Come to think about it…America was probably very close to a distributist society from its discovery up to the Industrial Revolution when it failed.
The Capitalistic system, wherein the less fortunate men could work for the more fortunate ones, necessarily arose after distributism failed. Capitalism came as a savior to the impoverished. They could now survive by working for the more fortunate man.
Capitalism guarantees the OPPORTUNITY and freedom to get rich.
Distributism guarantees EQUALITY at the lowest common denominator.
I would half agree with you; the first part of the first sentence, at least. Of interest, at the time of the American Revolution the colonists were, per capita, the wealthiest people on earth. They were far wealthier than their British cousins in Britain on a per capita basis.
One of the big reasons for that was the fact that land could be obtained by “sweat equity” and little else, and land was still the primary measure of wealth at the time. Another was the difficulty in the British government regulating trade. Colonists simply tended to undertake whatever trade for which they had any talent, and were too scattered (and oftentimes too deceptive) to be as tightly regulated as were their Brit bretheren.
I question that the Industrial Revolution ended all possibility of an ordinary person acquiring productive assets. My Italian great grandfather, for example, initially worked in the deep coal mines in which the pay was terrible and the conditions worse. Nevertheless, he accumulated enough to buy a small farm on time. His “farm specialty” was mules; huge mules, the product of very large jacks and Belgian mares. He sold them into the Deep South to the big agribusinesses there for prices far higher than the local trade would bear. He raised strawberries to ship to the wealthy and middle classes in the cities as well. Shortly before his death, he was able to give a small farm to each of his sons. To his daughters he gave his cash.
How did he do that? Well, as my grandfather told it by way of example, he ate a lot of polenta while he was working in the mines, and not much more. In short, he lived below his means.
My own grandfather, his son, went broke in the Great Depression. Lost his farm. Rented five acres from someone and raised strawberries, which he shipped to the cities. Sold as many as he could raise. No end to that market, he found. Bought junk land, timbered it and raised more. Built his own house out of his own timber. Sent both of his daughters to college though he never got out of the third grade himself.
In Chesterton’s and Belloc’s England was that possible? Well, if you read the literature of the time, it really doesn’t seem so.
And I’m not sure it’s a lot more true in Europe now, either.
In discussions like this, I’m often brought to mind of the young fellows (and occasional girl) who work in the feed mill I patronize. They don’t make much, and the work is strenuous. But they also haunt the country livestock auctions at night, buying bottle calves to raise on rented land. Eventually, they’ll do well. I have to admire one young woman there who saved her money to buy a used tractor, then a mower, tedder and baler. She “moonlights” doing custom farm work. Maintains her own equipment.
It’s possible. Not easy a good part of the time, but possible.
Distributism didn’t “fail”. Capitalism, in fact, is the soil in which it can grow.