yorkshiregirl
markomalley is very accurate and knowledgeable – you would be well advised to carefully consider his posts.
Wishful thinking helps no one. Face reality, that socialism denigrates human nature.
The socialism that is condemned by Pius XI in
Quadragesimo Anno, 1931 has the following false theories:
- The Welfare State as the supreme objective.
- Everything belongs to the State, thus excluding the real rights to private property.
- The elimination of free enterprise in favour of state-controlled production and distribution.
- Rejects the principle of subsidiarity.
Any ONE of these condemnations, based on the understanding of human nature, eliminates the scourge of socialism which is an ideology.
The freedom of the individual here is the freedom so forcefully declared in the Encyclical Letter *Sollicitudo Rei Socialis *(On Social Concerns), 1987, #42, Pope John Paul II teaches: “Likewise, in this concern for the poor, one must not overlook
that special form of poverty which consists in being deprived of fundamental human rights, in particular the right to religious freedom and also
the right to freedom of economic initiative.
On
Caritas in Veritate [
Library : The Truth about Caritas in Veritate | Catholic Culture]](
http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=9102])
Fr John De Celles points out that the Pope clearly states that “The Church does not have technical solutions to offer” [CV 9]. Also, not only does the encyclical not even once use the world “capitalism”, but it does refer repeatedly to the “market economy,” a term of art which Pope John Paul II used to refer to that form of capitalism that is “the path to true economic and civil progress.” See
Centesimus Annus, 42. And rather than attacking capitalism Benedict generally embraces it, while calling for its renewal, as it were, in charity and moral truth. It is this renewal that will make the old order “new.”
Fr De Celles: “….the Pope writes specifically of the need for the “redistribution of wealth,” which many say is anathema to capitalism. Unfortunately, his use of the term is often ambiguous, but in no way suggests a massive effort by government to take from the rich, by taxes or other means, to give to the poor. In fact, he seems to argue against that kind of radical redistribution when he later proposes the need for an “effective antidote against any form of all-encompassing welfare state” [CV 57]. The only time he is clear on what he means by “wealth redistribution” is when he uses it to mean increasing the share of wealth of the poor by normal market economic activity such as, better jobs, increased profits, etc. [CV 42]. No capitalist I know would object to that, or even to the normal redistribution of wealth that comes through reasonable taxation…… This seems consistent with what he said just six months prior to releasing CV: ‘
the illusion that a policy of mere redistribution of existing wealth can definitively resolve the problem must be set aside. …Wealth creation therefore becomes an inescapable duty… if the fight against material poverty is to be effective in the long term.’ Message of the World Day of Peace, January 1, 2009.”