Brjoseph #109
But the minute you question or disagree with Right Wing American Politics, or suggest Capitalism, on its own, is no more a solution to the country’s (or world’s) problems than Socialism
the idea that you’re really just someone trying to find the narrow road through ideologies to the truth… can’t be.
Such persistent myopia indicates a fatal flaw in reasoning, for not only has free enterprise raised the welfare of untold millions out of poverty, but is emphatically affirmed by Bl John Paul II in
Centesimus Annus, 42, 1991. How does free enterprise raise welfare? As welfare = something that aids or promotes well-being/a contented state of being happy and healthy and prosperous, the answer is obvious. That untold millions have benefited is unchallengeable.
Unfortunately what is obvious is apparently beyond some. Dr Chafuen states: “The objective of policy, according to the Medieval Doctors, is to favour the common good. This is in agreement with the principle that the general welfare is more important than individual interest.”
Christians For Freedom, Ignatius, 1986, p 159-160].
Free enterprise has a set of principles developed by Catholic late Scholastics, but these principles cannot be applied to any great effect for “economic progress” anywhere when governments and their central banks practice finagling interventions which create booms and busts, prostitute welfare and produce the enormous deficits seen on both sides of the Atlantic.
Leo XIII asserts: “…the socialists, working on the poor man’s envy of the rich, are striving to do away with private property, and contend that individual possessions should become the common property of all, to be administered by the State or by municipal bodies.”
Rerum Novarum, #4]. Similarly John Paul II condemns socialism for precisely this among other errors, in
Centesimus Annus, making a frank acknowledgement that socialism has failed on its own terms as witnessed by events in Eastern Europe.
For a Catholic to ridicule the clearly expressed teaching shows the dissenting attitude and failure to understand either socialism or free enterprise. For Pius XI declared emphatically in
Quadragesimo Anno, 1931, #120: “If Socialism, like all errors, contains some truth (which, moreover, the Supreme Pontiffs have never denied), it is based nevertheless on a theory of human society peculiar to itself and irreconcilable with true Christianity. Religious socialism, Christian socialism, are contradictory terms; no one can be at the same time a good Catholic and a true socialist.”