Although
today is the end of CESJ’s fiscal year, things haven’t slowed down any. In fact, they’ve picked up quite a bit of
speed. Most of this doesn’t make good
news items, of course; it’s pretty baffling to read, “Someone whose name we
can’t reveal talked to someone here for over six hours last night, but we can’t
tell you what they talked about until something happens.” The events that we can tell you about are
often not quite as exciting as that, but we try:
Friday, September 30, 2016
Thursday, September 29, 2016
The CESJ Core Values
Although it’s
posted on the CESJ website, we made a reference
yesterday to the Core Values of the Center for Economic and Social
Justice. Therefore, without further ado,
we post them today, either as a refresher or an introduction. There is, of course, much more about CESJ on the website, which you are encouraged to visit:
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Inspiration
As we’ve said on more than one occasion, we like it when people ask us serious questions. In that category we do not include the “Are-you-still-beating-your-wife?” type. This is technically known as “the complex question fallacy” because it assumes as a given the answer to a question that has not been asked. It’s committed when a question is asked (a) that rests on a questionable assumption, and (b) to which all answers appear to endorse that assumption.
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Let Freedom Ring: Social Injustice
Yesterday
we noted that, in refusing to stand for the National Anthem of the United
States, Colin
Rand Kaepernick may have acted in a
socially unjust manner. That is, if he
harmed the common good, he broke the first law of social justice.
Monday, September 26, 2016
Let Freedom Ring: Principle and Application
One thing we’ve
noticed (i.e., had driven home to us
like a railroad spike through the skull) is that quite a large number of people
are confused about the difference between a general principle, and a particular
application of that same principle. Yet
all the sciences, moral philosophy, and even theology are based in some measure
on this distinction.
Friday, September 23, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 36
A
number of important irons are in the fire as CESJ approaches the end of its
fiscal year (September 30). A lot of
time is taken up with that, of course, but things are also moving forward:
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Where’s the Recovery?
On the Opinion
page in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal,
the title, “The Reasons Behind the Obama Non-Recovery” (p. A13) caught our
eye. The argument by a Harvard professor
of economics was that because recovery from all past depressions/recessions has
always been relatively rapid, President Obama is responsible for a slow
recovery because he increased non-productive government spending that made the
rich richer, instead of figuring out ways to make business more profitable to
make the rich richer.
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism . . . and Socialism
From the point of
view of organized religion, the situation in the first half of the nineteenth
century was a virtual shambles. There
was a perceived conflict between reason and faith. The Will (opinion) had replaced the Intellect
(knowledge) as the basis for discerning the natural law — the general code of
human behavior.
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
And Another Distributist Question!(!): Distributism
To continue our little
discussion from yesterday. . . .
Monday, September 19, 2016
And Another Distributist Question!(!): Catholic Social Thought
They do seem to keep coming,
don’t they? The questions from
distributists, that is. We’d prefer if
they were accompanied by checks with large numbers of zeros to the right of the
other digits, but we’ll take what we can get.
Anyway, we just got this question:
Friday, September 16, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 35
As
the world’s central bankers try to figure out what a central bank is supposed
to do, and the commercial and mercantile banks follow suit, the stock market
continues its wild gyrations. We believe
that this will continue (if it doesn’t crash and burn) until a Capital
Homestead Act is passed and the stock market can return to its proper role as a
Second-Hand Shoppe for used debt and equity.
To help a CHA along, here’s what we’ve been doing for the past week:
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Another Taxing Question, IV: The Terror of Taxation
Quite a large
number of people would tend to agree that the United States should get rid of
the Federal Reserve System and the income tax.
We agree with that goal . . . if to “get rid of” is broadly interpreted
as getting rid of the incompatible functions that have been added to these
essential if exasperating social tools.
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Introduction to Keynesian Wreckonomics: Say’s Law
Last
week we mentioned Adam Smith and the possibility that the
political-economist-you-love-to-hate might have gotten a bum rap for the past
couple hundred years or so.
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Distributism, Socialism, and Syndicalism, What’s the Difference?
We’ve mentioned a number of
times before on this blog that we like it when people ask questions that are
easy to answer. It makes us look smart,
and it doesn’t take too much work to put a posting together. That’s why we were so delighted last week to
get the following question: “I just came across the word ‘syndicalism’. It sounds very much like distributism. How do they differ?”
Monday, September 12, 2016
More Malthusian Madness: Scarcity
Last
week we mentioned the Thomas Malthus in a posting or two in connection with the
reverend sir’s lamentable effect on economics — he is, after all, credited with
getting it labeled “the dismal science.”
Our comments last week, however, had to do with Malthus’s rejection of
Say’s Law of Markets, which brought forth Jean-Baptiste Say’s best explanation
of the “law” that bears his name . . . and that many people reject flat out
without knowing anything about it.
Friday, September 9, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 34
As
of this writing, the Dow is down over two-hundred points, probably due to the
various noises about the possibility of the Federal Reserve raising rates,
making it more expensive to create money to pour into the stock market. The possibility of eliminating “interest”
altogether for any money that creates new owners of capital instead of to make
the rich richer doesn’t seem to have occurred to any of the powers-that-be.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Distributism and Population Growth, III: Mean Ol’ Adam Smith
Distributists almost always have one political
economist they detest more than all the rest . . . which is saying a lot. That is that Mean Ol’ Adam Smith, whose “invisible
hand” argument has sometimes been characterized as attempting to substitute for
the Hand of God.
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Why Did the U.S. Go Off the Gold Standard in 1933?
The other day we took a poke
. . . or maybe that was a peek . . . at what people mean when they say “gold
standard.” Today we look at why the U.S.
abandoned the gold standard in 1933. It
might surprise you.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
What is “Capitalism”?
As
we mentioned a short time ago, we seem to be getting more and more questions
from distributists. Not from the
official organizations, of course. They
have their Party Line and they’re sticking to it. There are, however, a growing number of
people interested in the subject who seem to be increasingly dissatisfied with
the Party Line, which bears a strong resemblance to a somewhat skewed or off-center
version of social justice. As CESJ
co-founder Father William Ferree put it,
Monday, September 5, 2016
Distributism and Population Growth, II: Who Has Rights?
Last
Thursday we looked at the question of whether a program of expanded capital
ownership requires adherence to a particular belief system, or any belief at
all. We concluded that, as long as
someone adheres to the basic principles or precepts of the natural law, his or
her personal beliefs — or lack thereof — are (or should be) a matter of
complete indifference to others.
Friday, September 2, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 33
Things seem to be
picking up a little as the summer draws to a close. That being the case, we won’t waste time, but
get straight to this week’s news items:
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Distributism and Population Growth, I: A “Catholic System”?
We’re
not sure why, but we keep getting questions about distributism, the rather
loose proposal by G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc that was developed in the
early twentieth century as an alternative to Fabian socialism with its heavy
reliance on State control of the economy, of the law, of individual lives, and of
anything else it could get its mitts on.
Distributism, by the way, is more or less defined as a system in which
most people own capital, with a preference for small, family-owned (meaning members of the family have defined ownership stakes, not that the family unit owns) farms and
artisan, worker-owned businesses. That’s “preference,”
by the additional way, not “mandate.”
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