the stock market (which has little or nothing to do with the primary,
productive market), academia (which has almost nothing to do with real
education these days), politics (which has little, if anything to do with what
Aristotle meant by the term) . . . and so on, so forth.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Standards, II: What Are Standards?
Yesterday we asked the eternal question, “Why Have
Standards?” Today we start getting down
to basics, and ask “What Are Standards?”
Yes, we answered that in part yesterday, but we need to expand on it a
bit in order to get to the point we’re eventually going to make in this series. Yes, there’s a point to all this, believe it
or not.
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
Standards, I: Why Have Standards?
For years, CESJ’s chief volunteer was a Southern Lady (note
the capitalization) who, on occasion, was wont to make a comment or two about
persons who lacked what she called “standards.”
Generally this was in response to an enquiry about why she chose not to
associate with certain individuals or groups.
Her almost inevitable reply was, “I have standards,” implying that they
did not.
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Faith, Fraud, Fame, and Finance
Not necessarily in that order, of course, but they do seem
to be related, especially in modern academia, which has some rather serious
problems that nobody seems to be dealing with.
Er . . . with which nobody seems to be dealing? Forgive us, oh Strunk and White!
Monday, January 12, 2015
Where Men are Men
Lumberjacks. Real Men. |
. . . and women are glad of it? No, we’re not talking about the Last
Frontier. Raymond
Cardinal Burke recently gave an interview in which he laid out the reasons
why he thinks there is a “Catholic Man Crisis.”
We had a number of problems with the article, which we read in great
detail. Primarily, since when is the
“crisis” a “Catholic thing”? Well, maybe
His Eminence meant “catholic,” which means “universal,” in which case, okay,
we’ll agree with him. Up to a point.
Friday, January 9, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 2
It’s difficult for anyone familiar with economic and
financial history not to feel a little uneasy about the increasingly wild
fluctuations in the stock market. All of
the experts in academia and government seem to forget that the stock market
isn’t really what they call an “economic indicator,” leading or otherwise. It’s a secondhand shop for used debt and
equity. The primary market, where people
engage in agriculture, industry, and commerce, really doesn’t have much to do
with the secondary market, where people move pieces of paper around.
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Fantasy Finance
In the world of classical economics of the Banking School
(of which binary economics appears to be the sole survivor), money is a symbol,
a means of exchanging, measuring, and storing claims on the present value of
existing and future marketable goods and services, i.e., production, whether produced by labor, land, or technology.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Solidarism, IV: True Solidarity
We had one more posting in last year’s series on solidarism
that we interrupted in order to present the series on Thomas à Becket. It’s a bit of a tag-end, but here it is:
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Canterbury Tale, V: Murder in the Cathedral
Silly persons like to point out that every right Saint
Thomas died to defend was eventually recognized as being properly the purview
of the civil order, so that his death was — in their eyes — totally useless and
meaningless. Some even end up agreeing with Henry VIII Tudor, who put Saint Thomas on trial for high
treason post mortem, that the
Archbishop was a consummate villain who was trying to assert the supremacy of
the Church over the State . . . rather than the supremacy of the State over the
Church, as Henry Tudor did.
Monday, January 5, 2015
Canterbury Tale, IV: Separation of Church and State, Christian Style
Last year (we couldn’t resist saying it that way) we looked
at how the Romans viewed separation of Church and State. We begin this year by looking at how things
changed with the coming of Christianity.
Friday, January 2, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 1
Interestingly, the January 3rd-9th
issue of The Economist just arrived,
with a cover story on “Workers on Tap: Technology, freelancing and the future
of the labour market.” Our first
reaction, of course, is to wonder why a British magazine doesn’t use “the
Oxford comma.” Our second reaction was a
bit delayed until we read an article in today’s Wall Street Journal on “New Year, New Laws on Pay, Pot, Pets.
Thursday, January 1, 2015
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