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Holly3278
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I am not entirely sure what distributism is but it sounds like some form of socialism which if I understand correctly, the Church condemns.
What about it makes you think it sounds like socialism?I am not entirely sure what distributism is but it sounds like some form of socialism which if I understand correctly, the Church condemns.
frankpearson;8703345:
Distribution (in reflection of a situation) and Redistribution (an action) are just entirely different things. “Redistribution” is an action. “Distribution” reflects the state of the market. Why can’t we just get past this.I
Distributism is not about redistribution of wealth, but it does attempt to address ownership distribution.
Anyone out there writing a text book on Logic? Here is a perfect example of a Contradictory Premise:
Distributism does attempt to address ownership distribution but Distributism is not about reditriubtion of wealth.
So if something has a wide distribution, it means it is not concentrated. Maybe you could sort of say that translates into parts of a whole being more loosely together.
If something is redistributed, the “loosely together” or state of being more concentrated is changed by the act of redistribution.
As an example, if you have all of the grass growing on your lawn, in its natural form, it is well distributed. When you cut the grass and rake it into piles and put that into bags, it is concentrated. The act of putting the grass in the bag or of sprinkling it all over the lawn again is redistribution.
Hope that helps.![]()
Like your signature! I am about to pray the Rosary now. I think in our culture, anything other than an unrestrained capitalism sounds like socialism. Distrubtism is really the opposite of socialism.I am not entirely sure what distributism is but it sounds like some form of socialism which if I understand correctly, the Church condemns.
frankpearson;8703345:
I want to address an obvious follow-up question instead of requiring it to come out in dialogue. Perhaps you understand the distinction between “redistribution” and “distribution” perfectly well. Perhaps you instead say, well don’t you have to redistribute something for it to become more distributed? I know you have already asked this question and have already been answered. But since we have such an apt example in the grass on the lawn, let’s use that to address this follow-up.I
Distributism is not about redistribution of wealth, but it does attempt to address ownership distribution.
Anyone out there writing a text book on Logic? Here is a perfect example of a Contradictory Premise:
Distributism does attempt to address ownership distribution but Distributism is not about reditriubtion of wealth.
So grass is distributed naturally across the lawn. Some one tends to cut that grass and gather it into bags. If I want to stop that practice don’t I need to dump out his bags of grass?
No. I don’t. First off, the grass we are dealing with is a special grass that can choose for itself and even has mobility. So it can redistribute itself. That would be one way to achieve more wide distribution.
Another thing that I could do, even if the grass doesn’t redistribute itself, without redistributing the grass is to hinder the putting of the grass into bags by, say, cutting the bottom out of the bags, making it disadvantageous to gather grass.
Another thing I could do if I had access to these sorts of resources is that I could limit the size of the bags that the gatherer uses so that the grass could only be put into many smaller bags.
Reflecting the fact that this grass can walk, the gatherer may take a different course to gathering it himself and he may make it less and less advantageous through an itching powder or something for the grass to remain in its natural state, distributed on the lawn, and he may be just holding the bag open while the grass jumps in the bag. I can stop him from using itching powder on the grass.
Or finally, and these are all just off the top of my head, I expect there are many more possibilities, if I happen to be employing the gatherer myself (taxpayer to state apparatus), I could employ him doing something else, or even eliminate the position of gathering grass into bags altogether.
All of these things would affect distribution, but I would only be redistributing myself if I went and took the bag and dumped it out all over the lawn or coerced him to do the same.
Hope that helps, David.
Cottage industries, basically.I’m sorry. I was engrossed in a different conversation and missed your last post. Here is a link to practical distrubtism in 100 seconds:
Distributism is the economic philosophy of ownership.
Of course, he mentioned Mondragon. You can organize large or small companies according to distributist principles.Cottage industries, basically.
I was surfing the net, looking up the biographies of television and entertainment personalities.David and I had an exchange of posts about “focusing on maximizing profits,” as he put it, earlier in this thread. He seemed extremely intent on it, so you’ll have to ask him. I gave him a few made-up examples of what I was thinking, but the examples were based on things that I have seen happen, usually in small communities in which I have lived.
It’s just not that practical.I’m sorry. I was engrossed in a different conversation and missed your last post. Here is a link to practical distrubtism in 100 seconds:
Distributism is the economic philosophy of ownership.
Of course this isn’t how we support ourselves in our old age in the current brand of capitalism. We support ourselves partially by Social Security, and moreover, through mild socialism.The point being that you take your earnings and save them up and buy some business that will support you when you are no longer able to work … in this case, a building with rental apartment units. But, if you’re not good with managing tenants, then the stock market … and that gets you away from Distributism. And into American capitalism.
So, it sounds like you don’t believe in “saving up for a rainy day”.Of course this isn’t how we support ourselves in our old age in the current brand of capitalism. We support ourselves partially by Social Security, and moreover, through mild socialism.
It is true that living off of the labor of others is one way that the elderly can continue to take in income, but this is not practical on a large scale, except under some form of distributist arrangement to society that helps to ensure most people own productive property. Only by the elderly as a general rule owning productive property or land could the elderly support themselves on rents and profits.
What we have done with our safety nets is provided a government funded alternative to distributism, one that ensures the poor and the elderly don’t starve (at least in the US and at this time). If that wealth were distributed in the form of ownership of productive property or land, only then would it be possible to consider the possibility of your ideal elderly sustainment network above.
And even in the absence of wealth redistrubution, what we currently have, only in a more competitive market with ease of entrance for many smaller businesses and laws that promoted land ownership for the less wealthy (again distributism, not cottage industries) could the elderly live off of profits and rents.
But of course you and I both know that in reality, before government intervention families took care of the elderly of their own families or they were destitute and any aid they received was from charity.
Oh, and of course under laissez-faire, nothing bad ever happens to anyone, people don’t grow old, people are never laid off and have trouble finding a job, people never have emergencies which eat up all their savings, no! because in laissez-faire, everyone is so prudent and virtuous that nothing bad ever happens to them…So, it sounds like you don’t believe in “saving up for a rainy day”.
I hate to break it to you, but people have been saving up for a rainy day for hundreds of years.Oh, and of course under laissez-faire, nothing bad ever happens to anyone, people don’t grow old, people are never laid off and have trouble finding a job, people never have emergencies which eat up all their savings, no! because in laissez-faire, everyone is so prudent and virtuous that nothing bad ever happens to them…
Where is the reference to and quote for “laissez-faire” by the Popes? St Francis in #428 states that it has not existed since the 18th century.St Francis #531
of course under laissez-faire, nothing bad ever happens to anyone