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badnewsbarrett
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If yes, has the Vatican made any statements specifically pertaining to democratic socialism? If not, what would be an economic metric that more closely aligns with official Catholic social teaching?
Very interesting, thank you. I’m especially interested in the book it references toward the end, Grand New Party. A roadmap for revising the Republican Party in the United States, and according to Ross Douthat, “a book written in the distributist tradition.”Democratic Socialism is usually a secular political belief but may be inline with Church Teaching when it comes to social justice, if anything is nearest to Catholic Social Teaching it would be Distributism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism
No Problem glad to help.Very interesting, thank you. I’m especially interested in the book it references toward the end, Grand New Party. A roadmap for revising the Republican Party in the United States, and according to Ross Douthat, “a book written in the distributist tradition.”
Democratic socialism is somewhat distinct from regular socialism, at least to some extent, so although distributism opposes both socialism and capitalism, I wonder if it would oppose democratic socialism. This is the Wiki page on democratic socialism. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_socialism
Democratic socialism puts an emphasis on collective ownership of the means of production, while distributism emphasizes property ownership as a fundamental right while the means of production should be spread as widely as possible, although not while being under the control of the state. There are some details to work through, but it seems like there could be quite a bit of overlap between the two. Do you suppose I’ll run into anything completely divergent as I look a bit further?
The Catechism has a very dim view on socialism or any form of central planning.If yes, has the Vatican made any statements specifically pertaining to democratic socialism? If not, what would be an economic metric that more closely aligns with official Catholic social teaching?
Neither the socialism party, nor the democracy part, would be good for this country.I would say no, since there is not one form of government that the Church has declared to be the best or in most accord with her teachings, but Communism and Socialism (I don’t think this includes democratic Socialism) has been condemned by the Church. Democratic Socialism would not be good for this country.
Democratic Socialism is usually a secular political belief but may be inline with Church Teaching when it comes to social justice, if anything is nearest to Catholic Social Teaching it would be Distributism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism
This is not a good excuse to abstain from voting. If there is no candidate that completely fits your political ideology or Catholic morality, then you should pick the lesser of the two evils. Your vote as a Catholic can help make this country better. As a side note, it is not against Catholic teaching to support the death penalty.There is truly NO GOOD CANDIDATE for a catholic to vote for in 2016. Sanders and Clinton both support abortion rights and gay marriage and all Republican candidates support war and the death penalty. I am not voting again as long as I live.
America was founded on rampant anti-catholicism so as a practicing catholic, why should I vote? If I had the money and the passport, I would leave the USA in a heartbeat.
Then don’t complain when your take home pay goes down due to higher taxes if Sanders wins. You do realize voting is a civic duty? And the death penalty is allowed in very limited cases. The republican candidates don’t support the death penalty for the innocent (unborn babies). And sometimes war is necessary in certain cases…we’d still be under English rule of it weren’t for a certain war of independence…There is truly NO GOOD CANDIDATE for a catholic to vote for in 2016. Sanders and Clinton both support abortion rights and gay marriage and all Republican candidates support war and the death penalty. I am not voting again as long as I live.
America was founded on rampant anti-catholicism so as a practicing catholic, why should I vote? If I had the money and the passport, I would leave the USA in a heartbeat.
The Vatican has indeed made statements on the ideas found in socialism. In his encyclical, Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII states:If yes, has the Vatican made any statements specifically pertaining to democratic socialism? If not, what would be an economic metric that more closely aligns with official Catholic social teaching?
Nobody ever went to jail for NOT voting. Sorry, NONE of these candidates reflect my Catholic beliefs. But you let me know how SWELL this nation is gonna be the next 4 years. I would post what George Carlin thought of voting but it would get erased and I’d get banned.Then don’t complain when your take home pay goes down due to higher taxes if Sanders wins. You do realize voting is a civic duty? And the death penalty is allowed in very limited cases. The republican candidates don’t support the death penalty for the innocent (unborn babies). And sometimes war is necessary in certain cases…we’d still be under English rule of it weren’t for a certain war of independence…
That last sentence is unlikely. Canada and Australia are good examples of countries with somewhat shared history as British colonies that gradually developed independence from Britain without war.Then don’t complain when your take home pay goes down due to higher taxes if Sanders wins. You do realize voting is a civic duty? And the death penalty is allowed in very limited cases. The republican candidates don’t support the death penalty for the innocent (unborn babies). And sometimes war is necessary in certain cases…we’d still be under English rule of it weren’t for a certain war of independence…
Seems like a pretty “sensational” question.Is democratic socialism the closest cognate to Catholic social teaching?
This reminds me of something said in another thread. I don’t remember the exact words, but something like: If the GOP wants Catholic votes, they need to act Catholic.There is truly NO GOOD CANDIDATE for a catholic to vote for in 2016. Sanders and Clinton both support abortion rights and gay marriage and all Republican candidates support war and the death penalty. I am not voting again as long as I live.
America was founded on rampant anti-catholicism so as a practicing catholic, why should I vote? If I had the money and the passport, I would leave the USA in a heartbeat.
I might recommend putting some support behind Santorum if he takes another run in another election cycle.There is truly NO GOOD CANDIDATE for a catholic to vote for in 2016. Sanders and Clinton both support abortion rights and gay marriage and all Republican candidates support war and the death penalty. I am not voting again as long as I live.
Rome wasn’t exactly founded on a pro-Catholic platform either, or pro-monotheism either for that matter. And it had a spotty history with Christianity for a little while- and by “a little while,” I mean a period of time roughly as long as the history of the United States as an independent country.America was founded on rampant anti-catholicism so as a practicing catholic, why should I vote? If I had the money and the passport, I would leave the USA in a heartbeat.
The problem with distributism it doesn’t work in large scale economies. Sure if you want to be an artist or a farmer then it works well but try to imagine producing iPhones, computers or safe cars. If you want go back to the horse and buggy days sure you can have lots of companies producing buggies and we did. as those companies transition to making cars, it didn’t work out so well for them.Democratic Socialism is usually a secular political belief but may be inline with Church Teaching when it comes to social justice, if anything is nearest to Catholic Social Teaching it would be Distributism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism