For one who warns others against false dichotomies, you sure dished one out yourself. So the options are working in a medieval craft guild OR in a post-industrial assembly line at the whim of a heartless employer? Right.
I was not creating a false dichotomy, because you were saying you liked the modern economic system–and I was describing that economic system in its realities. And I didn’t say “working at an assembly line;” that may be the image conjured in your mind, but I meant no such vague, pisturesque ideas. I meant capitalism, period.
All capitalism is, in actual fact, as I described it. If you don’t think so, it’s only because you’re not acquainted with the science of economics, or you’ve been deluded by externals like white shirts and neckties.
Capitalism is that system in which the means of production are in the hands of a few (the capitalists) and those who do not own those means of production (the proletarians) must of necessity labor for the capitalists, and for the capitalists’ profit, while political liberty is in theory retained by all.
Working white-collar is exactly as bad as working an assembly line, except not as dignified; you are still a proletarian and nothing will change that.
Except owning a meaningful portion of the means of production.
I don’t think it’s really that helpful, in a 21st-century context, to point to their cultural norms and wonder why we can’t apply them to our current state. A lot has happened in the last 800 years; while we can learn from their norms, it’s impossible to resurrect them to any large extent.
Actually, of course we can. It’s poppycock to say we can’t turn back the clock: the clock, as Chesterton said, is a piece of human invention and so is society.
No, we can’t duplicate the entire medieval economic system–you’ve been slaves too long to know how to be free. But we can gradually bring it back, break down capitalism, and erect a just economy founded, not on competition, but on qualification. Medicine and law, as fields, are both still based on that, and they seem to be doing all right. Neurosurgery’s not exactly medieval, now is it? But it’s a guild all the same.
What if an industry–the means of production–was owned and controlled, not by investors, but by the people who actually worked in it? What if the ownership of some form of productive property (the means of production), including stock in a jointly held industry, became the norm of society? Why, then, eureka! We’ve brought back the guilds, and most of the rest of the medieval economic system!
Revolutions are not made by actions until very late in the game. Those actions must be the fruit of years and years of ideas: in this case, economic ideas. If you want to bring about an economic system founded on justice, you’d better learn economics.
No form of capitalism, properly so-called, is compatible with Christianity; only the ignorant can maintain otherwise.