As the title of this posting has it, Happy New Year's Eve! And don't you have something better to do than be reading this?
Monday, December 31, 2018
Friday, December 28, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 52
Here is the second half of our annual news roundup. The second half (July through December) always ends up being longer than the first half because the evets seem more timely and less outdated than what happened during the first half of the year. To cut to the chase, however::
Thursday, December 27, 2018
Crisis of Confidence
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, with the publication of “Tract 90,” John
Henry Newman inadvertently gave leverage to the enemies of the Oxford
Movement. By playing on the fears of “creeping
(or galloping) Romanism,” the more liberal (in the bad sense) elements in the
Church of England were able to undermine and eventually marginalize almost
completely the effort to return to orthodoxy.
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
When the Chips are Down
Watching “cop
shows” on television it is easy to get the impression that a police officer’s work
is a constant round of burglaries, bar fights, “domestic incidents,”
investigating crooked cops, murders, and (if it’s a comedy) lots of doughnuts. Television cops (the funny ones, anyway) have
a hunger for doughnuts that would shame Homer Simpson.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Merry Christmas!
Monday, December 24, 2018
Happy Christmas Eve!
Yes, since we're taking the day off in everything else (not the night, though), we're also letting the blog slide today and tomorrow. If you get lonely, of course, listen to some of the musical free samples for Christmas Eve available here. We recommend "Santa Geh Gesunder Heit." And a sample is about all you can take. Otherwise,
Friday, December 21, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 51
This week in addition to some
current events (which you will find at the end of this posting), we have the
first half of the annual news roundup from the Just Third Way, from January
through June. One of the things we found
ironic was our commenting in the first “News from the Network” for 2018 that
the newly achieved “25,000 Dow” was making some people nervous. Given the market shakeup over the past few
weeks, that seems to have been warranted.
It does, however, tend to make the Just Third Way more attractive:
Thursday, December 20, 2018
“Remarks on Certain Passages in the Thirty-Nine Articles”
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, John Henry Newman’s goal when he
published “Tract 90,” otherwise known as “Remarks on Certain Passages in the
Thirty-Nine Articles,” was not to try and turn the Church of England into the
Catholic Church. Rather, it was to show
the continuity of doctrine in both churches and their fundamental agreement on
what makes Christianity specifically Christianity.
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Real Bills for Real Wealth
Leo XIII |
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, in his landmark social encyclical Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII managed to
do two things that took the socialists, modernists, and New Agers off
guard. One, he followed up on the series
of social encyclicals that had started with Gregory XVI’s Mirari Vos in 1832 with an unexpected twist. Instead of simply condemning the “new things”
of the modern world, he presented an alternative that could deliver what
socialism, modernism, and the New Age only promised, and that without sacrificing
one iota of the natural law or Catholic doctrine.
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
A Suitable Pretext and the Usual Suspects
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, worried that the Church of England might
return to orthodoxy and undermine or repudiate all the gains that had been made
by “the democratic religion” or New Christianity that was intended to replace
traditional political and religious institutions, the “Broad Church” faction
comprised of socialists, modernists, unitarians, and even followers of esoteric
cults whipped up fear of “Romanism” among the Evangelical faction that adhered
to traditional Christian beliefs.
Monday, December 17, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 11 (Rerun)
Today
we have a reprise of Podcast Number 11 on What is Money? and Capital
Homesteading. These are questions that are of interest to everyone, so it
is useful to rerun one of the podcasts on them every now and then just to keep
people up to date:
Friday, December 14, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 50
Although things often slow down as
the holidays draw near and the end of the year approaches, people involved in
the Just Third Way movement have been seeing a lot of action, so to speak. A number of projects are coming to fruition,
such as the prototype instructional video, some major publications, and a
revived newsletter. We’re also come
across some interesting ideas that might be integrated into the Justice
University project. Then there’s the
international and national scene:
Thursday, December 13, 2018
The Wisdom of Social Justice
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, given ordinary circumstances, moral
questions tend to get away from the gray shadings and drift into black and
white. They never really get there, of
course, but as a general rule, as Fulton Sheen was fond of saying, “Right is
right if nobody does it, wrong is wrong if everybody does it.”
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Prelude to Catastrophe
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the adherents of the “democratic
religion” of socialism — which also encompassed what became known as modernism
and the New Age — became adamantine opponents of John Henry Newman and the
Oxford Movement when it became obvious that the tenets of the New Christianity
could in no way be reconciled with orthodox beliefs. As G.K. Chesterton would note a century or so
later, the “Hampden Affair” revealed the profound differences between traditional
religion (Orthodoxy, 1908) and the
invention of a new religion under the name of Christianity (Saint Francis of Assisi, 1923).
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
The Wisdom of Fulton Sheen
This past Sunday
marked the thirty-ninth anniversary of the death of Archbishop Fulton John
Sheen (1895-1979). Ordinarily we would
have posted any reflection on his thought pertaining to the Just Third Way on
that day. We don’t post on Sunday, however,
and yesterday was the day reserved for CESJ’s “electronic apostolate” (so to
speak), and Sheen would have been the first one to appreciate the fact that “the
show must go on.”
Monday, December 10, 2018
CESJ Video Broadcast, Week of December 9-16, 2018
This week’s video
broadcast is a show first aired on December 21, 2016, an episode of The Challenge With Russell Williams,
featuring Dr. Norman G. Kurland as a guest.
While the show is fairly short at less than half an hour, we’re sure you’ll
want to tune in:
Friday, December 7, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 49
While it certainly seems as if good
news travels so slowly that it never seems to arrive, a number of projects that
have been in the works for years are nearing at least the initial stages of
completion or fulfillment. CESJ still
has a need for volunteers to handle the routine organizational administrate tasks
as well as take over some key (but understaffed) projects, but every
organization and movement can say the same thing. CESJ’s most critical need at this point is
people willing to learn about the Just Third Way and who will take advantage of
the vast amount of material available free on the
CESJ website, such as the free e-books.
There are, of course, publications for sale, and we encourage you to
purchase them, but try the
free stuff first . . . don’t cost nothing. . . And in the meantime:
Thursday, December 6, 2018
The Slavery of Savings
It is traditional
in economics and finance to accept the principle that new capital formation is
utterly impossible without saving.
Nobody ever got something for nothing, and nobody ever will. What about gifts and charity, you ask? What about them? If someone gives you a gift or alms, you owe
gratitude. You don’t get something for
nothing.
Wednesday, December 5, 2018
“As Many as Possible of the People”
In the
previous posting on this subject we began by complaining about a
book without embarrassing the author by giving the title or the name of the
author. The book exists, though, even if
it does not appear to have sold very well.
Tuesday, December 4, 2018
Broad Church Basics
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, John Henry Newman and the others of the
Oxford Movement were confronted with something they were ill-prepared to deal
with, and up to a point did not even realize what the real problem was. With the Industrial and French Revolutions a
new idea had grown up regarding the real purpose of religion — and it did not
have too much to do with God, as Fulton Sheen would point out in the next
century.
Monday, December 3, 2018
CESJ Video Broadcast
While the Just
Third Way Podcast is on Holiday Hiatus we decided it was the perfect
opportunity to run a number of the videos that cover Just Third Way
subjects. This particular one, a Molly
Cheshire Show interview featuring Norman Kurland, president of CESJ, is especially
interesting:
Friday, November 30, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 48
As the last month of the year
approaches — it’s only a few hours away as of this writing — it’s easy to get
depressed about the number of people who have not heard about the Just Third
Way rather than satisfied about the increasing number of people who have. That’s understandable, because until a
determinant number of people even know about the Just Third Way and start
urging their leaders to do something positive instead of the Same Old Thing,
things are going to stay pretty much right where they are. There are, however, signs of hope:
Thursday, November 29, 2018
A Change of Tactics
Man proposes, the
internet (or at least email) disposes.
We were going to have a posting continuing the saga of John Henry
Newman, the Oxford Movement, and the act of social justice for today. At the last minute yesterday, however, we got
an email from a faithful reader in Canada alerting us to a book he came across on
Catholic social teaching . . . sort of.
As the book was published a few years ago and is not very well known, we
decided not to review it.
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Stranger Than Truth
As we saw in the
previous posting in this series, in the 1830s John Henry Newman and others
in the Oxford Movement found themselves at odds with the “Broad Church”
movement within the Church of England, a variety of what purported to be
Christianity, but without all those annoying legalistic, papist rules that got
in the way of the true religion taught by Jesus: democratic socialism. At issue was the nature of truth itself, even
if such a thing as truth could exist.
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
A Few Thoughts About Taxation
Not too long ago
we got into a discussion about one of everybody’s least favorite subjects:
taxation. Nobody likes it, even the
people who levy taxes or benefit from it.
That being the case, why do we need taxes in the first place?
Monday, November 26, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 14 (Rerun)
Possibly “rerun”
is not quite the right word for repeating Dave’s “Gas Truck Driver Rant.” Perhaps we could think of this as traveling
over the same route again. In any event,
while Dave is on holiday hiatus from the Just Third Way podcast we thought we’d
replay one of his more popular shows:
Friday, November 23, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 47
Amazon workers in Germany and Spain
went on strike today in Amazon distribution centers, possibly the biggest sales
day and busiest of the year. The stock
market is down. And nobody seems to know
how to fix what is going wrong. Maybe it’s
time to look seriously at the Just Third Way . . . .
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
Stupid Federal Reserve Tricks
It really is
amazing what you kind find rooting through old documents, correspondence, what
have you. When you have access to an
archive that records a social movement of which most people have at best an
inadequate understanding, it is easy to become frustrated at just how obtuse
people have been.
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
The “Myth” of Stagnant Incomes
One of the
interesting things about college is the opportunity to take courses in subjects
so far outside your major that students as well as professors cast suspicious
looks at you. That is, until they start
to realize that you might actually be taking the course because you’re
interested in it, not for an “easy A” to repair your GPA.
Monday, November 19, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 43
In this week’s
Just Third Way podcast, host Dave Hamill finishes the discussion on the
Core Values of the interfaith Center for Economic and Social Justice
(CESJ). Successful organizations start with people firmly committed
to a set of core values, which cannot be compromised without weakening the
organization. CESJ’s strength, unity and
programs flow from its founding principles, agreed upon by consensus from the
first meeting on April 7, 1984. CESJ’s core values were developed to guide CESJ
in its work, to attract others sharing these values and to serve as the very
basis of CESJ’s existence.
Friday, November 16, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 46
A great deal of outreach was done
this past week, with letters, telephone calls, and emails being sent to a
number of possible contacts. It is
becoming increasingly clear that without the Just Third Way the world will have
a difficult time turning aside from the path it is currently on and
establishing a system that will give each person the chance for a more just and
humane future. With that in mind —
Thursday, November 15, 2018
Christianity versus the Democratic Religion
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, in the early nineteenth century
traditional forms of Christianity were under assault from socialism, modernism,
and what became known as the New Age, with two churches especially targeted,
the Church of England and the Catholic Church.
Nor is this surprising, given the fact that the Catholic Church had
always been opposed to anything that undermined the natural law, and the Church
of England with the Oxford Movement was making an effort to return to its original
doctrinal roots.
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
Why NOT Capitalism?
On a fairly
regular basis we get called capitalists by the socialists and socialists by the
capitalists, which suggests there might be a little confusion around. Not on our part, but on the part of
others. Last week, for example, we
received the following email after someone here rejected the use of the word “capitalism”:
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
Financing Made Easy(er)
Every once in a
while we get a question about money, credit, banking, and finance that allows
us to give a very brief refresher course on some basic principles that,
nevertheless, are hard to hold in your head if you aren’t using them every
day. As our correspondent queried,
Monday, November 12, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 42
In this week’s Just
Third Way podcast, host Dave Hamill leads a discussion on some of the
Core Values of the interfaith Center for Economic and Social Justice
(CESJ). Successful organizations start with people firmly committed
to a set of core values, which cannot be compromised without weakening the organization.
CESJ’s strength, unity and programs flow
from its founding principles, agreed upon by consensus from the first meeting
on April 7, 1984. CESJ’s core values were developed to guide CESJ in its work,
to attract others sharing these values and to serve as the very basis of CESJ’s
existence.
Friday, November 9, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 45
We don’t need to comment on the
elections this week, since they were no surprise except in a few individual
cases. Overall, the mid-terms went about
as expected. Of much more importance for
the Just Third Way are the ongoing efforts at outreach, such as letters,
emails, telephone calls, etc., and attendance at conferences as speakers and
presenters. It is important for people
to realize that the CESJ core group cannot open their own doors — we need
people with contacts to use those contacts to open doors, e.g., as was done to
get the initial enabling legislation for the ESOP through, as described in “Dinner
at the Madison”:
Thursday, November 8, 2018
“The Oxford Malignants”
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, just as the Oxford Movement gained what
many authorities consider its greatest triumph — neutralizing the “Broad Church”
(“Latitudinarian”) clergyman and Oxford professor Renn Hampden — it also set in
motion a reaction that would within a few years undermine the Movement and
bring it to a screeching halt, at least as far as its original purpose of
reviving the Church of England was concerned.
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
A Turning Point
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the victory of orthodoxy (more or
less) in the matter of the appointment of the Reverend Renn Dickson Hampden,
while the high water mark of the Oxford Movement, came at what eventually
proved to be a high price. Although the
members of the Movement were not the only ones objecting to Hampden, they were
the only ones singled out as having “persecuted” him.
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
Misinterpreting Utopia
The
other day someone referred to the Just Third Way as “utopian.” It was one of those occasions when you
realize that some people might not know exactly what they are talking about. Quite a large number of people seem to think
that a utopian scheme is one for an ideal society. Not quite.
Monday, November 5, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 41
A little late,
perhaps (unless you’re on the Julian Calendar and are a couple of weeks behind
everyone else) but this week’s podcast is an overview of some “Halloween Horror
Specials” from past years on the
Just Third Way Blog. We would tell
you more about what your host Dave Hamill has selected to relate . . . but we
were far too scared to preview the podcast, and so you’ll have to take your
chances. Today is Guy Fawkes Day, so we really don't know what to expect in any event. . . .:
Friday, November 2, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 44
Much of the activity in the Just
Third Way this week involved the
interesting-to-participate-in-but-not-so-interesting-to-read-about making
connections, building relationships, and planning for the coming year. CESJ’s fiscal year ended September 30, and
the annual “planning phase” for the coming year usually takes place in the “lame
duck” months following the end of the fiscal year and the beginning of the
calendar year:
Thursday, November 1, 2018
Guidelines for Reform
As we noted in the
previous posting on this subject, society is in chaos. People are, frankly, scared to death. They know something is wrong but can’t seem
to be able to put their finger on the problem.
They know key definitions of concepts have been changed and their
institutions have somehow been transformed at a fundamental level, although the
powers-that-be keep insisting otherwise.
Wednesday, October 31, 2018
“Like a Summer’s Cloud”
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.
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:
Friday, September 28, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 39
This past week was marked by good
meetings and good contacts, and it looks as if next week will be just as
productive. In addition, a number of
publications are moving forward, and a publisher has expressed interest in a
new book on Capital Homesteading! Take,
and read:
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Liberalism Strikes Back
To a greater degree than many people realize, some extremely
serious conflicts throughout history have resulted from an error that most
people not only fail to recognize as an error, they do not see any difference
between the error and what is correct.
Seemingly so esoteric that it appears to have absolutely no relation to
anything in real life, it is the question whether the natural law is based on
what can be observed about human nature or is based on someone’s interpretation
of something accepted as God’s Will . . . or whatever is put in God’s place.
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
CESJ Looks at Money, Part I
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 MonetaryInstitute. The monetary theorists
requested a detailed analysis of exactly where what CESJ advocates from the AMI’s
proposal.
Tuesday, September 25, 2018
The Newmanites
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, John Henry Newman rapidly became the prime mover in the Oxford Movement. Between the friends and enemies of Newman, however, it
is difficult to decide which has made understanding him more difficult. Enemies tend to portray him as the arch-traitor
to the Church of England. He is a
veritable Ahriman who led so many down the primrose path along the road to
apostasy and out of the nurturing cradle of the Anglican Communion into the
arms of the Whore of Babylon.
Monday, September 24, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 35
This week your host Dave
Hamill talks with Peter Hayes in Louisville, Kentucky about spreading word of
the Just Third Way:
Friday, September 21, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 38
The stock market and Congress are
both getting extremely surreal, so we’ll leave commentary on both to the usual experts
who don’t let their lack of knowledge, consistency, or veracity interfere with
their opinions. Instead, what we’ll do
is look at the latest happenings in the Just Third Way:
Thursday, September 20, 2018
Initial Success
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, there
was a very natural desire on the part of the members of the Oxford Movement to
come to grips with the serious danger threatening the Church of England. This, combined with some difficulties in
completing any plan of association, prevented the formation of an organization
to provide a base from which to carry out a coordinated campaign.
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
(Another) Global Debt Crisis
Back in the early
nineteenth century following the Napoleonic Wars and the dissolution of much of
the Spanish Empire, the new republics of Central and South America found they
had a problem: no tax base, and thus no way to meet government
expenditures. This was doubly a problem,
because in order to demonstrate their legitimacy, the new governments had to
assume all the obligations of the old government as well as meet their own
current needs.
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Oxford Movement, Guerilla War Phase
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, the
organizing members of the Oxford Movement were in general — though not specific
or particular — agreement on fundamental principles of Christianity that they
believed must be embodied in and taught by the Church of England. They were also in agreement on their opinion
that the Church of England was in deadly peril.
What they lacked, and what was to show up as the Movement progressed,
was an appreciation of the importance of the phases of a movement, and the need
to “secure” and continue each phase before going on to the next one.
Monday, September 17, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 34
In this week’s Just Third Way
podcast, Dave Hamill hosts a panel discussion with Dr. Norman Kurland,
president of the interfaith Center for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ),
Dawn K. Brohawn, CESJ’s Director of Communication, and Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s
Director of Research on the first two of CESJ’s “Core Values”:
Friday, September 14, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 37
As the world attempts to move into
Fall in the Northern Hemisphere and into Spring in the Southern Hemisphere,
other things are staying pretty much the same.
That is, the powers-that-be can’t figure out that if you want economic
recovery, a sound currency, and a just and sustainable economy, you’d better be
able to make everybody productive, and that means expanded capital ownership:
Thursday, September 13, 2018
Social Justice in Action
In the previous posting on this subject, we contended that
the Oxford Movement was an exemplar of social justice a century before the term
had the precise meaning Pope Pius XI assigned it in his social doctrine. Prior to the late 1840s, in fact, “social
justice” had a variety of meanings almost completely unrelated to any concept
of social virtue. That would come only
with the work of Monsignor Luigi Aloysius Taparelli d’Azeglio,
S.J. (1793-1862), and would rapidly be hijacked by the socialists.
Wednesday, September 12, 2018
Time to Pay Attention to Puerto Rico
Everybody knows
about Puerto Rico, right? It’s that
place, that, you know, is “down there” somewhere, where a bunch of people live,
who are, like, Americans, sort of, except they’re kinda like, you know, not
really. Is this going to be on the test?
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
A Brief Outline of Social Justice
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, two
great perils faced the Church of England in the early nineteenth century,
capitalism and its near-twin, socialism.
Not that the prime movers in the Oxford Movement saw it that way, of
course. It would never have occurred to
any of them, then or later, to give that much importance to the things of this
world . . . which made the problem even worse — there is, after all, no problem
so bad that it cannot get worse by ignoring it.
Monday, September 10, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 33
In today’s Just Third Way
podcast, your host Dave Hamill gives us a little “blast from the (recent) past,
with an interview of Dr. Norman Kurland, president of the interfaith Center for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ):
Friday, September 7, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 36
It may sound like the “same old
same old,” but it’s really . . . okay, it’s the same old same old. The difference is that every day we seem to
be reaching a larger number of people about the Just Third Way and Capital
Homesteading, and a number of people are still coming up with the same old
excuses that they have for decades, evidently not realizing that they’ve worn a
little thin over time. Be that as it
may, here are a few highpoints on what’s been happening in the movement:
Thursday, September 6, 2018
The English Constitution
In the previous posting on this subject, we looked at the
background against which the Oxford Movement took place, viz., the culture of elitism that found expression in English type
liberalism. This led naturally to an
overemphasis on capitalism to counter socialism. Since both capitalism and socialism are in
many respects fundamentally the same in theory as well as in practice,
socialism was as ineffective in overcoming capitalism as capitalism was in
countering socialism.
Wednesday, September 5, 2018
The Crisis of Democracy?
Last week in the Wall Street Journal Walter Russell Mead
gave his opinion that the “Crisis of Democracy” in the modern world is a bit
exaggerated (“The “Crisis of Democracy” Is Overhyped,” WSJ, 08/28/18, A-13). According
to Mead, the democracies are, if not precisely doing-just-fine-thank-you, at
least doing better than the non-democracies.
Tuesday, September 4, 2018
A Primer on English Liberalism
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, the
Aristotelian and Platonic views of reality led to different theories of
politics — and this had a significant effect not merely on the direction of the
Oxford Movement, but on the fact of the movement itself.
Monday, September 3, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 32
In today’s Just Third Way
podcast, your host Dave Hamill talks with Leonard Walker of the Descendants of
American Slaves. There seems to be a lot
of congruity between the Just Third Way and DAS, which only makes sense, as
justice for any will be compatible with justice for all.
Friday, August 31, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 35
Perhaps not surprisingly, there is
not much good news this week, or at least we haven’t been able to find it. What little there is seems to be internal,
e.g., some important publications are in the works for CESJ, and there has been
a great deal of interest expressed in the projects. As for the rest of the world:
Thursday, August 30, 2018
“The Accident of an Urgent Necessity”
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, “the
New Christianity”/”Neo-Catholicism” — euphemisms for “the democratic religion”
of socialism — was a serious problem in the early nineteenth century — and not
one confined to religious society. The
sea change in how people viewed the human person and his or her place in the world
was devastating. It undermined
fundamental principles of the entire social order in all its aspects, religious,
civil, and domestic. The social
earthquake triggered by the French Revolution has had aftershocks lasting down
to the present day.
Wednesday, August 29, 2018
The New Greek Myth
Recently Alexis
Tsipras, the Prime Minister of Greece, has declared the end of the bailout of
the country, proclaiming a “day of liberation.”
Greece has completed a three-year emergency loan program worth €61.9
billion to tackle its debt crisis. It
was part of the biggest bailout in history, totaling approximately €289 billion,
which will take the country decades to repay. Cuts in public spending, especially for social
welfare programs, will continue.
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
The Pilgrims of God and Liberty
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, in
November 1831, calling themselves “the Pilgrims of God and Liberty,” de
Lamennais, Montalembert, and Lacordaire set out for Rome to present their case
to the pope. Much to de Lamennais’s
annoyance, the trio was not granted an audience immediately, although that
should have been expected in light of the fact that they showed up in Rome
without warning.
Monday, August 27, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 31
How to reach Bernie Fans? Why would we want to do that? Well, why not? Bernie Sanders has a following, and people
pay attention to what he says, he’s concerned about things — and he is a strong
supporter of worker ownership. It should
be a pretty short step for him to see that if ownership for workers is good,
ownership for everyone is better, and can accomplish most if not all of the
goals he says he wants to achieve through redistribution. Why do it the hard way?
Friday, August 24, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 34
In case you were wondering how
people are benefiting from all the presumably wonderful economic growth (e.g., the stock market booming, falling
unemployment, protection of America’s infant industries, etc.), it’s a good idea to keep in mind that there is a difference
between the collective and the individual human person. In the aggregate — the collective sense —
things may be going great, per capita
income is $1 million . . . except that means one person gets $300 million a
year, and the other 299,999,999 people get zip.
And why not redistribute by abolishing private property for one guy so
the 299,999,999 can have it? Because
abolishing private property for one means abolishing it for all. Why not just figure out a way to make
everybody productive instead of just one person? Or you end up with what we have today:
Thursday, August 23, 2018
The Birth of Social Catholicism
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, if
there was one thing that both the Catholic Church and the Church of England had
in common in the early nineteenth century, it was “religious
indifferentism.” Although it stemmed
from different causes in each country, the widespread neglect of religious
duties and the belief that all religions are essentially the same was a serious
problem in both France and England.
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
The Accountable Capitalism Act
Senator Elizabeth Ann Warren (Democrat, Massachusetts) has
created a bit of a stir with her “Accountable Capitalism Act” proposal. The ACA is a proposed piece of legislation
recently introduced by Senator Warren that she believes would restore
accountability of corporations to their employees and to the public at
large. At the heart of her proposal is
her oft-repeated declaration that “corporations are not people.”
Tuesday, August 21, 2018
The Unusual Suspects
In the previous posting on this subject we mentioned that
as early as the 1820s in France there were a significant number of sects of the
“democratic religion” — socialism — springing up everywhere. Within a generation there had grown to be so
many that Alexis de Tocqueville commented in his recollections of the 1848
Revolution,
Monday, August 20, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 30
Every organization needs not
only a mission statement and a business plan — and yes, even non-profits need a
“business plan” because if you cannot state clearly why your organization
exists . . . why does it exist? Further,
the more vague or general an organization’s mission statement (e.g., “The Much Ado About Nothing
Society works to promote interest in William
Topaz McGonagall (1825-1902), the greatest poet who ever lived or ever
will live, and to jabber on endlessly without knowing anything about him.”*)
the more chance there is that the organization will eventually lose its
way. It may continue, but more and more
people will simply ask Why?
Friday, August 17, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 33
A lot of bull. |
Talk on “the Street” (when it’s
capitalized like that it’s Wall Street, because that’s where everything is capitalized
. . . right? Wrong, but we won’t go into
that today) is that consumer spending is up, up, up, and that’s a good thing,
right? Yes, it’s a very good thing . . .
assuming it’s in response to people being able to meet their needs and reasonable
wants out of current income. When it
involves buying luxuries on credit — or, worse, necessities on credit — it’s a
very, very bad thing . . . but that’s what’s happening, even though that part
of the equation is being ignored or downplayed.
In other news:
Thursday, August 16, 2018
The Rise of Democratic Socialism
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, disconnecting
ordinary people from the ability to produce and the resulting loss of power had
serious repercussions throughout the social order in the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries. Traditional
institutions no longer seemed able to fill human wants and needs, whether material,
moral, or spiritual, and were increasingly seen as irrelevant or, worse,
opposed to human development.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
The Economic and Financial Revolution
The situation between John Henry Newman and Orestes
Brownson described in the previous posting on this subject had not sprung from
out of nowhere. Nor were they the only
ones confronted with what looked like an attack on the very fabric of the
social order itself.
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Is Development Bad?
At the end of the previous posting on this subject, we
noted that some people with agendas had found what they wanted in John Henry
Newman’s book, An Essay on the
Development of Christian Doctrine. The
problem was that what they claimed to have found was the opposite of what
Newman had actually written.
Monday, August 13, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 29
This week your host Dave
Hamill talks with Monica Woodman from Cleveland, Ohio. Monica comes to the Just Third Way naturally. Her father, Bob Woodman, was one of the movement’s earliest supporters, and
her siblings are also very strong in their support of the Just Third Way. It’s a kind of family heritage with the
Woodmans, so let’s hear what Monica has to say:
Friday, August 10, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 32
Panic in the streets. Again.
As this is being written, the stock market is crashing. Again.
Don’t worry, though. Give it
another hour or two and it will be back up.
After all, it doesn’t really measure anything except people’s inability
to recall what happened fifteen minutes ago.
Other things are of more concern, such as the surge in support for “democratic
socialism” . . . which might not be all that worrisome, either, despite the
hysteria from both ends of the spectrum.
Of course, if people would get off the spectrum altogether and on to the
Just Third Way, then a lot of things that take up far too much of their time
could take a back seat to what is really important: actually living life:
Thursday, August 9, 2018
Newman and Brownson
John Henry Newman was arguably the most notable English convert to Catholicism in the nineteenth century. We only qualify that statement because if we didn’t, we would get a flood of emails demanding to know why we didn’t consider so-and-so or detailing alleged faults of Newman that presumably disqualify him from a position of preëminence.
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
“When He Enters into a State of Society”
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject,
American liberalism that sounded very good in theory has a serious flaw in
practice. It is not too far out of the
realm of possibility that this flaw may have contributed to John Henry Newman’s
inability to see any difference between the English and European types of
liberalism and the American type. We
refer, of course, to chattel slavery.
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
American Liberalism, Theory and Practice
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, we have been looking at American type liberalism as
fundamentally different from the English and European types. Our case is based on the claim that European
type liberalism vests sovereignty in the collective, while English type
liberalism puts it in an élite.
Monday, August 6, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 28
This week’s Just Third Way
Podcast is the second part of a rebroadcast of a “FOCUS” (Follow One Course
Until Successful) show with host Meshorn Daniels and guest Dr. Norman G. Kurland. Again we invite you to sit back and enjoy!
Friday, August 3, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 31
This week we cover news items from
Japan to the Vatican, and that span nearly a century . . . but that you can
still read quickly. Don’t be worried,
however. The only controversial thing we
cover is expanded capital ownership, which is very upsetting to the increasing
numbers of democratic socialists:
Thursday, August 2, 2018
Democracy in America
Following up on the previous posting on this subject, answering the question What is liberalism? is key to
understanding the life and times of John Henry Newman, particularly since what
has baffled many Newman scholars is the fact that he claimed to be against all
forms of liberalism and yet held many opinions and took many positions that people
today regard as liberal. Part of this
may be due to the possibility that Newman seems to have had trouble viewing
this world as anything other than a temporary stopping place on the way to the
next.
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
A Different Kind of Liberalism
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, John
Henry Newman based his thought firmly on the idea that the human person is of
paramount importance. At the same time,
he failed to account for (or possibly only failed to appreciate) the fact that
human beings, while remaining individuals, are also social, a possibly unique
combination Aristotle called “political.”
This may, in part, have caused him to lump all types of liberalism
together under the umbrella of what he called “the Anti-dogmatic Principle,”
which is to say to someone like Newman, “the Anti-truth Principle.”
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
A Quintessential Individualist
As
we saw in the previous posting on this subject, John Henry Newman tended to
rely on absolutes discerned by faith and reason instead of transitory popular
fads, expedience, or even earthshaking changes in society in forming his
opinions. Newman had, in the best sense,
the extreme disadvantage of being an unworldly person in an increasingly materialistic
society. This explains many things that
have baffled modern commentators as well as Newman’s own “failures” in carrying
out projects that relied in any degree on matters outside of the realm of personal
faith and reason.
Monday, July 30, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 27
This week’s Just Third Way
Podcast is actually the first part of a rebroadcast of a “FOCUS” (Follow One
Course Until Successful) show with host Meshorn Daniels of "DAS" and guest Dr. Norman G.
Kurland. Sit back and enjoy!
Friday, July 27, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 30
Some weeks there are a lot of
things going on in the Global Justice Movement.
Other weeks there are still a lot of things happening, except nobody
tells us what they are. . . . Be that as it may, here are this week’s items:
Thursday, July 26, 2018
A Grammar of Assent
We
closed the previous posting on this subject with the statement that while
American type liberalism and European and English type liberalism are all
“liberalism,” there is a fundamental difference between the American version
and the other two. In brief, where
European liberalism puts sovereignty into the abstraction of the collective,
and English liberalism puts sovereignty into the abstraction of an élite (ultimately the same thing, for an
élite of some sort always ends up in
control of the collective), American liberalism puts sovereignty solely and
exclusively into the human person.
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
An Introduction to American Liberalism
On
Christmas Day in the year 1797, Luigi Barnabà Chiaramonte (1742-1823), bishop
of Imola, astounded conservatives in the congregation at his cathedral by
declaring that there is no necessary conflict between Christianity and
democracy. Nor did Chiaramonte change
his liberal position when he was elected to the papacy in 1800, taking the name
Pius VII.
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
How About English Liberalism?
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, and as is clear to anyone who has looked into the career of
John Henry Newman, one of the main reasons for the Oxford Movement, if not the
reason (understood in its broadest sense), was the concern he and others had
regarding the spread of liberalism and its result on the clergy and laity of
the Church of England.
Monday, July 23, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 26
This week we have a very
special program on the Just Third Way Podcast: Civil Rights Legend the Reverend
Dr. Virgil Wood, who was the New England representative for Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Today Dr. Wood talks about “jubilee,”
civil rights, and empowering all with economic opportunity through
ownership. He also mentions Dr. King’s
encouragement for him to pursue the advancement of Kelso’s philosophies!
Friday, July 20, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 29
A great many things have been
happening on the Just Third Way home front, not the least is the discovery of a
“missing link” tying together Cardinal Newman, Msgr. R.H. Benson, Msgr. Ronald
Knox, G.K. Chesterton, and Abp. Fulton J. Sheen! We predict that a lot of preconceptions and
assumptions are going to bite the dust with a rather loud thump when we
complete our research and make it public.
Until then, however, there are other important things happening in the
movement:
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Liberalism? Which One? European?
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, the
authorities generally list four primary causes of the decay of the Church of
England and the beginning of the Oxford Movement. All of these are interrelated, and it is
actually impossible to discuss them intelligently in isolation. These are 1) Getting involved in politics, 2)
Erastianism, or the State moving into determining religious beliefs, practices,
and policies, 3) A confusion of the religious identity of the Church of England
itself, and 4) The rise of liberalism.
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
Religion Without God
Following up on the previous posting on this subject (i.e., John Henry Newman), we need to look at the specific situation in which he found himself. As was the case with all mainstream Christian churches in
the early nineteenth century, the Church of England was in serious
trouble. Nor was this situation limited
to religious society. In the wake of the
French Revolution, Church, State, and Family seemed to be dissolving in chaos
everywhere in Europe.
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Charles Kingsley and John Henry Newman, II
In the previous posting on this subject, we found that the
Reverend Charles Kingsley, who had accused John Henry Newman in print of being
a liar, actually admitted in the course of preparing his final blast at Newman that
his original accusation was false.
Despite that, Kingsley informed a friend of his that he was going to
continue making new accusations until he had taken revenge on Newman for some
undisclosed transgression Newman had allegedly committed against Kingsley
twenty years before.
Monday, July 16, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 25
Yes, we know that we labeled
last week’s podcast Number 25 . . . but there was a good reason for that: we
made a mistake. Or there was miscommunication. Or something.
We ran President Reagan’s speech before the Presidential Task Force on
Project Economic Justice from 1987 and labeled it “Podcast #25,” even though as
a “rerun” (so to speak) it doesn’t really fit into the series.
Friday, July 13, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 28
With the summer about half over, it
is encouraging that there are so many signs that people are starting to wake up
to the potential of the Just Third Way. There
are only a few news items this week, but they are of “high quality.” Of course, all of our news items are always
of “high quality,” but these add a bit of significance to people outside the
movement as well:
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Charles Kingsley and John Henry Newman, I
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, back in
the middle of the nineteenth century a man named Charles Kingsley, a successful
and well-known Anglican clergyman, seemingly out of the blue attacked a
semi-retired Catholic clergyman by the name of John Henry Newman, a convert to
Catholicism who was regarded even by himself as a failure.
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
John Henry Newman and Charles Kingsley
Everybody knows about John Henry Newman. He tried to turn the Church of England into
the Catholic Church, and when that didn’t work he became a real Catholic. He then wrote a bunch of books about how to
start a university and apologize for everything, and then had a big fight with Pope
Pius IX because they didn’t allow him to dissent about papal infallibility, so
he wrote a book about how to dissent without seeming to dissent, and he was
right because Pope Leo XIII made him a cardinal . . . right?
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
A New, Anti-Human Role for the State
In the previous posting on this subject, we examined
Woodrow Wilson’s philosophy of government.
We decided (we don’t know what you
decided) that Wilson’s approach to government was not exactly respectful of the
human person, dignity, and all that.
Monday, July 9, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 24-1/2
This
week on the Just Third Way Podcast we have a very special guest: President
Ronald Reagan! This is a live recording
of the talk President Reagan gave when receiving the report of the Presidential
Task Force on Project Economic Justice in 1987.
For those of you unfamiliar with the Task Force and who think that “government”
has to do everything, Project Economic Justice was a private initiative using
no government (i.e., taxpayer) money:
Friday, July 6, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 27
One of the interesting things about
investigating the roots of the Just Third Way is the fact that we keep
uncovering things that support what we’re saying, and that undermine claims
made by those who either oppose the Just Third Way (very few, actually, if you
limit it to those with valid critiques) or who just plain don’t understand the
Just Third Way. For example, this week
we found an article from 1855 that describes the tactics of the socialists: if
something doesn’t fly, or people become outraged, shift immediately to
something emotional instead of rational, and hide whatever is offensive under
another name. But there is some good
news as well:
Thursday, July 5, 2018
Government of the Élite, by the Élite, and for the Élite
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, Woodrow Wilson’s political philosophy boiled
down to “might makes right.” Something
was right because he believed it was so, not because it met or measured up to
any objective standard of good. In that,
Wilson simply echoed the totalitarian philosophy of Thomas Hobbes.
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
Happy Independence Day!
We suppose we really should post something to the effect that if you want true independence, you need a capital stake sufficient to generate an adequate and secure income. Since we say that in virtually every other posting one way or another, and today is a holiday, we're letting those of you who actually visit this blog instead of spending time with friends and family off the hook — for today, anyway:
Tuesday, July 3, 2018
Woodrow Wilson’s Political Philosophy
We’ve been
looking at Woodrow Wilson and his role in eliminating the vestiges of what was
once known as “Lincoln Republicanism,” i.e.,
a political philosophy that viewed government as being of the people, by the people,
and for the people. The Progressive
Party was pretty much the last gasp of the type of Republicanism that replaced
the Whig Party and ran Abraham Lincoln for president back in the day.
Monday, July 2, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 24
Wait! Didn't we see JTW Podcast # 24 LAST week? Yes, we did. Frankly, it was so well received that we decided to give in to popular demand and run it again this week. Since Wednesday is a holiday in the United States, this will give everyone a chance to catch up on all the podcasts they missed. So, for your listening pleasure, we again have a panel discussion on the Capital
Homesteading concept. The CESJ core
group gets together and fields some insightful questions and comments from your
host, Dave Hamill —
Friday, June 29, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 26
The stock market,
of course, is bouncing around like a rubber ball, President Trump is fretting
because manufacturers are leaving the U.S. — which they wouldn’t if the U.S.
had a Capital Homestead Act, a rational tax system, and an elastic,
asset-backed currency that financed private sector growth instead of government
spending — the immigrant “problem” is upsetting people (which it wouldn’t if
the U.S. and other countries had a Capital Homestead Act, etc.), and so
on. In other words, business as
usual. What isn’t “business as usual”
are the advances we continue to make in promoting the Just Third Way:
Thursday, June 28, 2018
The Triumph of the Will
If history has
shown us anything, it is that Woodrow Wilson was the wrong man in the wrong
place at the wrong time. At a time when
the United States needed a new direction to restore and retain government “of
the people, by the people, and for the people,” it got an elitist snob with a
vision limited by his own ego. When the
world needed the U.S. to take the lead and douse the flames that led to World
War I, Wilson retreated into isolationism until the situation he helped create
got so bad it could no longer be ignored.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
And What IS Money?
Back in 1912
people were demanding reform of the financial system as a result of the Panics
of 1893 and 1907. The problem was that
few people demanding reform had a good grasp of what money actually is. Having looked into why we think Modern
Monetary Theory (MMT) does not give a good — or even coherent — definition of
money, today we will look at a Just Third Way understanding of money.
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
The Presidential Campaign of 1912
As we saw in the last posting on this subject, the 1912 presidential campaign was hotly contested, with five different parties fielding candidates. These were the usual Republican and Democrat Parties, but also the Progressive Party, the Prohibition Party, and two socialist parties, the Socialist Party of America and the Socialist Labor Party.
Monday, June 25, 2018
Just Third Way Podcast No. 24
This
week on the Just Third Way Podcast we have a panel discussion on the Capital
Homesteading concept. The CESJ core
group gets together and fields some insightful questions and comments from your
host, Dave Hamill —
Friday, June 22, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 25
It might be
something of a paradox, but it is something to consider. If every country in the world had a “Capital
Homesteading” program or the equivalent, it is possible that there would be
more jobs created than there would be people to fill them. Instead of discouraging immigration,
countries would be encouraging it in order to get enough workers. At the same time, countries would also
encourage people to remain at home in order not to decrease the workforce and
discourage emigration. All of a sudden,
countries would be competing to see which one could offer the best incentives
to come and stay in their country. It’s at least something to think about:
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Democrats and Friends in the 1912 Campaign
In the previous
posting on this subject, we discovered that the Republican Party had split into
reactionary and progressive factions.
The reactionary faction, the “Old Guard” Republicans, were the social
and economic élite who had come into
the Grand Old Party following the Civil War when it was the only game in town,
the Democratic Party having been discredited.
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
Is Government Money Real Money?
In the previous
posting on this subject, we took a look at what is meant in Modern Monetary
Theory (MMT) by “pure money.” We
discovered that “pure money” doesn’t mean what one might expect from the Just
Third Way concept of “pure credit,” but is something similar in form to the
Just Third Way idea, while being pretty much its exact opposite.
Tuesday, June 19, 2018
Meet the Republican Candidates . . . for 1912
As we saw in our
previous discussion on this subject, the 1912 presidential campaign
was blessed — or cursed — with an abundance of parties and candidates,
including a few nobody remembers. There
was only one previous campaign of national importance in United States history
that even came close to the variety of candidates and positions in the public
eye.
Monday, June 18, 2018
The Just Third Way Podcast
This
week on the Just Third Way Podcast, Host Dave Hamill interviews CESJ intern
Sasha Miltreiger from the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Sasha, a political science major, talks about
how she became interested in the Just Third Way and selected CESJ for her
internship, joining a number of other very well qualified interns that CESJ has
had over the years:
Friday, June 15, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 24
Despite what is
normally a slow period for news, some interesting things are happening around
the world in the Just Third Way network and beyond. These range from minor matters such as
meetings, to important breakthroughs in historical research on the development
of the concept of social justice. There
is also a bit or two on the need to work for a more equitable distribution of
the world’s wealth, but without harming the rights of anyone:
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Panics, Populism, and Progressivism
The United States
presidential campaign of 1912 was, all things considered, unique in American
history.
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Pure Money
Last week we
finished off our look at what was meant in Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) by the
claim that money
is a creature of law rather than a commodity. We concluded that “creature of law” in MMT did
not mean consistent with the natural law and the legal definition of money as
anything that can be accepted in settlement of a debt. Rather, it meant that money is a special
creation by the government . . . which pretty much negates the real definition
of money.
Tuesday, June 12, 2018
Freedom and Justice for All
In 1647 Oliver
Cromwell (1599-1658) and his son-in-law Henry Ireton (1611-1651)
had a problem. They had succeeded in
their revolution but had no real idea what to do with their victory. They wanted to impose Presbyterianism but had
no program of political reform. Having
no plan, they did nothing.
Monday, June 11, 2018
The Just Third Way Podcast
This
week on the Just Third Way, Host Dave Hamill again pushes the envelope a little
by giving a brief rundown of “Things You May Not Know About the Just Third Way.” As Dave is both entertaining and informative,
you’re sure to enjoy this episode:
Friday, June 8, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 23
As the summer days
get longer (depending on when your summer begins), so do some of the news items
affecting the Just Third Way and the philosophy (so to speak) of economic
personalism. This would seem to be
appropriate as the world situation becomes more critical:
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Theodore Roosevelt and the Crisis
In our
previous posting on this subject — the failure of the progressive movement of
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to address the issue of
widespread ownership of capital — we noted that because of a quarrel between
Roosevelt and one of his “trust busters,” Judge Peter S. Grosscup, the
ownership issue was sidelined during Roosevelt’s administration. It never became a part of the progressive
platform, despite ongoing efforts by Grosscup to focus people’s attention on
the critical need to spread out ownership of America’s productive capacity.
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Money as a Creature of Law
Last week we
delved into Modern Monetary Theory, or “MMT” as it is known, based on
Keynesian economics, which is in turn derived from the “chartalism” of Georg
Friedrich Knapp, also known as “the State Theory of Money.” As we noted, the essential principles of MMT
are:
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Why Not Ownership?
Theodore
Roosevelt, Jr. described himself as a “Lincoln Republican.” That term means pretty much anything someone
wants today, but back in Roosevelt’s day it meant something specific:
government of the people, by the people, and for the people. When most people owned a small farm or
business or were wage workers socially and economically not too different from
owners and managers, society was more egalitarian.
Monday, June 4, 2018
The Just Third Way Hour Podcast
On this week's Just Third Way Hour, Host Dave Hamill interviews Gary Reber, who has been a supporter of the Just Third Way for a long time. Gary is very active in the social media, and has a large number of articles and postings, most (if not all) of which relate to the Just Third Way:
Friday, June 1, 2018
News from the Network, Vol. 11, No. 22
With everyone
obsessed with the effects of bad monetary and economic decisions, very few
people (if any of them) are paying attention to what is causing the problem in
the first place: lack of productive capacity on the part of ordinary people. If that can be fixed, then a major obstacle
to the establishment and maintenance of a just and sustainable economy has been
removed. Unfortunately, that is not what
the powers-that-be have been busy doing:
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Populism v. Progressivism
Looking back a
century ago, and as we saw in Tuesday's posting, we often find that words and language were used in ways that seem a
little alien to the people of today. Things
that once seemed not quite right are now deemed the height of virtue, while
goods things have now become something pretty bad, or at least very different
from what they were.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)