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MindOverMatter2
Guest
What strikes me as irrational about your post is the complete lack of understanding of what it means to be apart of a human community and the moral responsibility that civil law has to protect the value and dignity of all life in that community, against all oppressive factors including economic ones.What struck me about the post he made was the complete lack of any reference to personal responsibility for the choices one makes.
Ishii
You seem to think that you’re in it for your self, taking from the human community and moaning because you have to give something back in order to support those less fortunate in the economic market place. You then make fallacious straw-man arguments about the downside of things and ignore the positive ones (preserving the life of those less fortunate) in-order to make it appear as if the government is doing something wrong by preventing murder (allowing or depriving members of the human community of lifes necessities for the sake of profit, thus allowing your brothers and sisters to starve to death). That human beings in general have a moral responsibility to look out for there own well being is irrelevant to the fact that the government also has a right and a responsibility to safe guard the well being of all humans in the community regardless of economic concerns. The dignity of human life comes first. For a billionaire to cry about losing a million that he will never spend is irrational and down right shameful. In the end you are complaining about people having basic human rights, which is quite disgusting.
XII in Rerum Novarum criticized liberal capitalism noting the “enormous fortunes of some few individuals, and the utter poverty of the masses.” This statement remains exactly right, particularly given the varying, but similar figures, stating that an incredibly small minority of people own beyond-staggering percentages of global wealth. Forty years after Rerum Novarum, Pope Pius XI declared that “a veritable economic dictatorship” was forming. The Holy Father argued that these disorders, by and large, resulted from the divorce of economic science from natural law morality and social ethics:
Code:
“The ultimate consequences of the individualist spirit in economic life are those which you yourselves…see and deplore: Free competition has destroyed itself; economic dictatorship has supplanted the free market; unbridled ambition for power has likewise succeeded greed for gain; all economic life has become tragically hard, inexorable, and cruel. To these are to be added the grave evils that have resulted from an intermingling and shameful confusion of the functions and duties of public authority with those of the economic sphere—such as, one of the worst, the virtual degradation of the majesty of the State, which although it ought to sit on high like a queen and supreme arbitress, free from all partiality and intent upon the one common good and justice, is a slave, surrendered and delivered to the passions and greed of men. And as to international relations, two different streams have issued from the one fountain-head: On the one hand, economic nationalism or even economic imperialism; on the other, a no less deadly and accursed internationalism of finance or international imperialism whose country is where profit is.”
They are:
** The right to a just wage.**
* The right to rest.
* The right to a working environment and to manufacturing processes that are not harmful to the workers’ physical health or moral integrity.
* The right that one’s personality in the workplace should be safeguarded without suffering any affront to one’s conscience or personal dignity.
* The right to appropriate subsidies necessary for the subsistence of unemployed workers and their families.
* The right to a pension and to insurance for old age, sickness, and in case of work-related accidents.
* The right to social security connected with maternity.
* The right to assemble and form associations."