J
JRRTFAN
Guest
You (and I) are what Chesterton and Belloc called “wage slaves”, most people are enslaved by a job. Belloc has a number of books, published by IHS Press I believe, which expound on Distributism. This is a pretty good exposition: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism. Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII 1891 and Quadragessimo Anno Pope Pius X! 1931 as well as Centessimus Annus John Paul II 1991 are all Catholic prescriptions of Distributism.I have never advocated that the state should own the means of production. That is not my position. And i am in complete agreement with what you have written above. I don’t like banks either.
Do you have any idea as to how disturbutists intended to implement their theory in practical reality, given that most of us are at the mercy of the cooperate ownership of the means to production? What i mean by that is, i don’t actually own anything accept the cloths on my back, which actually gives free advertisement for businesses (cloths with designer logos). I rent everything; my electric, gas, my bedsit flat, communication technology, ect, and in order to maintain that i must work for somebody who is free to charge me what they like and reject me when they like. I am more or less an economic slave to the whim of big business and profit margins; and that is why there are so many people unemployed because in the cities they don’t have the means to production and thus neither the power to implement it. This means that if you are poor, like i am, it is very difficult to develop you own means of production with success, and those that succeed appear to be few and far between. Survival of the fittest, competition, and profit seems to be the core goal and motivation of today’s business world. The end benefits tend to be extremely individualistic and thus it would be an irrational stretch to say that the common good is the intended end of big business. So it would seem that distrubutism cannot work under the current system on a large scale, and thus would require a complete and fundamental change to the system. But Is this change even possible, how would it come about, if not through force of the state?
What’s Wrong With the World - G.K. Chesterton 1910, now published by Ignatius, will enlarge on the “wage slave” concept.
The concept is that, if you produce a necessary product or service at a local level and are close to the consuming market, you can support yourself and family without reliance on the economic strife around you.
My daughter worked on a farm for the last 3 months. That farmer has 250 acres and via the food he produces (animal and vegetable) and the bartering he does at farmers markets and auctions he survives even if Bank of America fails or AIG tanks. His wife works as a teacher part time and that gives them a source of health insurance and some spending money.
They work their butts off but are beholden to no-one. That must be a good feeling. I think it is a lost cause to think we can, or would, all get to the Distributist level. Most people can’t produce anything of tradeable value. Everybody is responsible for some little part of the whole, not the complete marketable item or skill.