Friday, May 31, 2024
News from the Network, Vol. 17, No. 22
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
Putin’s Tiger by the Tail
According to Renaud Foucart, a senior economics lecturer at Lancaster University in a recent article in Business Insider, Putin has put Russia into a “lose-lose” position. In a “tiger by the tail” scenario, the country cannot afford to continue the war against Ukraine, but neither can it afford to stop. According to Foucart’s analysis, the Russian economy has become so dependent on the war that “defense” spending is the only thing keeping up the illusion of viability.
Monday, May 27, 2024
JTW Podcast: Fulton Sheen on Firing Line
Friday, May 24, 2024
News from the Network, Vol. 17, No. 21
Not much has been happening in the Global Justice Movement this week . . .that we can report about! A great deal has been happening, but mostly setting the stage for what we’re working on, primarily getting the Economic Democracy Act adopted:
Wednesday, May 22, 2024
Just Third Way Tax Reforms
As the saying goes, nothing is inevitable but death and taxes, and hopefully not in that order. That being the case, how should taxation (for we don’t claim any power over death) be made as fair and just as possible? We have some suggestions, consistent with the Just Third Way of Economic Personalism.
Monday, May 20, 2024
JTW Podcast: Mortimer Adler on Aristotle
Friday, May 17, 2024
News from the Network, Vol. 17, No. 20
We can save you a lot of time on this week’s news items. People who think they are in charge of the economy are making the same stupid decisions week after week, and we are getting nowhere fast as no one considers adopting the Economic Democracy Act:
Wednesday, May 15, 2024
Keynesian Economics and Income Distribution
Monday, May 13, 2024
JTW Podcast: Mortimer Adler on Aristotle’s Theory of Happiness
Friday, May 10, 2024
News from the Network, Vol. 17, No. 19
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
The Keynesian Fairy State
Today’s blog posting is adapted from the book, Economic Personalism, which you can get free from the CESJ website, or from Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
One of the first things a student must learn about Keynesian economics is there are certain questions one must not ask, such as, How could Keynes reject Say’s Law of Markets when he couldn’t even define it correctly? What did it mean when Keynes declared inflation — which means a rise in the price level — isn’t really inflation until after “full employment” is reached, and that a rise in the price level before reaching full employment is due to “other factors” and isn’t really inflation . . . meaning a rise in the price level isn’t really a rise in the price level until Keynes said it is a rise in the price level?
Monday, May 6, 2024
JTW Podcast: Mortimer Adler on Reading Aristotle Backwards
Friday, May 3, 2024
News from the Network, Vol. 17, No. 18
Week after week, one thing becomes crystal clear (as if it hadn’t already): Keynesian economics isn’t working and has never worked . . . but the politicians and so-called experts insist with all their heart and our lives, fortunes, and sacred honor that it’s going to work, or they’re going to see that we die while they try. Or they could do the sensible thing and adopt: the Economic Democracy Act:
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
The Theory of Certitude
Socialism as promoted by Robert Owen, Claude-Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint-Simon, François-Marie-Charles Fourier, and others, sought to abolish traditional concepts of private property, marriage and family, and religion. In their place would be new institutions that might go by the same name and even have the same outward form as the old institutions (Saint-Simon, for instance, called his system, “the New Christianity”), but the substance would be completely different.