As the world drifts faster into insanity . . . okay, gallops headlong . . . it becomes increasingly evident that the Economic Democracy Act is the only game in town that would put a stop to things like this:
As the world drifts faster into insanity . . . okay, gallops headlong . . . it becomes increasingly evident that the Economic Democracy Act is the only game in town that would put a stop to things like this:
There’s an old joke about a hobo who comes to the back door of a farmhouse asking for a handout. “Can you help a poor man out of his misery?” he asks the tired and overworked housewife. “Certainly,” she replies. “Would you rather be shot or hit with an ax?”
This week we have a special podcast, one specifically about the Just Third Way of Economic Personalism, the Joe and Joe Show with special guests Dawn K. Brohawn, CESJ’s Director of Communications, and Michael D. Greaney, CESJ’s Director of Research, authors of The Greater Reset: Reclaiming Personal Sovereignty Under Natural Law:
As usual, people are in a panic this week over economics and finance when the solution, the Economic Democracy Act, is staring them right in the face. We know we’ve been saying this for years, but you never know when someone might start paying attention:
No, this is not a video about Aristotle’s political activities or opinions . . . at least, not in the modern sense. Instead, this is a look at one professor’s opinion about a book Aristotle wrote called the Politics, meaning how human beings live together as “political animals”:
From the 1930s on, Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago and Mortimer J. Adler, the “Great Books” philosopher, expressed great concern about the state of American education. As they saw it, what passed for education had degenerated into vocational training for jobs that either didn’t exist or were completely different than those for which people had been trained.
Okay, in today’s blog video, forget about the big words and the politically correct lingo and attitudes. It’s a good overview of Aristotle and his theory that “virtue” is the habit of doing good. This is the heart of western concepts of what it means to be fully human. Was Aristotle completely correct? Of course not, but he was on the right track. (There was another video that was better for content, but the sound quality was very bad.)
A few things have crowded out Just Third Way-type news this week, such as the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the new offensives in Ukraine that are making astonishing gains. Still, there are a few items of interest:
We’ve been doing a bit of reading in the works of Robert Maynard Hutchins and Mortimer Jerome Adler regarding the state of education today and thought it might be a good segue into a short presentation on “Justice University.” JU has been around for a while, since 2008 in fact, but it never hurts to have a refresher course, especially since as Hutchins and Adler both noted, education is a lifelong process.
And now for something completely different. Today we bring you Zuckerkandl! — the “!” is part of the title, by the way — starring the voice and image (more or less) of Dr. Robert Maynard Hutchins, president and then chancellor of the University of Chicago, with Mortimer Adler one of the prime movers behind the Great Books program, educational reformer, and cartoon character . . .
Once again, many of the news items this week make it obvious that the Economic Democracy Act is pretty much the only game in town if you want something that will actually work. Otherwise, you’re stuck with: