I note Mr St. Francis believes:
- *For a person that has maximized profits to be a good father is not possible
I repeatedly quoted *your
words, which were “focus on maximizing profit,” and “getting every nickel out of the business.”
To focus is to make something the center of attention or resources. To maximize is to make as big as possible.
Now, you did not offer any explanation that maybe you weren’t talking about putting all your attention and resources on making the profit be as large as possible except for those few slivers which went to “fill one’s obligations” to God and family, so I had to go with what you were saying.
You didn’t offer any arguments in favor of this concentration of resources except to say that doing so leads to a wonderful spread of material resources all over the world with no further explantion.
And now you are using different words to make me look foolish.
- *That large companies are inherently bad
And this is not what I said. I said that the corporate stock-holding organization was a bad thing. And I explained why I thought that.
- *That though a large organizatioin can offer a product at a lessor prices it should not be
And I do not think that just because toys painted with lead paint are cheaper that they should be offered, either.
I think that the problems with stock-held corporations outweigh the potential reductions in price, esp. considering, as I mentioned before, that there is a lot of departmentalizing and subcontracting going on anyway.
- *That though some large organizations can create more jobs ithey should not exist
I have mentioned Mondragon cooperative as an counter to this more than once, so I do not understand why you insist on repeating this.
- *That though a successful businessman maximizes profits while doing God’s work it can not be so
Refer to reply to #1 above.
Yes, it is easy to go on misquoting people’s words and assuming their beliefs…
*I believe he represents a core of society that has an inherent envy to those who are successful. *It is hard, even for me, to observe those who succeed although I have worked my tail off.
I am sorry you have a problem with envy, please don’t project it onto me.
Your assumptions allow you to dismiss my ideas without truly considering what I am saying. I come to these ideas because I have had a lot of varied experiences, some of which have not been experienced by many people in my generation, along with observation and reading. While we measure the states of various societies and see improvement, the measurments we use relate to material possessions and not to overall social health. During the decades the USA was lauded as the freest, happiest, most developed nation in the world, we were experiencing great increases is teen suicide, abortion and out-of-wedlock pregnancy, debt, divorce, etc. Seems like we traded our inheritance for a mess of pottage, no?
So, in a third world nation, a woman may now be able to make 10 times what she used to make, but at what price? She is not with her children, much of what she makes has to go towards upgrades in her lifestyle like cell phones and work clothes that do not really enhance her life.
And the ultimate condemnation of the rapid material "improvements is that after 30 or 50 years of this enhanced lifestyle, few remain in their churches.*
What does it profit a man if he gain the whole world but loses his soul?
*It is life. *Life is not fair; the only place where you will find fair and justice is with God.
And I never said anything about that, did I? Instead, I cited instances of businesses lobbying to create legal barriers to the entry of competitors–nothing to do with God.
Never the less, I wave the white flag; do not throw your pearls to swine.
Oh, were those pearls? There were so few instances of substance that I couldn’t tell.