I do not want to get into any discussion that ends up compromising the intellectual integrity of our discussion, so I am very hesitant to even say this, but you are raising a straw man.
As I said to another poster, I disagree. Iâm making logical conclusions from the very limited and quite vague information Iâve been given so far, then reading it back to you for correction.
The intent is to motivate supporters of Distributism to both define it, and state their desired policies.
You must remember that I had stated that there would be no land-oversight bureaucracy. There would be no âcapital and landâ (not property) hand-outs or confiscations. implicit in a system that is not revolutionary is that you start from a point where the land is not yet owned or is transferring hands but is not being confiscated (see my ideas for implementation).
Which posting or document, please?
From the inception, labor in regard to capital and land would accompany ownership. Economic rents would be made disadvantageous or disallowed.
You started out, however, with a requirement that canât be fulfilled (implicit in a system that is not revolutionary is that you start from a point where the land is not yet owned), yet that land
is already owned.
If by the rest of this statement you are talking about imposing requirements on property transfer, then youâve contradicted yourself, as to impose such requirements would require a âland-oversight bureaucracyâ that engages in a kind of confiscation. This kind of argument is almost directly analogous to the âtakingsâ arguments around the imposition of constraints on the development, use and transfer on privately held âwet landsâ.
On the issue of socialism-lite. These are terms that hold an immense amount of emotion and less meaning than they should. Socialism in practice is a belief in the empowerment and the increased propertied reach of the state.
No, not quite. Socialism does not require ownership of the property, only control over it. Control such as deciding who can sell what land to who, when they can do so, and how much they may sell to a given other person.
I describe this as a socialism-lite, because it is very similar to socialism, but I describe it as âliteâ because as described, it is a limited form of socialism.
I will repeat that distributists do not believe in the creation and/or investment of ownership in government bureaucracy.
And âownershipâ is your particular straw man in this discussion. The question is not one of ownership, it is in control over said property. If you own a property, but the government controls it, then yes, you are talking about socialism. If you only assert control during the transfer of property from one party to another, then you are still talking about a kind of socialism, but a more limited form (and thus: socialism-lite).
It is in your qualification that I see cause for concern. As of yet, I have not been assured by any Distributist that their policies would require no authority, no imposition of control, and no direct intervention in the market to enforce their beliefs.
I think it is good for everyone involved to get away from the muddy definitions of capitalism and socialism and make their definitions succinct.
I would, with all due respect, flatly disagree that the definitions of capitalism and socialism are muddy. As for succinct, that would be nice, but not the extent of creating more ambiguity or uncertainty. âJust enough succinctness, neither more nor less!â
I accept your correction to my definition of capitalism, and that was what I was getting at anyway. Socialism is about the investment of land and capital in the state.
If by investment, you mean âcontrol over, in part or wholeâ, then we are converging on agreement as to the term. To reiterate, âownershipâ is not dispositive in this definition, unless by ownership you also include the concept of âcontrolâ as an inseparable component of ownership. That, however, is in direct contradiction to reality, as we already live in a political climate that asserts control over private property absent actual ownership.
Diffusion of property in the free market is a different thing. Distributists call this distributism.
Which already exists, and is an emergent property of Capitalism.
What you have yet to do is define what you mean by âowned by the free marketâ.
Thanks for the intellectual and thorough discussion thus far.
Likewise. I apologize for using âreading backâ in such a way as to make respondents believe I was asserting control over the definition. In retrospect, it works better in oral conversation, where a âquestioning or puzzled expression on oneâs faceâ gives the necessary clue(s) as to what is intended.