Here
is the second part of the annual year-end news roundup, covering July through December
2016. The first part, covering January
through June, was posted Friday of last week.
From the volume of news from the second half of the year, perhaps we
should have done a 75-25 split instead of 50-50:
Friday, December 30, 2016
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Whence Cometh This Demand?, III: Multiplying Barren Consumptions
Yesterday we
looked at how, under Say’s Law of Markets — everything else being equal — every
producer is a consumer, and every consumer is a producer. Thus, as Say’s Law is often (if somewhat
inaccurately) summarized, “supply (production) generates its own demand
(consumption), and demand its own supply.”
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Whence Cometh This Demand?, II: Getting Even
Yesterday we
looked at how supply and demand should always be in balance. That is, as long as we hold everything else
in the equation equal, and consider only supply and demand, no other factors —
no ifs, ands, or buts. Everything else being
equal, supply and demand will always be in balance, with everyone producing as
much as he or she consumes, and consuming as much as he or she produces.
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Whence Cometh This Demand?, I: Supply and Demand
Okay, last week
we had a couple of postings on the first principle of economics, viz., that consumption is the sole end
and purpose of all production. This fits
in perfectly (in our opinion, of course) with basic principles of the natural
law as found in (for example) Catholic social teaching. That’s because Catholic social teaching is
based on the dignity of the person and sovereignty of the individual under God
— as is the Just Third Way.
Monday, December 26, 2016
“A Worthy of the People”
It is either a
baffling paradox or a supreme irony that many people in the United States who
call themselves solidarists often have neither a real understanding of
solidarism, nor any practical experience in implementing the solidarist
approach.
Friday, December 23, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 49
Here
is the first part of the annual year-end news roundup, covering January through
June 2016. The second part, covering
July through December, will be posted Friday of next week:
Thursday, December 22, 2016
And the Purpose of Production Is . . . ?
Okay, we actually
answered this question — very briefly
— in yesterday’s posting. As we noted, according to Adam Smith and a bunch
of other people (such as a couple whose first name happens to be “Pope”), the
purpose of production is consumption. This does make a little bit of sense, after
all. If something is not going to be
used (consumed), why bother to produce it?
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
The Purpose of Production Revisited
A little over
four years ago (on December 13, 2012, to be exact), we whipped out a quickie
posting on the purpose of production in real life, versus the purpose of
production in the economics of John Maynard Keynes. As the introduction to the link to the
posting on FaceBook was just a trifle long but substantive, and the posting has
proved one of the most popular on the blog, we decided to repost it with a few
additions. After all, one reader, J.C.
(not that one),
recently commented on this particular posting,
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
“The Euthanasia of the Rentier”, II: Why?
Yesterday we
looked at what Keynes really meant when he advocated “the euthanasia of the
rentier.” Today we want to look at why
he would say something so obviously heartless and insensitive.
Monday, December 19, 2016
“The Euthanasia of the Rentier”, I: What?
In his book, The General Theory of Employment, Interest,
and Money (1936), John Maynard Keynes made the somewhat startling (and
rather heartless) statement that he was advocating that rentiers — small
investors who live off the income from their investments — should be
euthanized. Specifically,
Friday, December 16, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 48
As
the late cartoonist Charles Shultz (usually) had his character Schroeder say
every December 16, “Happy Beethoven’s Birthday!” One year he forgot, and Lucy reminded him,
giving the poor guy a double whammy.
Fortunately, the Just Third Way is for every day in the year, so we
don’t have to worry about missing a specific anniversary . . . although we
would welcome the opportunity to become so used to Capital Homesteading as a
way of life that we are tempted to take it for granted. We won’t, of course, but we would certainly
like the opportunity to be tempted. . . .
Thursday, December 15, 2016
A Dishonest Way to Argue, III: Social Credit . . . Yet Again
Yesterday we
looked at the strange case of people who insist on arguing with others by
forcing their definitions and principles on others, and then berating those
others as stupid, vindictive, or malicious if they stick to their own
principles and definitions.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
A Dishonest Way to Argue, II: Change the Question
Yesterday we
looked at the strange case of the man who wouldn’t take yes for an answer, and
who kept insisting we didn’t know the difference between speculation and investment
because many people today confuse speculation and investment. Today we go one step further and look at a
second case in the examples of the dishonest way to argue.
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
A Dishonest Way to Argue, I: Apples and Oranges
In his little
book on the Scholastic philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas, the English essayist
G.K. Chesterton remarked that one of the problems of the modern age is that few
people take the time to argue. That is,
few people take the time to argue fairly. All too many people find more than enough
time to argue unfairly — mostly by
sneering at anyone who disagrees with them.
Monday, December 12, 2016
What’s Wrong With This Story?, III: Real Investment
Last Thursday we
promised (sort of) that today we would talk about how to restructure the
financial system to encourage real investment so that people like Sister Lioba
Zahn, O.S.B. of the Mariendonk Abbey won’t have to deal in speculation just to
keep their heads above water. This is
not as cosmic as it might otherwise appear.
It’s one of the paradoxes of the modern world that the way the financial
system is running today is not the way it’s designed or intended to run.
Friday, December 9, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 47
The
stock market continues to soar. This is
because . . . we have no idea. Let’s
just say the stock market, in a continuing burst of (what was it Alan Greenspan
called it?) “irrational exuberance”?
Whatever. The stock market just
keeps going up for some reason, and economic (and thus political) insecurity
continues to spread. Meanwhile, back at
the ranch, we continue working to spread word that there is a viable solution
out there. All we need to do is get it
to people who can get it to world leaders. Maybe the fact that this is Fulton Sheen Day might wake some people up:
Thursday, December 8, 2016
What’s Wrong With This Story?, II: Investment v. Speculation
On Monday of this
week we opined that, while Sister Lioba Zahn, O.S.B. of the Mariendonk Abbey in
Germany seemed to be doing good by doing well as a day trader in the stock
market, things are not as they seem, especially in the rather schizophrenic
global financial system. While her
activities are directed at generating essential funds for the Abbey (not all of
them are able to provide the stuff of hit musicals), the end does not justify
the means.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
There’s a Better Way, Mister Trump, II: What Should Be
If we ignored your private crusade...good. |
December is a
really bad month in which to blog if you’re trying to focus on things like the
Just Third Way. Today is a very historic
anniversary, and we could tie it in to the Just Third Way, but it would be a
pretty big stretch, and we’d spend more time justifying it than we would on the
subject at hand, which is a bit more immediate.
We get enough flak from people whose personal crusades we’ve forgotten
to mention just because they have nothing to do with what we’re talking about.
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
There’s a Better Way, Mister Trump, I: What Is
St. Nick opening the can of whup-ass on Arius |
If this were a
religious blog, today we’d be gushing about how the original Saint Nick got a
rep as a real bad-ass dude by slapping down Bishop Arius for asserting that the
Son was similar, but not the same as the Father (the original lump of coal in
the stocking for bad boys and girls was a fat lip for spouting what Bishop
Nicholas of Myra thought was drivel), and how the tradition of gift-giving got
associated with him (and maybe even how he became the patron saint of
pawnbrokers).
Monday, December 5, 2016
What’s Wrong With This Story?, I: Is Profit Evil?
Last week the Wall Street Journal carried one of its
more or less cute human interest stories.
You know, the ones that appear on the front page and tell you more than
you really want to know about turtle ranching in Tasmania, the world’s champion
string collector, or the most prolific novelist in history — “Corin Tellado,” pen name of Maria del Socorro Tellado Lopez (1927-2009),
with more than 4,000 (not a typo) novels, and total sales of over 400
million. Most prolific living novelist?
Japanese-Brazilian Ryoki Inoue, with
more than 1,100 novels to his credit, having turned out as many as three in one
day.
Friday, December 2, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 46
All done with smoke, mirrors, and ice. |
Breaking
news: the latest conspiracy theory is that the Titanic didn’t really sink on its maiden voyage. It was actually a ship named Olympic.
The switch was made to collect the insurance. And if you believe that, Modern Monetary
Theory (MMT) and Keynesian economics should be a breeze for you. (Nobody has bothered to explain where the
actual Titanic ended up, though. Unless it’s that thing floating next to the
rubber ducky.)
To
get back to the real world and the economics of reality, however, this has been
a busy and interesting week for those promoting the Just Third Way:
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Minimum Wage Follies
Tuesday, November
29, 2016 was designated “National
Day of Action to Fight for $15,” meaning an across the board hike in the
minimum wage to $15.00 per hour throughout the United States. Many workers at McDonald’s restaurants walked
off the job and participated in protests, with “dozens” being arrested in
various demonstrations across the country, according
to an Associated Press Report.
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
How to Make America Great Again
According to
historian Frederick Jackson Turner, the loss of America’s land frontier meant a
complete change in the American character as well as the gradual Europeanizing
of the United States. As Turner saw it,
the end of “free” land meant the end of democracy as well as the unique
American character that made the country great and, as Abraham Lincoln put it,
the last, best hope of earth.
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
The Last Great Hope
Yesterday we took
a look at what made England Great & Glorious, Long to Reign O’er us . . .
at least until she screwed up the financing of the greatest commercial
expansion the world had ever seen up to then, “then” being the period prior to
the British Bank Charter Act of 1844. We
discovered that after the government took over the banking system (you don’t
have to have actual title to something to own it, you just have to control it,
as the agrarian socialist Henry George realized in promoting his theories), the
British Empire began its long and slow decline.
Monday, November 28, 2016
You Can Bank on It
Last week we got
into a little discussion about Merrie Old England. One individual started gushing about how so
many inventions ’n stuff had come out of England, and wondered why this was
so. Of course, this particular
individual was into Art & Literature, so wasn’t too clear on just which
inventions she was talking about, but we got the general drift.
Friday, November 25, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 45
It’s
been a few weeks since the election, and a great many people still don’t know
what to make of President-elect Trump.
We can’t say that we do, either, but we know one thing: whoever is in
the White House, if he or she doesn’t have the Just Third Way and Capital
Homesteading, the only thing the American people will have is more of the same,
only more so. To keep that from
happening, here are this week’s happenings:
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Something For Which to Be Thankful
Seriously? You’re reading this blog on Thanksgiving
Day? You haven’t got anything better to
do? Well, be that as it may, we thought
we’d just give you a little something for which you can be thankful . . .
besides the election being over, that is.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
How to Invent a New Religion: Re-Edit the Dictionary
Yesterday we
looked in general at how to start your own religion for fun and profit. The issue today is how to make certain you do
it successfully, or at least until people start thinking for themselves and
realize what’s going on. Since people
without property tend to think the way those in power tell them to think,
that’s usually not a problem once you’ve abolished property.
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
How to Invent a New Religion: Abolish Private Property
There is a passage in G.K. Chesterton’s little book on St. Francis of Assisi —
titled, appropriately enough, St. Francis
of Assisi (1923) — that seems to baffle many people. It is the one where “G.K.” related how St. Francis was such
a one-man earthquake or revolution that, had he been so inclined, he could have
founded a new religion. Ironically, that
is precisely what some of the followers of “Il Poverello” (“the Little Poor
Man”) evidently thought he was doing, although they still called it
“Christianity.” As Chesterton made his
case,
Monday, November 21, 2016
And This Is Important . . . Why?
This past
Tuesday, November 15, 2016, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
elected His Eminence Daniel
Cardinal DiNardo, Archbishop of Galveston-Houston, Texas, as their new
president for a three-year term. Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles,
California, was elected vice president.
Friday, November 18, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 44
Although
there has been no sign of actual increases in the production of marketable
goods and services in a way that allowed the full participation of everyone as
both producers and consumers, the stock market took a big jump right after the
election. The real problem remains,
however: how do we restructure the system to give as many people as possible to
the opportunity and means to become capital owners? All we can say right now is that we’re
working on getting through to people who might help carry the message:
Thursday, November 17, 2016
The Feast of Christ the King?!?!?!?(!)
What the
heck? Why is there a posting on the Just
Third Way blog about an obscure Catholic religious feast? And by “feast” we mean a religious festival,
not the kind with roast turkeys, roast beef, roast pork, roast lamb, roast . .
. what were we talking about, anyway?
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Solidarism and the Just Third Way, IV: Expanded Capital Ownership
Today
we look at the fourth pillar of a just market economy, expanded capital
ownership. Father Pesch did not
specifically list widespread ownership as a pillar in his system of solidarity,
but — as we will demonstrate — it is necessarily implied in his third pillar, “private
property.”
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Solidarism and the Just Third Way, III: Restoration of Private Property
Yesterday
we looked at the role of free and open markets in solidarism and the Just Third
Way. We found that Father Pesch and CESJ
are in substantial agreement that the free market and fair competition are
fully compatible with the demand for justice and morality in daily life.
Monday, November 14, 2016
Solidarism and the Just Third Way, III: Free and Open Markets
Last
Thursday we looked at the role of the State in solidarism as understood by the “redeemer”
of solidarism, Father Heinrich Pesch, S.J.
We discovered that a limited economic role for the social tool of the
State is a pillar of both solidarism and the Just Third Way. Yes, we think Father Pesch could have been a
little more explicit, but by and large CESJ and Father Pesch come to the same
conclusion: the economic role of the State should be limited as much as
possible.
Friday, November 11, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 43
As
the United States works to deal with the widespread trauma caused by the
election of Donald Trump, we in the Global Justice Movement have a much better
way to spend out time and efforts: working to restructure the social order so
it doesn’t matter how bad elected officials may be, the people are in charge
and are giving the orders again . . . something that can happen only with
widespread capital ownership:
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Solidarism and the Just Third Way, II: Limited Economic Role for the State
Especially these
days, people seem confused about the proper role of the State. Many, if not most people haven’t bothered to
find out what the State is supposed to be doing or even what the State really
is — a social tool, not the “Mortall God” of totalitarian philosopher Thomas
Hobbes. That is why we usually list the
pillar having to do with the social tool of the State before the others — as
did Father Heinrich Pesch.
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Solidarism and the Just Third Way, I: Three or Four Pillars?
Today we start to
look at how well solidarism as understood by Father Heinrich Pesch, S.J. (not Émile Durkheim) and CESJ’s Just
Third Way fit together. Both claim to be
based on an Aristotelian-Thomist interpretation of Catholic social teaching —
and thus of the natural law — and therefore should come to the same
conclusion(s), even if by (slightly) different routes.
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Esoteric Posting for Election Day
Just to take a
break from our short series on solidarism (and because nobody is going to be
reading blogs today, anyway), we’re posting our response to a question we got
last week on a rather “esoteric” subject: the basis of the natural law.
Monday, November 7, 2016
Solidarism and the Common Good
Today
we start to look at how to restore solidarism to comply more closely with the
vision of Father Heinrich Pesch, S.J., whom we have decided is not the founder
of solidarism, but its redeemer, so to speak.
To do this we have to understand the whole point of solidarism, at least
from the natural law, “Christian” (or Catholic) perspective: to enhance the
dignity of the human person under God.
Friday, November 4, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 42
As
the situation continues to deteriorate nationally and internationally, and the
long slide to moral relativism and nihilism (to say nothing of capitalism and
socialism and ismism) continues, the number of surreal incidents and just plain
nuttiness accelerates to what, without the act of social justice and the
principles of economic justice, would be the point of no return. Just keep the Just Third Way in mind as you
read this issue of New from the Network if you want to retain your sanity:
Thursday, November 3, 2016
Faux Solidarism and the Totalitarian State
In
yesterday’s posting we gave a brief overview of solidarism, especially as it
relates to individual and social virtue.
We closed by noting, however, that what passes for solidarism in many
cases these days can hardly be called virtuous.
It violates natural law, particularly the natural rights of freedom of
association (liberty/contract) and private property, turning the tool of the
State into the master. This is a
phenomenon Archbishop Fulton Sheen noted in his first two books, God and Intelligence in Modern Philosophy
(1925), and Religion Without God (1928).
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Introduction to Solidarism
Solidarism is defined in
sociology as a theory that the possibility of founding
a social organization upon a solidarity of interests
is to be found in the natural interdependence of members of a society. Solidarity, a characteristic of groups per se, is defined as unity — as
of a group or class — that produces or is based on community of interests,
objectives, and standards.
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
After the Election
While most people
are concerned with the upcoming election, we should probably spare a thought or
two about what to do afterwards. After
all, whether Clinump or Trumton wins, We, the People, are going to get what is
euphemistically termed the “short” end of the stick. Or maybe the whole stick, a.k.a., “the
shaft.”
Monday, October 31, 2016
A Brief Discourse on Social Credit, VIII: The Analysis, Part Two
Last Thursday we
looked at some of the flaws in Major Douglas’s social credit proposal, e.g., the wrong definition of money and
abolition of private property by taking away the usufruct, to say nothing of
allowing politicians to avoid accountability for their actions. After all, is it really coincidental that as
more and more of the government’s budget consists of money created by emitting
bills of credit instead of tax revenues, the number of programs that go
contrary to the fundamental beliefs of most people have proliferated?
Friday, October 28, 2016
News from the Network, Vol. 9, No. 41
This
has been another seemingly slow news week in which a great deal has been accomplished. Contrary to the usual case with many
organizations, CESJ actually gets things done in meetings, and comes up with
some good ideas:
Thursday, October 27, 2016
A Brief Discourse on Social Credit, VII: The Analysis, Part One
In yesterday’s
posting we noted that even if social credit could deliver on every promise it
makes, and every individual received a basic subsistence income from the State
in the form of the National Dividend, it would be “unwise” to give the State
that much power over the lives of its citizens.
Power corrupts, as Lord Acton quoted, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely.
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