In the
previous posting on this subject — John Henry Newman and what later
became known as “the act of social justice” — we saw that the controversy at
Oxford University in the 1830s at the height of the Oxford Movement was
starting to heat up. Although not
clearly defined, the battle lines were beginning to be drawn between the more
or less orthodox “High Church” Anglicans centered (more or less) around Newman,
and the less or more unorthodox “Broad Church” Anglicans who started coalescing
(less or more) around the Reverend Renn Dickson Hampden.
Wednesday, October 31, 2018
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
How Things Went Wrong
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject — the claim that modern society is going
to Hell — we looked into three recent books that went into the subject in some
depth. These were Rod Dreher’s The Benedict Option (2017), Anthony Esolen’s
Out of the Ashes (2017), and
Archbishop Chaput’s Strangers in a
Strange Land (2017). We identified
what we believe to be the “cause behind the cause” of the problems on which the
three authors focus.
Monday, October 29, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 40
This week Host
Dave Hamill relates the story of how he got interested in the Just Third Way
and Capital Homesteading. As a special
bonus, he’s also trying out a new segment that he calls “Plutocracy Story of
the Week.” This first one is about former
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's interview with the New York Times about his just-released new book, Keeping at It: The Quest for Sound Money and
Good Government. Volcker says we are
becoming a plutocracy . . . which comes
under the heading of “everything old is new again,” meaning this is hardly “news.”
Friday, October 26, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 43
Fluctuations in the stock market
have become so common that it’s almost not worth commenting on. If you have publicly traded shares, you’re
probably watching it like a hawk, anyway.
If you don’t, you probably don’t really care. One thing you should care about, however, is
getting the Capital Homestead Act passed as soon as possible and get things
back to a more rational system:
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Counterattacking in the Culture Wars
Recently we’ve
been reading a few books about the decay of culture and civilization. We mean recent books, although the general
theme and even many of the specifics have been the subject of commentators for
millennia. They all have certain
elements in common:
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
A Good Way to Go Bad
In yesterday’s Wall Street Journal there was a
relatively small item that, no doubt, many people missed. On the surface, of course, there is no
particular reason why anyone should pay attention to it . . . and that might be
the biggest problem of all.
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Distributism and Ronald Reagan, IV
Last week we made a series of
postings on the Presidential Task Force on Project Economic Justice, creatively
titled Distributism
and Ronald Reagan I, Distributism
and Ronald Reagan II, and Distributism
and Ronald Reagan III. Today we
conclude the series with (what else?) “Distributism and Ronald Reagan, IV.” Making it easy for us, the conclusion of
Reagan’s speech sums up things nicely:
Monday, October 22, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 39
Ƒor a slight
change of pace, this week Dave Hamill interviews retired Merchant Marine Commander
Robert Woodman who some years ago led the effort for a worker buyout of the
Ogleby Norton line on the Great Lakes.
Some listeners may be aware that Ogleby Norton was once called the
Columbia Line, and their flagship was an ore carrier named the Edmund Fitzgerald. . . .
Friday, October 19, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 42
The mode of this week’s media is
market madness . . . with a nod toward a number of future publications
hopefully soon to come down the pike. Other
than that, there have been a lot of thoughtful conversations and one meeting,
as well as the usual advancement of the Just Third Way:
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Distributism and Ronald Reagan, III
Even though we have provided
links to the
first posting in this little series, as well as the
second posting in this series (so people can read the whole story, if they
are so inclined), some readers — admittedly very, very few, a statistically “zero
sample” — insist on either putting words into our mouth or don’t bother to read
before jumping to a (wrong) conclusion or making an assertion they pull out of .
. . the blue.
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Distributism and Ronald Reagan, II
In yesterday’s
posting we broke the astonishing news (a mere thirty-seven years old . . .
so should it be called “olds” instead of “news”?) that Ronald Reagan, fortieth
president of the United States, “the Gipper” in the second greatest movie ever made
(the first, of course, being The Quiet
Man), and the bane of whoever needs a convenient excuse or target for bane-ing,
may have been a not-so-closet distributist! — that is, if you believe columnist
John Chamberlain, but he’s a Dead White European Male (DWEM™), so you can
believe anything you want . . . and you probably will . . .
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Distributism and Ronald Reagan, I
President Ronald
Reagan? The Gipper? A distributist? Yes — at least according to John Chamberlain in
his July 8, 1981 These Days column, “Everything Back to
the Electorate.” Chamberlain, who anticipated
today’s Chesterton revival by a few years, compared Reagan favorably to G.K.
Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. Possibly
outraging many who even then equated distributism with “democratic” or other
forms of socialism, Chamberlain claimed that the problem with England and its
“Nanny State” was that they had gone over to Fabian socialism instead of to distributism.
Monday, October 15, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 38
In this week’s
Just Third Way podcast we continue our series of discussions on CESJ’s Core
Values. This episode covers Core Values 5
and 6, discussed by Dr. Norman Kurland, president of CESJ, Dawn K. Brohawn,
CESJ’s Director of Communications, and Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s Director of Research.
Friday, October 12, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 41
Naturally many people this week are
obsessing about the drop in the stock market as if it actually means
something. It is, of course, useless to
point out that if you buy a share of stock at $10, and it goes up to $100, and
then drops to $50, you haven’t lost $50.
At the same time, you haven’t made $90 or $40, either. You haven’t made or lost one cent, and won’t
until you actually sell your share of stock.
It would be different, of course, if you had purchased your shares on
the margin and had to come up with the money to repay the acquisition loan or
meet the margin call, but that doesn’t happen too much any more, since the
minimum required margin these days is 50%, not the 1-3% sometimes required prior
to the Crash of 1929. In any event, most
of what goes on in the stock market is speculation, not true investment, as
recent events once again demonstrate:
Thursday, October 11, 2018
Non-Christian Christianity
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the appointment of the Reverend
Renn Hampden to the Regius professorship of Divinity at Oxford University in
the 1830s provoked an intensification in the ongoing struggle to define the
identity of the Church of England.
Hampden’s innovative views on what constitutes Christianity provoked a
storm of outrage among the more traditionally minded (meaning those who
accepted Jesus as the Son of God and the Messiah), which in turn prompted a
reaction from Hampden’s supporters.
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Halloween Horror Special: Regulation v. Internal Control
According to Dr.
Lawrence Ball on a recent episode of “Squawk Box Europe,” inadequate regulation
will bring about the next financial crisis.
Dr. Ball, an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University and author
of the book, The Fed and Lehman Brothers:
Setting the Record Straight on a Financial Disaster, getting rid of
regulations such as the Dodd-Frank Act lays the groundwork for an economic
meltdown of cosmic proportions.
Tuesday, October 9, 2018
The Romish Menace
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, a number of people became worried
by the success of the Oxford Movement in waking people up to the perceived need
to return the Church of England to a more traditional understanding of
Christian doctrine and even the meaning and purpose or religion. Those with a vested interest in adapting
doctrine and practice to modern conditions to make the Church of England more
relevant to the modern age needed a cause around which they could rally.
Monday, October 8, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 37
In this week’s
Just Third Way podcast we continue our series of discussions on CESJ’s Core
Values. This episode covers Core Values
3 and 4, discussed by Dr. Norman Kurland, president of CESJ, Dawn K. Brohawn,
CESJ’s Director of Communications, and Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s Director of
Research.
Friday, October 5, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 40
A lot of things have been happening
this week, and we still don’t have to resort to the usual causes of the day
about which the major media obsess. As
far as we are concerned, this demonstrates that the Just Third Way is the way
to go; all other presumed solutions to the messes of modern society are simply
the result of desperate people trying desperate measures before they have tried
common sense:
Thursday, October 4, 2018
Birth of the Broad Church
As we hinted in the previous posting on this subject, even
after the defeat of the motion at Oxford University in the 1830s to replace the
Thirty-Nine Articles with something even more vague and stripped of all
substance that students and faculty could sign, the situation did not improve. John Henry Newman had earlier predicted that
“bitterness” would ensue as a result of the conflict, and he was right.
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
CESJ Looks at Money, Part II
This is the second part of a posting completing the one begun last Wednesday. Recently members of the CESJ “core group” got
into a discussion with a couple of monetary theorists who confused what CESJ
says about Just Third Way monetary reforms and the proposals of, e.g., the American Monetary
Institute. The monetary theorists
requested a detailed analysis of exactly where what CESJ advocates from the AMI’s
proposal.
Tuesday, October 2, 2018
Politics and Religion
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, in
March of 1834 members of the Cambridge University Senate petitioned parliament. Their goal was to abolish the requirement for
students and faculty to subscribe to the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of
England in order to take a degree or obtain a fellowship, respectively. Although it was not rigorously enforced at
Cambridge, requiring someone to sign the Third-Nine Articles kept anyone who
was not a member of the established church from obtaining a degree or teaching.
Monday, October 1, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 36
For a little change of pace (and subject), this
week your host Dave Hamill talks with Jerome Peloquin about the psychology of
change:
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