Along with visits to this blog
increasing dramatically over the past two weeks, there are some real news items
that should be of interest to readers (other than the good news that, if you’re
reading this, you are not alone). It
seems that people around the world are becoming increasingly aware that
something may be wrong, and the usual solutions have been proven to be
inadequate:
Friday, June 28, 2019
Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Four Faces of Socialism: The Democratic Religion
As we saw in the
first posting on this subject, and (purely by coincidence) in Wednesday’s
posting, there are four primary aspects of socialism: philanthropy,
communitarianism, reform or abolition of religion, and abolition of private ownership. Again, it is important to note that a
particular form of socialism may not include all or even any of these aspects,
and yet still be true socialism.
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
The New Christianity
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, following the Financial, Industrial, and French
Revolutions, society was in chaos and people began searching for alternatives
to traditional political, domestic, and religious institutions. What they came up with was “the democratic
religion” — socialism.
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
The Four Faces of Socialism: Communitarianism
As we saw in the first posting on this subject, there are four
primary aspects of socialism: philanthropy, communitarianism, reform or abolition
of religion, and abolition of private ownership. We noted that a particular form of socialism
may not include all or even any of these aspects, and yet still be true
socialism.
Monday, June 24, 2019
The Ownership Vehicle Podcast!
In this week’s Just Third Way
podcast, Dr. Norman Kurland, President of CESJ, takes a look at the three main ownership
vehicles of the Just Third Way. These
are Capital Homesteading Accounts, Citizens Land Development Cooperatives, and
the one in current law that embodies the basic concept on which the others are
based, the Leveraged “JBM S-Corp ESOP”:
Friday, June 21, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 25
Another week with a plethora of
items indicating that something is wrong with the world, somewhere and somehow,
but nobody seems able to pinpoint what or how to solve it, at least not without
the Just Third Way, which doesn’t seem to fit into most people’s
paradigms. From “the JTW Perspective,” however,
what to do about these situations becomes obvious:
Thursday, June 20, 2019
The Four Faces of Socialism: Philanthropy
In the
previous posting on this subject, we noted that there are four primary
aspects of socialism: philanthropy, communitarianism, reform or abolition of
religion, and abolition of private ownership.
We also noted that a particular form of socialism may not include all or even
any of these aspects, and yet still be true socialism. As Pope Pius XI noted,
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Christianity and Democracy
On Christmas Day
in the year 1797 the aristocratic Luigi BarnabĂ Chiaramonte (1742-1823),
Cardinal Bishop of Imola in Romagna in northern Italy, startled his
congregation by declaring that there is no essential conflict between democracy
and Christianity. Coming as it did hard
on the heels of the Reign of Terror in Revolutionary France (1793-1794), it
must have seemed to many that their Ordinary had lost his mind. (E.E.Y. Hales, Pio Nono: A Study in European Politics and
Religion in the Nineteenth Century.
New York: P.J. Kenedy & Sons, 1954, 35.)
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
The Four Faces of Socialism: The Essence of Socialism
No, this is not a discussion on the various types of
socialism, such as Marxist, Georgist, Relgious, or Democratic (especially since
there are many more than that), but on four key aspects of socialist thought
itself. We will have to look briefly at a
couple of the different forms of socialism, but that is not the main point
here.
Monday, June 17, 2019
Mortimer Adler on Speaking and Listening
Last week’s video of Mortimer Adler
speaking on happiness made so many people happy that we thought we’d bring you
another one by Adler to listen to . . . about how to listen!
Friday, June 14, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 24
It’s astonishing the frequency with
which events and situations come to light that could be resolved very simply
(although not always easily) by applying the Just Third Way. Take for instance:
Thursday, June 13, 2019
Can Social Justice Be Defined?
As we have stated
more than once on this blog, we like to get questions or criticisms . . .
questions or criticisms that we can answer, that is. Okay, polite questions or criticisms that
we can answer. . . . like this one, from someone we had sent some links to
recent blog postings:
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Chesterton and Shaw: The Idea of Distributism
In the
previous posting on this subject, we closed by noting that a realistic
vision of a just society should present a viable alternative to capitalism,
characterized by concentration of capital ownership in the hands of a
relatively small private sector Ă©lite,
and socialism, characterized by concentration of capital ownership in the hands
of a public bureaucracy. Distributism, a
policy of widely distributed private property with a preference for small,
family owned farms and artisan businesses, appeared to be one possibility.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Why is Socialism Wrong?
Many people these days assume that if they can find a
precedent or some statement that they can twist into meaning what they want or
need it to mean, that they have discovered a new right or truth, conveyed to
them by whatever they worship as God and to be understood in the light of faith
alone. Such people forget (if they ever
knew) that truth is objective reality.
Their own perceptions and beliefs are, on the other hand, subjective. As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, nowhere has this tendency been more evident than in the ongoing effort to reformulate or repurpose Christianity as a form of socialism.
Monday, June 10, 2019
Mortimer Adler on Happiness
Today we take a look at Mortimer J. Adler's take on the question of happiness. Adler, who co-authored The Capitalist Manifesto (1958) and The New Capitalists (1961) with Louis O. Kelso, is considere4d by many to be the premier American Aristotelian of the twentieth century. In this half-hour video clip, we take a look at Adler's take on what Aristotle meant by "happiness," which seems to be a concept that is greatly misunderstood these days:
Friday, June 7, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 23
There have been a number of interesting
developments this past week relating both to the development of the concept of
social justice and to its application to address some current situations:
Thursday, June 6, 2019
Rebranding Socialism as True Christianity
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, Robert
Owen believed that all of humanity’s problems would disappear if religion,
marriage, and private property were abolished.
In 1813 in A New View of Society he declared that reorienting
religion from worshiping God to bettering the condition of humanity would be
sufficient to establish and maintain the perfect world.
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Chesterton and Shaw: The Modernist World
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, George Bernard Shaw was as insistent that
socialism is the universal panacea for all problems (as long as you don’t eat
meat or drink alcohol) and that distributism is just another name for Fabian
socialism* as G.K. Chesterton was adamant that Shaw was full of . . . nonsense.
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Religion Without God
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, Robert Owen, the Father of Modern
Socialism (and Communism) wanted to establish and maintain a perfect society in
this life, a constant theme of socialism for the past two centuries and more. Since he believed that people are formed
entirely by their environment, all that is necessary to create the perfect
society (so he claimed) is to abolish religion, marriage, and private
property. Everything will then be
perfect.
Monday, June 3, 2019
Interview with Joe Recinos, Part II (and I)
This week we bring you the second
part of an interview with Joseph W. Recinos, the Latin America Director of the
Center for Economic and Social Justice. Just
so you don’t have to search out the first half, we’ve included that, also.
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