THE Global Justice Movement Website

THE Global Justice Movement Website
This is the "Global Justice Movement" (dot org) we refer to in the title of this blog.

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

The End of Private Equity Firms? No Way!

A few years back a member of the CESJ board of directors expressed concern over the Economic Democracy Act and the necessity of shifting new capital formation from past savings to future savings.  There was also the issue of phasing out governments monetizing deficits by emitting bills of credit (the constitutional form of “creating money” out of nothing).

Monday, May 19, 2025

JTW Podcast: Labor’s Great Mistake

The full title of this podcast is “Labor’s Great Mistake: Rethinking Full Employment in a Capitalist Society.”  In this video, we explore Louis O. Kelso's seminal 1960 article, “Labor's Great Mistake: The Struggle for the Toil State.”  In the face of the fixed belief human labor is the only true factor of production and thus a “job” is the only way to gain income, Kelso argues against the conventional wisdom that full employment is an ideal societal goal.

Friday, May 16, 2025

News from the Network, Vol. 18, No. 20

Although some of the experts seem to be acting as if everything is going to be fine, this week’s news items suggest disaster is in the offing and it’s only a matter of time.  We, of course, think that adopting the Economic Democracy Act: will go a long way to correcting the problem and providing a foundation for genuine sustainable growth:

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Where is Pope Leo XIV Coming From?

The election of a new pope has repercussions far beyond the Catholic Church, Christianity, and even all religion.  Especially since the Catholic Church became a truly international organization with the loss of the Papal States in the 19th century, people of goodwill everywhere look to the head of the Catholic Church as a voice for good, even if they do not always agree with what he says.

Monday, May 12, 2025

JTW Podcast: A Martyr to Economic Justice

Today’s podcast is more than a little different from what we’ve been presenting.  It is an original twelve-and-a-half-minute video about Blessed Pauline Jaricot, a nineteenth century “martyr” to economic justice.  Anticipating the work of Pope Leo XIII which the new pope, Leo XIV, has taken as his guide, Pauline struggled to achieve justice for the working classes of her day.

Friday, May 9, 2025

News from the Network, Vol. 18, No. 19

While the world situation seems to be getting more surreal by the hour, at least there may be a break coming with the election of a new pope . . . who might be open to hearing about the Economic Democracy Act:

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Egocentrism, Tariffs, and the Single Tax, Part IV

Concluding our discussion of tariffs, as we noted previously there are three badly flawed economic principles which many people hold as absolute, unquestioned dogmas.  Two of these flawed principles are general, but applied specifically in the third, regarding tariffs, which we looked at last week.  The principles are:

Monday, May 5, 2025

JTW Podcast: The Case for 100% Dividend Payout

If there is one thing which upsets people enmeshed in the fallacy Louis O. Kelso called “the slavery of [past] savings, it’s the systemic necessity of full dividend payout if Say’s Law of Markets is to be restored.  In this article, Kelso recommended changes such as corporations paying out 100% of earnings as tax-deductible dividends.

Paying out all earnings would force corporations to compete in the market for new capital rather than retain earnings as reserves for expansion — concentrating ownership in fewer and fewer hands, distorting market equilibrium.

The audio-visual presentation was created in “Descript”, using an AI-generated voice for narration. Visit CESJ.org for more information.

Friday, May 2, 2025

News from the Network, Vol. 18, No. 18

With the political chaos being spread by the current administration in Washington, it is difficult to discern what principles are driving policy decisions — if any.  This makes the case for the adoption of the Economic Democracy Act even more urgent: