One
of the problems with talking about things other people either don’t know
anything about, or (more often) who are operating within a different “paradigm”
(“a
philosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline
within which theories, laws, and generalizations and the experiments performed
in support of them are formulated”) is that matters can often get . . .
confused. People often use the same word
with different meanings, while some even change the meaning of words within a
single sentence, sometimes without realizing they are doing it.
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
How to Stimulate Economic Growth
Yesterday we noted that fiddling with the tax system does not really affect the aggregate rate of economic growth. Assuming that the government is not emitting bills of credit and inflating the currency and that private opportunists also are not printing their own money, the amount of spending in the economy will remain the same, regardless of the tax rate, even if the tax rate is 100%.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
About That Corporate Tax Rate
The “conservatives”
claim that taxing corporations less will stimulate the economy, result in new
capital formation, and create jobs. The “liberals”
claim that taxing corporations less will mean taxing people more, depress the
economy, result in new capital formation, and destroy jobs.
Monday, November 27, 2017
Birth of the British Currency School
For quite some time,
we have been making references to the “Currency Principle” versus the “Banking
Principle.” Understanding the
differences between the two is key to understanding today’s problems with money
and credit, and why adherence to the Currency Principle precludes restoring Say’s
Law of Markets and establishing and maintaining a society characterized by
widespread capital ownership. So here
goes —
Friday, November 24, 2017
News from the Network, Vol. 10, No. 47
Even with the
mid-week holiday and two days without internet access (long story), things have
been moving well along, with great strides being made in a number of
areas. This is encouraging, because
things often slow down at this time of year, whereas for us they seem to be
picking up:
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Happy Thanksgiving!
Since you should have better things to do today than read even this blog, we'll let you off the hook with a brief holiday greeting:
And if you want something more. . . .
Happy Thanksgiving
And if you want something more. . . .
Wednesday, November 22, 2017
A Pecuniary Paradox
Today we look at one of
the more bizarre, even baffling paradoxes that afflicts the modern global
economy, albeit one that has become so engrained in monetary and fiscal policy
as to rank as unquestioned — and unquestionable — dogma of The Great Defunct
Economist, He Who Reigns Above All Other Economists, Alive or Dead. In case the heavy-handed sarcasm hasn’t
alerted you to whom we refer, that’s John Maynard Keynes.
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Who Invented Social Justice?
Judging from
current literature, lectures, and what-not, “social justice” is just another
name for socialism. Is that really the
case, though, given that, e.g., the
Catholic Church has been extremely supportive of social justice, but “down” on
socialism? Are socialism and social
justice really just different names for the same thing?
Monday, November 20, 2017
The Just Third Way Hour Podcast
The latest Just
Third Way Hour podcast features an interview with Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s
Director of Research. Greaney relates
about how he learned about CESJ, and talks about his two upcoming books.
Friday, November 17, 2017
News from the Network, Vol. 10, No. 46
Even with the “Holiday
Season” right around the corner next week, things are happening on the Just
Third Way front. The CESJ core group has
put together the outlines of the presentation that could be the basis of a
lecture or an interview, new podcasts are being recorded on schedule, and the
new and revised publications are on track:
Thursday, November 16, 2017
The Nature of Truth
You get into the
strangest arguments on the internet . . . and sometimes they really are
arguments, that is, “a
coherent series of reasons, statements, or facts intended to support or
establish a point of view.” Not
like what we got into, thankfully just on the fringes.
Wednesday, November 15, 2017
Faith or Reason?
A while back we
got into a rather pointless argument — with a lawyer, no less — about whether
the natural law is discerned by faith, or by reason. Despite what you might think, it was the
lawyer who argued for a faith-based understanding of natural law! (And he was supposed to be an expert on
constitutional law, too, oy weh.)
Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Random ESOP Musing
As
we may have mentioned once or twice in the past, we like to get questions from
our loyal readers . . . “loyal” being defined as anyone with a query that does
not begin, “Are you stupid-insane-crazy, etc.,
etc., etc., for saying something with which I disagree, misunderstand, or
can’t pronounce? (The answer, by the
way, is “yes.”)
Monday, November 13, 2017
The Just Third Way Hour Podcast
We’ve been a
little remiss in posting the link to the CESJ podcast, scheduled for release on
a weekly basis . . . so here are the first few weeks’ worth. The newest one is always at the top, so if
you want to catch up, or use the podcasts as an informal Justice University class on the Just Third Way (albeit without a syllabus or grading. . . .) start at the bottom and work your way up. These are mainly informal talks about matters
relating to the Just Third Way, so tune in and turn on to the Just Third Way
with your host, Bryan Vosper:
Friday, November 10, 2017
News from the Network, Vol. 10, No. 45
A number of CESJ
initiatives have made a great deal of progress this week. We have been talking with people from across
the globe and even in the United States, as can be seen from this week’s news
items. Our electronic outreach seems to
be having some effect, and the social media, podcasting, and now even
television are starting to pick up on the Just Third Way:
Thursday, November 9, 2017
VI. Reinventing Religion
Far from being a
“religious” problem, what has been happening with respect to social
justice affects the whole of society.
The fact remains, however, that — at the same time — the issue is
“religious” in that what eventually became known as socialism first arose
within Christianity as an alternative to the existing economic, political, and
religious order, and based on a different idea of the dignity of the human
person.
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
V. “Doing” Social Justice
No virtue — and
social justice is a virtue — can be imposed by force, a monopoly of the State,
(human) nature’s only legitimate monopoly.
Force can be used to prevent injustice or punish wrongdoing, but not to
impose virtue. Everyone is free to be
unvirtuous, as long as in being so he or she does no harm thereby to others or
to the common good.
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
IV. Foundation of Confusion
As a follow-up to
last week’s look at social justice, yesterday we looked at social charity, that,
just as individual charity is the “soul” of individual justice, is the “soul”
of social justice. We discovered that
(as Father Ferree put it) in social justice nothing is impossible . . . even if
the institution in need of reform is social justice itself!
Monday, November 6, 2017
III. The First Step
Last week we
looked into the real understanding of social justice: the virtue that reforms
institutions to make individual virtue possible once again, but does not
replace individual virtue. What do we
do, however, when social justice is the very institution that needs reform?
Friday, November 3, 2017
News from the Network, Vol. 10, No. 44
Some new
initiatives, the near-completion of others, and restarting still others have
marked this week. As the end of the year
approaches, this bodes well for continued success in the coming year:
Thursday, November 2, 2017
II. The Problem (and Solution) of Social Justice
Yesterday we
raised the question about what to do when the institution of social justice,
the virtue directed to correcting institutions, is the very institution that is
in need of correction. Fortunately, the
paradox of the very institution essential to reform being itself in need of
reform resolves itself — up to a point.
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
I. A Question of Human Dignity
Modern society,
if there are any doubts, is in serious trouble.
Over the last two centuries, the institutions of civil, religious, and
domestic society — State, Church, and Family — have been revised, reformed, and
reinvented to the point that these chief props of human dignity have become, to
all intents and purposes, meaningless.