This week we have a number of news
items relating to the great Keynesian economic illusion that government creates
wealth by issuing debt, and that inflation is essential to economic
growth. Neither assumption is correct
and is easily disproved, but you can’t seem to get today’s academics or
politicians to understand that:
Friday, January 31, 2020
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Part 2½: What About the Universal Basic Income?
It’s true that no good deed
ever goes unpunished . . . sort of. In
the previous two postings on this subject, which we imaginatively called Part
I and Part II, respectively, we were asked the burning question whether the
Just Third Way of Economic Personalism/Capital Homesteading, etc., could be
considered communist.
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Part II: Is the Just Third Way Communist?
As we noted in the previous posting on this
subject, we
sometimes get letters asking about the Just Third Way of Economic Personalism,
and once in a while we answer them . . . okay, we almost always answer them,
except when someone is obviously trolling or trying to start a fight. It’s even better when somebody else answers
them so that we can steal the answer and use it as a blog posting.
Tuesday, January 28, 2020
Part I: Is the Just Third Way Communist?
As we’ve said before on this
blog, we like it when people ask us questions (coherent ones, anyway) that we
can answer and then “recycle” what we wrote as blog postings. It’s even better when somebody else answers a
question instead of us. That way we can
steal the question and answer and use it as a blog post without actually having
to do any work. . . .
Monday, January 27, 2020
The Homestead Act of 1862
This video might help people to understand why the idea of the 1862 Homestead Act should be duplicated today by extending the concept to all forms of capital:
Friday, January 24, 2020
News from the Network, Vol. 13, No. 04
Some interesting items this week on
the global justice (or lack thereof) front . . . mostly lack thereof, and the
obvious need for the Just Third Way of Economic Personalism. Of course, getting people to understand that
may be another matter, but there is certainly enough evidence that something
needs to be done:
Thursday, January 23, 2020
Life, Charity, and Justice
In classic
Thomist philosophy, as we saw in the previous posting on this subject, the four natural virtues are temperance, fortitude,
prudence, and — above all — justice.
According to Aristotle (and thus Aquinas), the capacity to acquire and
develop these virtues is built into human nature. No one is human without the capacity to
acquire and develop these virtues, for that capacity (which is the good common
to every human being) is what defines human beings as human beings.
Wednesday, January 22, 2020
The Meaning of Life
A sketch on the
old Muppet Show with their very special guest star Harvey Korman had a
panel discussion on The Meaning of Life.
Harvey Korman came down on the side of “Life is like a tennis game,”
with which Miss Piggy disagreed, while one of the other panelists favored “Life
is like a garbage dump.” The discussion
ended with a general exchange of insults and the announcement that the next discussion
would cover whether conversation was a dying art . . . whereupon all the
Muppets keeled over leaving Korman shaking his head.
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
We the People
It’s an absolute
dogma of modern politics and economics.
Everyone has the right to what they need to live a decent life. If people do not have what they need to do
so, it is the responsibility of the State to see that they do, and all efforts are
to be directed to the end of providing people with what they need.
Monday, January 20, 2020
Martin Luther King Summit
This week we bring you a repeat of the Summit on Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Just Third Way. Enjoy!
Friday, January 17, 2020
News from the Network, Vol. 13, No. 03
We didn’t get too much news from
our network this week, but there are a number of items of interest to adherents
of the Just Third Way. It’s just a
coincidence it’s mostly about food and drink this week:
Thursday, January 16, 2020
A Missing Link
As we saw in the previous
posting on this subject, in response to the “new things” of socialism,
modernism and the New Age, in 1891 Pope Leo XIII proposed a program of expanded
capital ownership. This would empower
people and families, giving them the opportunity and means to overcome the
growing social alienation that had led to the development and growth of the new
things in the first place.
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
New Things
In case you
haven’t noticed, it has become increasingly frequent over the past couple of decades
to demonize anyone who disagrees with you on virtually any subject. We’d say, “on any subject,” but there must be
some things that people don’t disagree on.
Somewhere.
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Backwards It Getting
No, we’re not
trying out a bad Yoda impression, although that might not be a bad idea if it
brings in readers. Or maybe a Darth
Vader as (apocryphally) done by Tony Curtis in The Black Shield of Falworth? “Luke, I am yer Fada.”
Monday, January 13, 2020
The Just Third Way on EWTN Live
Okay, admittedly the Just Third Way only comes in around the last quarter of the show, but at least half the studio audience stated explicitly that it was the best part of the show, and a number of other people concurred, judging from the mail we've received. So, just in case you missed it when it was live or on some of the reruns, here is the January 8, 2020 EWTN Live show with your host Father Mitch Pacwa interviewing CESJ's Director of Research, Michael D. Greaney:
Friday, January 10, 2020
News from the Network, Vol. 13, No. 02
Perhaps the most unusual thing this
week from the Just Third Way perspective is how no one seems to be questioning
the incredible rise in share values on the stock market that is not linked to
any discernible increase in the quantity or quality of marketable goods and
services, i.e., “economic growth.”
Instead, the rise in share values is itself taken as “economic growth,”
even though shares are not actually marketable goods or services. Be that as it may, here are the Just Third
Way highlights for this week:
Thursday, January 9, 2020
Debt and Taxes
According to an
article in the December 27, 2019 Washington Post, in the middle of a
presumably booming economy, Americans are drowning in non-mortgage consumer
debt. (“Americans Piling Up Near-Record Levels of Credit Card Debt,” A-3.) Unacknowledged in the story — or anywhere
else — is the depressing (and sobering) fact that Keynesian economics and all
derivatives, absolutely rely on non-productive spending for consumption, what
Jean-Baptiste Say called “multiplying barren consumptions.”
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Rethinking Saving for Retirement
It’s a truism
that has become engrained into American life.
Go to school to get good grades.
Get good grades to get a good job.
Get a good job to get a good pension for retirement. Be sure to save enough on the side in an IRA
or 401(k) to supplement your pension and Social Security so you can afford to
do all the fun things you see other people doing on TV.
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
The Idea of “Leisure Work”
In the previous
postings on this subject we looked at the effect two key inventions, the cotton
gin and the McCormick Reaper, had on society, whether for good or for ill. The cotton gin made raising cotton
profitable, while the McCormick Reaper made it possible to think about ending
world hunger and famine.
Monday, January 6, 2020
Norman Kurland on the Harold Channer Show
Here's a video from not too long ago, September 18, 2000, featuring Dr. Norman G. Kurland, president of the Center for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ), having a conversation with Harold Channer on his show.
EWTN Live! and Ten Battles Everyone Should Know
A relatively
short time ago the principal author of this blog had a book published by TAN
Books. With the title Ten Battles
Every Catholic Should Know (2018), which will be featured — along with the
author! — on EWTN Live! January 8, 2020, 8:00 pm EST on the EWTN
Television Network, a cable television channel.
Check your local listings for when it airs in your area. If you miss it or don’t have cable, EWTN
usually puts the show up on YouTube within a couple of days.
Friday, January 3, 2020
News from the Network, Vol. 13, No. 01
The big news this week is actually
for next week: Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s Director of Research, is scheduled to
appear on the Eternal Word Television Network’s show EWTN Live! with Father
Mitch Pacwa, S.J. In the expanded
ownership arena, we kick off the year with the SECURE Act, that puts more power
in the hands of participants in qualified retirement plans:
Thursday, January 2, 2020
A Tale of Two Machines, II: The McCormick Reaper
As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, the invention of the cotton gin
revolutionized cotton production and, in a horrifying twist of fate, revived
what to all appearances was a dying institution at the end of the eighteenth
century: human chattel slavery. Cotton
was now phenomenally profitable as the world’s leading fiber, cheap, durable,
and economical to produce . . . if you ignored the fact that it provided an
excuse to enslave millions of human beings and wore out land at a tremendous
rate. When money talks, human dignity
walks.
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
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