As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the agrarian socialist Henry George and
the renegade priest Edward McGlynn seem to have provided the original motive
for a new encyclical on the subject of socialism and why what was originally
known as “the Democratic Religion,” “The New Christianity,” “Neo-Catholicism,”
and many other names was not a very good thing for anyone, especially the
downtrodden workers socialism was presumably intended to help.
Thursday, February 28, 2019
Wednesday, February 27, 2019
Financing Change
One of the most
frequently heard questions about the proposed “Green New Deal” is where ire
they going to get the long green to pay for it?
For those of you not familiar with 1890s slang, “long green” refers to
paper currency — appropriate, since it was in 1893 that the populist leader
Jacob Sechler Coxey, a theosophist, proposed measures that many consider the
precursor of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, a rip-off of Theodore
Roosevelt’s Square Deal from 1910.
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Not the First Social Encyclical
Many people today
assume that Pope Leo XIII’s groundbreaking 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum, “On Capital and Labor,” was the first social
encyclical, and that the pope was addressing matters that had recently come to
his attention. On looking into it,
however, it becomes evident that Rerum
Novarum — Latin for “new things” — was not the first social encyclical, and
the “new things” to which Leo referred had been a serious problem for at least
three quarters of a century before Rerum
Novarum was issued.
Monday, February 25, 2019
Just Third Way Videocast
Just
to follow up on the previous two weeks’ podcasts outlining Louis Kelso’s “Second
Income Plan,” we thought we’d bring to you the 60 Minutes segment on Kelso. Of course, it’s not actually sixty minutes
long, more like thirteen and change, but that’s enough to give you the idea:
Friday, February 22, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 08
Some interesting developments this
week as world leaders and academics continue to flail and flounder around
trying to find the solution that has been staring them in the face for 2,500
years. If you want a stable and virtuous
society, as Aristotle pointed out in the first book of his Politics, you had better have widespread capital ownership. Otherwise, what you get is —
Thursday, February 21, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Problem of Finance
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the problem with the solution to social
problems that Fulton Sheen advocated is that it causes another problem . . .
such as, where does anyone get the money to purchase capital to become an owner
without violating someone else’s ownership?
We cannot make society a free-for-all in which people take what they
want when they want it. All that means
is “might makes right,” especially in economics and finance.
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Solution
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, Fulton Sheen strongly supported the idea that
the only way to counter both communism (and socialism) and capitalism is to
have a society in which capital ownership is widespread. As he stated, “Because the ownership of external things is the sign of freedom, the
Church has made the wide distribution of private property the cornerstone of her social program.” (Fulton
J. Sheen, Freedom Under God. Arlington, Virginia: Economic Justice Media,
2013, 33.)
Tuesday, February 19, 2019
New Things, Part II
In the previous posting on this subject, we noted that the “new things” (rerum novarum) to which Pope Leo XIII referred in his landmark 1891
encyclical, “On Capital and Labor,” had first been addressed in 1832 and 1834
by Pope Gregory XVI in the first two social encyclicals, Mirari Vos and Singulari Nos,
both of which were concerned with problems with the theology, philosophy, and
social thought of a French priest by the name of Hugues-Félicité Robert de Lamennais.
Monday, February 18, 2019
Just Third Way Podcast
This
week we have the second part of a discussion on Louis Kelso’s “Second Income
Plan” from the 1960s. As with last week,
there may need to be some allowances made for terms now out of common use. Of course, the real issue is that as
technology has advanced by leaps and bounds, what Kelso proposed as a second income should become people’s first income!
Friday, February 15, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 07
While world leaders ponder how to make
the hole deeper that they’ve been getting the world into since governments
began controlling money and credit for their own political purposes instead of
the economic needs of actual people, there are a few bright spots on the
horizon (if that’s not mixing metaphors or something). They are only tiny points of light at this
point, but still it’s something::
Thursday, February 14, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Problem of Savings
In the previous posting on this subject, we noted that, according to Fulton Sheen’s
understanding of the natural law right of every human being to be an owner (at
least as expressed in his 1940 book, Freedom
Under God), private property is an essential means to secure individual
liberty. Ultimately, private property in
capital is the principal means by which people acquire and develop virtue in a
social setting, thereby becoming what God intended them to be.
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
New Things, Part I
While not the
most immediate challenge facing people today, confusion over Catholic social
teaching has, as Pope Pius XI put it, “given rise to
controversies that are not always peaceful.”
If only to resolve these disputes rationally it will be useful to
explore how Catholic social teaching developed.
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
The American Chesterton
Back in 1940,
Fulton J. Sheen published Freedom Under
God. Why bring up a book that is
eighty years out of date? Because at no
time in living memory has there been less true human freedom. Even the idea of freedom has decayed to the point where it is
effectively meaningless for most people.
Sunday, February 10, 2019
Just Third Way Podcast
This
week we have the first part of a discussion on Louis Kelso’s “Second Income
Plan” from the 1960s. Of course, there
may need to be some “mental adjustments” on the part of the listener as people
back in the Stone(d) Age might not have spoken the way people do now (they
were, like, so totally groovy and outa sight) and used terms now out of fashion. Even worse, as technology has advanced by
leaps and bounds, what Kelso proposed as a second
income could easily become people’s first
income! Actually . . . that would be better, not worse. . . .
Friday, February 8, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 06
It is not quite March, but this
month’s mentions are mostly media material.
That is because the CESJ core group is trying to get up to speed on all
the projects we want to complete or get moved well along for the current
year. It’s just a coincidence that it
all seems to deal with media, traditional, social, and otherwise:
Thursday, February 7, 2019
Ronald Reagan . . . Communist?
Unless you’ve
been living in a bottle or on the top of a mountain in Tibet, you are probably
aware of the massive confusion surrounding the terms “capitalism,” “socialism,”
“private property,” “rights,” “duties,” “person,” etc., etc., etc.
The fact is that a lot of people are using terms when they have no idea
what they really mean, and just put their own private meaning on to things.
Wednesday, February 6, 2019
A Challenge to Civilization
In the opening of
A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens
noted that the French Revolution was a time so like his own day as to be
practically indistinguishable. Although Dickens
was employing a literary device to bring the reader into the story, a similar
observation could be made comparing the early twentieth century to the present time.
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
The Real Issue
Inevitably, when discussing
capitalism versus socialism versus the Just Third Way, somebody will shift the
basis from what is the right and just thing to do, to what is the most
expedient or that gets them what they want, regardless of the cost to others.
Monday, February 4, 2019
Just Third Way Podcast
This
week we have a discussion between Norman Kurland, president of CESJ, and Dawn
Brohawn, CESJ’s Director of Communications:
Friday, February 1, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 05
With the country gripped in the icy
grip of a gripping Polar Vortex, the Just Third Way forges on in hot pursuit of
justice:
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