David, Cho, Meme,
Little words making major differences:
I have spent the past few days doing research… I sure do appreciate your contributions in this thread. I started out thinking that a lot of my ideas occurred in distributism, but not really having a coherent idea of what it was all about. As a result of having to research to answer your questions and challenges, I have had to learn a lot about it, and I see it more clearly now, altho I still have a lot to learn.
The main thing I have discovered is that distributism is not a system the way socialism and communism are. What it is is what would happen if everyone were very thoughtful, moral, and not focused on maximizing profit and possessions.
**So, are you proposing that Distributism can not work. That I do agree. Surely, you know we will never rid ourselves of thoughless, immoral, people?. “We have all sinned and fallen short”… This fact is one reason that a free market works so well.
What, is wrong with maximizing profits?

Someone in this blog help! I have read, I think CA or RRNV, that maximizing profits is a must for a succesful business. St. Francis, what if Jim the store owner decided not to maximize profits. One day he comes to work and says to the staff, “Look guys I know some of you thought you were gong to get raises and be promoted to the new store, but I have decided not to maximize profits and will not open the new store. And by the way, we will not be hiring more as we are not going to expand.”… St. Francis, if you want to help the poor; I suggest start with ENCOURAGING business owners to maximize their profits. I would also remind you that work is a virtue.**
What do I see wrong with other schools of thought? Well, I think that everyone sees that there is a problem.
If you are going to be logical, you must first ask; what is the objective? And I ask you in a discussion of an economic system, what is the final objective of the system? The final objective is the effecent distribution of goods and services. You must answer this first before addressing the other issues.
I see the problem as being the intertwining of government and business.
What reduces the effectioncy of the distribution of goods and servies? I would agree one of the biggest problems is (in fact) government interference.
But the solutions offered consist of getting rid of one or the other. The economic left wants to get rid of business, and the economic right wants to get rid of government.
NO! A typical free market assumes methods of amerliorating contract disputes whether via a government judicial system or an agreed upon intermediary. Some form of “government” must be incorporated to give order; BUT not to tell a business what to produce and how much.
But I still see the problem as being that of concentration of power. Socialism concentrates the power in the hands of a few government officials; free-marketry, whether anarchic or limited-government, concentrates the power in the hands of a few businesses.
NO How do you come that conclusion. Most businesses are NOT in the hands of a few. NO. When there are enterprises that are in the hands of a few, typically, that is because the product produced requires a very large amount of capital and a LONG time to recover cost. Often these businesses loose money intermittently and the cost is astronomical. Would you suggest that the mining industry be small, or the steal manufacturing, or chemical industry?
Here is a second reason that big is often good: innovation. St. Francis, if you are able to get Milk for 4 cents a gallon would you prefer to buy it at the old $4? Obviosly, not. but in order to get it, it is sold by one manufacturor. One who discovered a methold that took him years to develop and billions of capital to build a processsing plant. What in the world is wrong with him.
The entire spectrum is completely focused on humans as economic units, mostly completely interchangeable. Workers, consumers, owners, the vast majority are simply cogs in a gigantic machine which is grinding our humanity out of us.*
No no no … The system has nothing to do with morality, morality has to do with people. People can view others as automotons if they choose or as people with dignity. It has nothing to do with a system. Virtue does not depend on a system, virtue depends on a heart. Read Von Mises’ Human Action.
As a Catholic, and as a human being, I cannot desire, endorse, condone, or support anything else I have read about. Distributism answers all the problems I see with our current system, and has the checks in place to avoid many problems.
What are those checks???


The heart of a free system is based on the rights of man; Distributism takes from the rights of man
and what works best for it. That is probably why it looks good to me, but also why it is different from other proposed systems, which come up with something which would only work if people were some other sort of being than they are.
St. Francis, what you are proposing is akin to a child that does not find comfort in the thought that the family pig will be eaton tonight. (First mistake: naming the pig.). So the child does not eat the pig or any meat the rest of his life. People call him a vegetarian, but he insist that he is a non-meat eator. He says, "I am not like those immoral meat eators nor am I like those sillly vegetarians; I just have a better alternative than the other two.
You can put lip-stick on a Distributiest, but it is still…