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<> Distributism values an economic/social system where the means-of-survival are owned, as widely as possible, by naturally-occurring-groups.
<> The antithesis of Distributism is Centralization. It is the centralized ownership of the means-of-survival into artificial groups independent of the naturally occurring groups.
“Means-of-survival” is the real action which provides the necessities and luxuries of life. It is farming, manufacturing, research, education, entertainment etc.
“Naturally-occurring-groups” are groups of people which form without any outside influence such as the recruitment efforts for employment in a business or military service. It is most widely seen in family, but also in friendships and in neighborhoods and in voluntary social groupings such as a Church. “Artificial” groups, as I use it, are simply any unnatural group.
Distributism in it’s purest form is most easily seen in the family farm; in the family run cottage industry; or in entrepreneurial friends doing a “start-up” in their garage. In it’s more abstract forms it is seen in Credit Unions and Cooperatives. These abstract forms begin to stretch the “natural” aspect of the groupings and the essence of distributism is lost once the naturally-occurring-groups are no longer central to economic life. Distributism is not a rich/poor class conflict. The rich aristocratic family who lives off of their investments is also a distributist ideal.
Centralization is most robustly seen in employment by artificial groups, e.g. large, perhaps multi-national, corporations in the capitalist model, or in State-owned industries in the socialist model. The employee does not own any of the necessary tools of his survival. The individual employee is entirely reliant for his survival upon the artificial group, and the relationship is entirely individualistic. No company hires a family or a group of friends. They hire individuals, exclusively individuals.
Distributism seeks the best-interest of the naturally-occurring-group. The naturally-occurring-group is central, and prime to distributism. By extension (because we are social animals) it seeks the spiritual or psychological/humanistic best-interest of the individual. It does not seek the individual’s material best-interest.
Centralization seeks the material best-interest of the elite stewards which preside over the centralized means-of-survival. This is, and always has been throughout history, the prime goal of any movement towards centralization. Industrialization/technology has created a secondary “trickle-down” material benefit to the consumer. Centralization relates to the functional individual either as an employee or as a consumer. Centralization has no relation to the naturally-occurring-groups, and in fact is in competition with these groups for the services of the functioning individual.
Commentary:
Distributism was once the accepted norm of human life. With industrialization, centralization became the norm of human life. Centralization is about one and a half centuries old. In the US it was the era of the Civil War that saw the simultaneous centralization of big-business and big-government, what Chesterton called Hudge and Gudge. Today in the US the Tea Party protests the abuses of big-government. Occupy Wall Street protests the abuses of big-business. Because they are fooled by the false dichotomy that Chesterton clearly saw (as their names imply there is no essential difference between Hudge and Gudge) they do not realize that they are both protesting the principle of Centralization. And because we have lived our entire lives in this centralized paradigm we do not know that there is an alternative - the third way … which actually is the first way.
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<> The antithesis of Distributism is Centralization. It is the centralized ownership of the means-of-survival into artificial groups independent of the naturally occurring groups.
“Means-of-survival” is the real action which provides the necessities and luxuries of life. It is farming, manufacturing, research, education, entertainment etc.
“Naturally-occurring-groups” are groups of people which form without any outside influence such as the recruitment efforts for employment in a business or military service. It is most widely seen in family, but also in friendships and in neighborhoods and in voluntary social groupings such as a Church. “Artificial” groups, as I use it, are simply any unnatural group.
Distributism in it’s purest form is most easily seen in the family farm; in the family run cottage industry; or in entrepreneurial friends doing a “start-up” in their garage. In it’s more abstract forms it is seen in Credit Unions and Cooperatives. These abstract forms begin to stretch the “natural” aspect of the groupings and the essence of distributism is lost once the naturally-occurring-groups are no longer central to economic life. Distributism is not a rich/poor class conflict. The rich aristocratic family who lives off of their investments is also a distributist ideal.
Centralization is most robustly seen in employment by artificial groups, e.g. large, perhaps multi-national, corporations in the capitalist model, or in State-owned industries in the socialist model. The employee does not own any of the necessary tools of his survival. The individual employee is entirely reliant for his survival upon the artificial group, and the relationship is entirely individualistic. No company hires a family or a group of friends. They hire individuals, exclusively individuals.
Distributism seeks the best-interest of the naturally-occurring-group. The naturally-occurring-group is central, and prime to distributism. By extension (because we are social animals) it seeks the spiritual or psychological/humanistic best-interest of the individual. It does not seek the individual’s material best-interest.
Centralization seeks the material best-interest of the elite stewards which preside over the centralized means-of-survival. This is, and always has been throughout history, the prime goal of any movement towards centralization. Industrialization/technology has created a secondary “trickle-down” material benefit to the consumer. Centralization relates to the functional individual either as an employee or as a consumer. Centralization has no relation to the naturally-occurring-groups, and in fact is in competition with these groups for the services of the functioning individual.
Commentary:
Distributism was once the accepted norm of human life. With industrialization, centralization became the norm of human life. Centralization is about one and a half centuries old. In the US it was the era of the Civil War that saw the simultaneous centralization of big-business and big-government, what Chesterton called Hudge and Gudge. Today in the US the Tea Party protests the abuses of big-government. Occupy Wall Street protests the abuses of big-business. Because they are fooled by the false dichotomy that Chesterton clearly saw (as their names imply there is no essential difference between Hudge and Gudge) they do not realize that they are both protesting the principle of Centralization. And because we have lived our entire lives in this centralized paradigm we do not know that there is an alternative - the third way … which actually is the first way.
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