In the
previous posting on this subject we looked at the fundamental assumption of
socialism: that people have a right to what they need. In the modern age this has largely displaced
the traditional assumption that people have a right to the means to acquire
what they need.
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Monday, December 30, 2019
Just Third Way for Local Government
In this week’s
podcast we bring you a special guest, Chris Dardzinski from Lincoln Park,
Michigan, where he is an Economist, local politician, and Just Third Way
activist. He talks about how to organize for change right where you live,
including efforts to implement the concept of Capital Homesteading locally.
Friday, December 27, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 52
It’s time again for our annual news
roundup, the first part of which we posted last week, and the second part today. Again, there is such a volume of material
that for once we decided to forgo illustrations:
Thursday, December 26, 2019
How to Have Your Cake and Eat It
In case you haven’t
noticed, there is something of a split in modern society. On the one hand are those who believe that
you only deserve what you work for, and if you don’t have something, it’s
because you didn’t work for it. You are
lazy, shiftless, and worthless.
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Merry Christmas!
If you're visiting this blog today . . . why? As long as you stopped by, however, kick off your shoes, sit back, and have a glass of hot mulled cider or whatever you want.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
“Good Upon ’Change”
This is the time
of year when people give each other the Dickens in the numberless readings and
dramatic adaptations of A Christmas Carol, that is, as well as all the
parodies, spoofs, rip-offs, and cartoons.
A personal favorite among the later comes from the old New Yorker/Saturday
Review of Literature cartoon series by the late Burr Shafer (1899-1965), “Through
History With J. Wesley Smith,” known as “History’s Greatest Wrong-Guesser.”
Monday, December 23, 2019
An Oldie But a Goodie
A while back the talk was about Louis Kelso's "Second Income Plan." The principles are the same as those of the Capital Homestead Act, and some people might wonder why we continued to develop the concept. View these videos and judge for yourself. We think we've come a long way, but you will see that decades ago Kelso was already centuries ahead of where we are now:
Friday, December 20, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 51
It’s time again for our annual news
roundup, the first part of which we will post today, and the second part next
week. There is such a volume of material
that for once we decided to forgo illustrations:
Thursday, December 19, 2019
A Tale of Two Machines, I: The Cotton Gin
Many people are
aware that advancing technology has an effect on society and individual
behavior. From the displacement of human
labor from the production process to video game or social media addiction,
technology often seems to benefit only a relatively small number of people at
the expense of everyone else.
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Guest Blog: Is Capitalism a Moral System?
A
short time ago, someone “accused” CESJ of promoting capitalism as a moral
system, linking us with Father Robert A. Sirico of the Acton Institute. This was presumably due to the fact that both
capitalists and adherents of the Just Third Way support the institution of
private property . . . but that’s about as far as it goes, as today’s Guest
Blogger, Dr. Norman G. Kurland, president of the Center for Economic and Social
Justice (CESJ) explains in this slightly edited version of his response:
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
What They Should Have Read
It’s that time of
year when various publications, online and off, come out with their lists of “best
books of 2019,” some of which the people who said they read them might actually
have done so. A lot of the lists,
however, sound more like books you leave on view so people will be impressed
that you (presumably) read them than something they actually wanted to read. And what better way to put hoi polloi
in their places than to be asked for a list of books that you thought were the
best?
Monday, December 16, 2019
The Challenge with Russell Williams
Yes, we know that today is Beethoven's Birthday, but we were unable to round up either Beethoven or Schroeder for an interview. Instead, today we have a segment of the show, The Challenge, with your host, the Rev. Russell Williams, who presents the Just Third Way in a nutshell:
Friday, December 13, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 50
It’s a little unclear about the
details, but the Integrity Marketing Group, LLC, an insurance company, has
declared it
has an “Employee Ownership Plan” that gives “meaningful ownership” to its
750 employees. The ownership structure
and definition of “meaningful ownership” were not given, nor how the workers
participate in share ownership, dividends, voting, or anything else — or the
reaction of existing owners/shareholders.
Since the program was not described as an “Employee STOCK Ownership
Plan,” the “ownership” could be like that of the “Scott Bader Commonwealth” that
is “owned” by people with no defined ownership stake, i.e., not actual
ownership as that is understood in law.
In other news:
Thursday, December 12, 2019
The Decline and Fall of Reason
For the last
couple of postings, “More on
Fulton Sheen” and “Fulton
Sheen and the Idea of Ideas,” we’ve been looking into the bruhaha (ha, ha,
ha!) over the announced delay in the “beatification” of the late Archbishop Fulton
J. Sheen.
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Idea of Ideas
Yesterday, in the
previous posting on this subject, we looked at one of the most important
things the late Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen addressed in his work: the fact that
God created human beings, not humanity.
We also noted that most people would be completely baffled by this
distinction, not able to see the difference between the actuality of a child,
woman, and man created by God, and the ideas of children, women, and men
created by human beings.
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
More On Fulton Sheen
Yesterday was the
fortieth anniversary of the death of Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen. As some of our readers might be aware, Sheen
(whom the Catholic Church considers “Venerable,” or two steps away from
canonization or official recognition as a saint, as people in Heaven are
called) was scheduled for “beatification” later this month. As a “beatus” or “blessed,” Sheen would have
been one stop away from official recognition as a saint.
Monday, December 9, 2019
JTW Vlogcast: Dave Hamill at the Lincoln Memorial
We're so used to hearing the voice of Dave Hamill, host of the Just Third Way podcast, that we might forget he's a real person and not just a disembodied Spirit of Change coming over the internet. In today's podcast we decided to give everyone a treat and let them see Dave's smiling face as he gives a talk in 2013 in front of the Lincoln Memorial:
Friday, December 6, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 49
We just got a notice from a
religious watchdog group that we usually ignore as it tends to go as far in
favor of religion as anti-religious counterparts do against it. This time, however, they might have had a
point: a push by certain anti-religious groups during the Christmas Season to
convince people that freedom of religion is the single greatest threat to
freedom that exists seems to be a little over the top.
Thursday, December 5, 2019
College Versus Childcare
A think tank that
shall remain nameless recently presented a study, the point of which was that
free childcare is more important than free college. At first glance this seems like heresy. For around half a century at least, the
constant mantra in the United States was to study hard, get into a good college
and you’ll get a good job. That is,
assuming that there are any jobs to get, but that’s another issue. . . .
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
Capital Homesteading and Social Security
It’s amazing the
stories people will tell when they have no idea what they are talking about. For example, for years we’ve been hearing
that the goal of the Just Third Way is to abolish wages (which are presumably
absolutely secure) and force all workers to live on profit sharing alone.
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Are the Computers Taking Over?
According to Ray
Kurzweil and generations of science fiction writers, the human race is in a
great deal of trouble. In books and
films he has warned of a coming “technological singularity.” That is a hypothetical future point in time
when technological growth becomes uncontrollable and irreversible, resulting in
incomprehensible changes to civilization.
Monday, December 2, 2019
JTW Vlogcast: Why We Need Justice University (and Capital Homesteading)
According to Dr. Noriko H. Arai, in most countries
today (although she was focusing primarily on Japan), students memorize vast
amounts of data — which any computer can do better, e.g., “Watson” on
the “Jeopardy Challenge” — but often fail to understand meaning, that is, they
do not really comprehend what they “learn” in any meaningful sense.