Opinions on Catholic bishops' support for socialistic ideas

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Not once in this thread have I read:

-Let’s pray and ask God to guide, strengthen and defend our church.
-Let’s pray that the Holy Spirit continue to bless and inspire the church to do God’s will.
-Let’s pray for our church leaders, that they may persevere in their faith, grow in holiness, and avoid the attacks of Satan so that they can lead their flock to Christ.
-Let’s pray that we receive the Holy Spirit to understand God’s will and follow it despite our personal preferences.

Why has no one suggested we pray together, seek guidance and discuss with our pastor or bishop the social and moral issues taught by the church? We should give thanks and praise to God for giving us a holy and apostolic church.

If you believe prayer won’t work to bring about change, then you have a bigger problem than libertarianism or socialism. With lack of faith, hope and love, your freedom or money are not endangered but your very soul. Let’s all pray for one another and ask the Blessed Virgin Mary, angels and saints to join in our prayers to strengthen the body of Christ.

Now I exhort you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you all agree and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be made complete in the same mind and in the same judgment. 1Corinthians 1:10
You are right. Naively, I thought prayer for the help and protection of Our Savior and His Blessed Mother was a given. Perhaps not.
 
To test your thesis I had a quick look at the figures for drug addiction.

France: 900,000 addicts in a population of 60 million. 1.5% addicts.

USA: 4 million addicts in a population of 294 million. 1.4% addicts.

Your thesis falls at the first hurdle.

I will also point out that the rates of sexually transmitted diseases are influenced by the quality of healthcare available to those who are infected, so that is not independent of the general quality of healthcare in the country.

You will have to do better than this.

rossum
Please,

You can’t pick one out of all the various health issues I mentioned and use that to disprove what I said. Take them ALL together, not the one that fits your agenda. This is the very abuse of statistics I was referencing. Infant mortality is affected by the overall health of the mother. Using drugs, drinking, smoking, sexually transmitted diseases, endemic disease from the country of origin of the mother, etc all contribute to the number of low birth weight babies. How many third world babies are born in France exactly?

To play YOUR game, I don’t see where your statistics break down addicted persons by sex. A male drug addict must be removed from consideration re: prenatal health as they do not affect it. So what is the rate of drug addiction for women? And you may NOT assume it is 50% male and 50% female in both countries in the numbers listed. Also what constitutes addiction in your statistics? Habitual use of exactly what kinds of drugs, and are the criteria the same between the statistics collected for the USA and France… How big is the crack cocaine problem in France, or is their drug problem more opiate related or perhaps cannabis. It makes a difference you know.

Finally I don’t see you disputing the fact that low birth weight infants once delivered have a higher survival rate in the USA than France, and THAT is the real question…medical care under a socialized system being BETTER by definition, than that currently available in the USA.

Cancer survivors live longer in the USA, heart attack survival rates are significantly higher in the USA. Why did that Canadian minister come to New York for surgery if his own country’s socialized care is so much better. Why do you quote UN infant mortality as the cornerstone of your argument. Could it be because that is the ONLY statistic you can find that fits your political agenda?

Personally I would have to read the paper setting out the criteria used by the UN to make their decision of what constitutes “infant mortality”. What age after delivery is the cut off? Do still born or spontaneous abortions make the cut? If it is like their other “rankings” of countries then their methods are heavily weighted in favor of “socialist” countries. “Universal availability” and “local availability” are NOT acceptable criteria when judging “quality” of medical care available.

Nice try, but you can’t blow it off that easily.

W.Unland
 
You can’t pick one out of all the various health issues I mentioned and use that to disprove what I said.
I have shown that you have done inadequate research and have failed to properly check your sources in at least one instance. I chose not to waste my time looking at the rest of what you said.
Take them ALL together, not the one that fits your agenda.
Why should I take any notice of a claim that I have shown to be false? If you want to rely on falsehoods to support your position then you will have a difficult time convincing me.

You appear to want to damage the Catholic Church in Europe by importing inappropriate right wing American political positions. That can only damage the Catholic Church in Europe. We already have centralised government health care over here, and while it is not perfect we can see that it works a lot better than the system you used to have in America. We will have to see how the new American system works out in practice.
This is the very abuse of statistics I was referencing. Infant mortality is affected by the overall health of the mother.
And the overall health of the mother is also affected by the quality of the health care available to her. Another reason why American infant mortality rates are as bad as they are.

rossum
 
The OP is.
No,this is about the principle of subsidiarity. It just so happens that Republican Party is supposed to uphold the conservative principle of constitutional,limited government,in order to safeguard our liberties and property from government intrusion and prevent government tyranny over the individual. This politically conservative principle is related to the Catholic principle of subsidiarity.
Universal government run health care is very common in Europe and generally supported by parties of both the right and the left. It only seems to be much of an issue in America. That is one reason why I see this thread as related specifically to American politics.
That just goes to show that Europeans have become used to socialistic government and complacently accept it as the right way of taking care of people. But Europeans ought to value their freedom as much as conservative Americans do. The Europeans will eventually reject socialism. It is starting to happen in England.
 
No,this is about the principle of subsidiarity. It just so happens that Republican Party is supposed to uphold the conservative principle of constitutional,limited government,in order to safeguard our liberties and property from government intrusion and prevent government tyranny over the individual. This politically conservative principle is related to the Catholic principle of subsidiarity.
What does the Republican Party have to do with me? The three major parties I can vote for are Labour, the Liberal-Democrats and the Conservatives. All three of these parties support state-run healthcare through the NHS. Even Mrs Thatcher said, “The NHS is safe in our hands.” You are trying to import American attitudes into Europe where all that they will do is to damage the Catholic Church by associating it with extreme right wing fringe politics.

America is not the world. The Catholic Church has to deal with the world, not just with America.
The Europeans will eventually reject socialism. It is starting to happen in England.
The current coalition government of the United Kingdom (not just England) supports the NHS and has not the slightest intention of abolishing it. To do so would be electoral suicide. You appear to have little understanding of either UK or European politics. Wisely the Catholic bishops over here have chosen to ignore what you are saying.

rossum
 
The pope has been influenced by socialistic ideas in regard to the economy and distributive justice
Or there are other economic possibilities besides laissez-faire Capitalism and Post-national Socialism, especially since Capitalism only began to emerge around the time of the Reformation. The distributive ownership of productive property that was formulated as a response to * cannot be socialist as it emphasizes private property.
Capitalism is simply about making a profit from the sales of goods and services. There is nothing wrong with that. It is not equivalent to greed.
Capitalism (without qualifiers) results in the least ethical and richest owners oppressing the theoretically free but dispossessed workers, as happened markedly in the industrial revolution in the English speaking world. This, in turn, results with the vast majority having no more real control of productive property than if they were slaves or under a socialist economy.

Our current economy is a bastard mix: the wage earner is desperately trying to avoid the Servile state*, the poor are living in a Socialist state, and the rich enjoy the benefits of the Capitalist state. A minority of small owners and higher wage earners have manged to live out the Proprietary (aka distributist) state.*
 
Our current economy is a bastard mix: the wage earner is desperately trying to avoid the Servile state*, the poor are living in a Socialist state, and the rich enjoy the benefits of the Capitalist state. A minority of small owners and higher wage earners have manged to live out the Proprietary (aka distributist) state.
Thank you for that. An interesting analysis.

rossum
 
No,this is about the principle of subsidiarity. It just so happens that Republican Party is supposed to uphold the conservative principle of constitutional,limited government,in order to safeguard our liberties and property from government intrusion and prevent government tyranny over the individual. This politically conservative principle is related to the Catholic principle of subsidiarity.

That just goes to show that Europeans have become used to socialistic government and complacently accept it as the right way of taking care of people. But Europeans ought to value their freedom as much as conservative Americans do. The Europeans will eventually reject socialism. It is starting to happen in England.
How arrogant, pretentious, and imperialist! Why should nations, particularly prosperous and stable nations of Western Europe, “ought” adopt your political values?

I am not going to yield any concessions to conservatives by adopting their definitions for certain words such as “freedom” or “tyranny”, which gives them the rhetorical edge. I do not see why the concept of “freedom”, defined by conservatives, is of significant value. Perhaps, I would value it if it included “freedom from want” as defined by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his “Four Freedoms” speech. But I find the conservative usage of the word “freedom” an exercise in rhetorical dishonesty and deception because the exploits the fact that the word generally has a positive connotation but lacks a rigorous definition that is universally accepted. Since “freedom” can adopt multiple definitions that adopts differing perceptions of the concept, it just becomes a blunt, rhetorical instrument because it describes many things and thus lacks any precision because its definition is not restrictive but inclusive.

At least Friedrich von Hayek lucidly delineated the differences between “freedom” and “liberty” in his* Constitution of Liberty* to avoid any potential for misinterpretation and confusion. He explicitly defined “liberty” merely as the non-interference in human affairs or the absence of coercion. He also states that it does not guarantee any positive outcomes or grant one with any degree of control over one’s circumstances. In this case, liberty is just a principle for human conduct, not an affirmation of the desirability of any state of reality nor any ethical mandate or compulsion to render such states into reality. Although von Hayek’s conception of liberty is inherently passive and would presumably tolerate many sins of omission, he argues that societies that embrace the principle of liberty, by adopting and nurturing a market economy, would be conducive to prosperity and innovation in the long run because it supposedly allocates resources more efficiently and allows inventive people to pursue and profit from their ideas.

As for me, I value my health, financial security, and living in a peaceful, friendly environment more than “freedom”.

Another poster has pointed the same thing rossum noted about imposing American right-wing anti-welfare state views in Europe. Why hasn’t the Church explicitly condemned universal health care systems in Canada and Western European? Does the Church want to alienate a continent (Europe) with 830 million people and a strong embrace for the welfare state?
The Church condemns socialism, but not everything that is called socialist by the American right-wing is condemned by the Church. My example was Canadian style, single-payer healthcare, which is at worst, I think, neutral by Church teaching.
Do you believe that, in setting up a universal health care system, the Canadian government has acted unjustly, immorally, and contrary to the Divine Law: depriving its citizens of their legitimate freedom, and abrogating their obligations to personal charity?
 
You can’t pick one out of all the various health issues I mentioned and use that to disprove what I said. Take them ALL together, not the one that fits your agenda. This is the very abuse of statistics I was referencing. Infant mortality is affected by the overall health of the mother. Using drugs, drinking, smoking, sexually transmitted diseases, endemic disease from the country of origin of the mother, etc all contribute to the number of low birth weight babies. How many third world babies are born in France exactly?
To play YOUR game, I don’t see where your statistics break down addicted persons by sex. A male drug addict must be removed from consideration re: prenatal health as they do not affect it. So what is the rate of drug addiction for women? And you may NOT assume it is 50% male and 50% female in both countries in the numbers listed. Also what constitutes addiction in your statistics? Habitual use of exactly what kinds of drugs, and are the criteria the same between the statistics collected for the USA and France… How big is the crack cocaine problem in France, or is their drug problem more opiate related or perhaps cannabis. It makes a difference you know.
Actually, you are the one making statistical claims (or claims that can be tested with statistics), not Rossum.

For example, you initially said:
Yes the USA has a higher infant mortality but it has NOTHING to do with the quality of health care in the USA, it has to do with the HUGE number of babies born to drug addicted mothers, alcohol abusive mothers, mothers with sexually transmitted diseases and so forth.
It is not rossum’s burden of proof to disprove this, it is your burden to provide reputable statistics for your claims. And you used the word HUGE (with the letters capitalized for emphasis) but you do not even provide any quantitative support (using concrete numbers) to justify using your qualitative (and relative) wording.
Personally I would have to read the paper setting out the criteria used by the UN to make their decision of what constitutes “infant mortality”. What age after delivery is the cut off? Do still born or spontaneous abortions make the cut? If it is like their other “rankings” of countries then their methods are heavily weighted in favor of “socialist” countries. “Universal availability” and “local availability” are NOT acceptable criteria when judging “quality” of medical care available.
“Universal availability” and “local availability” are certainly acceptable metrics “of medical care available”. What good would be “best health care” would be if would would not have access to it due to its exorbitant prices? Your questions seem like pointless caviling and irrelevant. Again, the null hypothesis is that pregnant woman’s health among developed countries do not significantly differ. It is your burden to show that they do instead of just asserting it here.
I have been working for 45 years now. By my calculations, clearly 20 of those years have been worked in slavery to the state. If I subtract the 10% of the time for that applied to national security, the police and fire department, and public roads, I end up with 18 years of slavery in the name of SOCIAL JUSTICE from which I have received NOTHING in return.
Am I supposed to feel sympathetic or sorry for you for allegedly being a “slave” to the “government”? What about all those human beings who lack access to clean water, food, health care, and shelter in underdeveloped countries?
Is this REALLY what G-d had in mind? Is it really my Catholic duty to be a slave so that the government can give my labors to the prototypical welfare mother eating fast food in front of her TV watching Oprah all day, or the drug addict who can’t work because of his “illness”, or even the illegal resident receiving section 8 housing allowances and welfare in the name of JUSTICE.
I have a real problem with this whole concept. It seems the Bishops live a pretty good life, the politicians certainly do, the priest in charge of Catholic Charities USA takes a salary of $140K a year, our “betters” do pretty well for themselves. I read this very morning that my Caesar in Washington has spent $10 million on parties and entertainment at the White House during the last year. That $10 mil would have bought a lot of SOCIAL JUSTICE. Meanwhile those of us that have to work are barely getting by, and yet our leaders want more in the name of JUSTICE. I’m sorry I am tired of it. I can’t pay anymore!
Why the use of the word “SOCIAL JUSTICE”? Could you tell me of left-wing poster in any thread from this forum who uses the word “social justice” consistently? And could you actually provide evidence that welfare recipients actually behave the way you describe them such as watching Oprah?
 
For those, loosely throwing around the accusation of “liberation theology”, you should at least consider that these Bishops, being learned and holy men, may be right about these things especially as concerns the morality of them and you might be the one who is wrong. One doesn’t need to rely on the bishops, any faithful true Catholic could lift several passages from the encyclicals of our most recent Holy Fathers, John Paul II and Benedict XVI that would make many of today’s righteous Calvinist Catholics blush. Both of these great holy men have condemned liberation theology. But for many today in the Church, “liberation theology” is anything that threatens their service of mammon after the Mass.

Cafeteria Catholicism is alive and well. But it doesn’t just affect those who promote liberalism, marxism and sexual hedonism. It also affects those who claim to be Catholic, but are in effect little different than southern “prosperity gospel” protestants. Thanks be to GOD, I see this problem as most affecting the North American church and not the emerging church.
:clapping: Well said.
 
What is your opinion on the Catholic bishops’ support for typically socialistic ideas,such as universal heath care mandated and controlled by the government,universal amnesty for illegals,extended unemployment benefits,diplomacy with terrorist states,and a world-wide governing authority or court of law?

Many Catholic bishops have long been influenced and misled by socialism,and tend to equate Catholic social justice with socialistic ideas. This nonsense has got to stop. These bishops are fostering the rise of tyrannical,over-bearing,mintrusive government.
The position of the Bishops on this issue is the same as their position on the Pro-Life movement. The way I see it these are not a left or right stance they are a moral stance. Christ did not say hand over your jacket, as long as you have a spare. I realize that we have limitations and that is what the secular government does, but from the Churches perspective they have to take the high road.

As much as I agree with the Churches position and advocacy on these Social issues. I won’t vote for them. I will vote according to the Pro-Life agenda, but that is because I am not taking the moral high ground.

I am selfish. I am looking out for my family, my neighborhood, my city, my country, not all mankind. The fact that I am selfish does not negate the obligation of the Church to teach according to Christ’s teaching.
 
What does the Republican Party have to do with me?
I didn’t say that it did. You were the one who brought up the Republican Party.
The three major parties I can vote for are Labour, the Liberal-Democrats and the Conservatives. All three of these parties support state-run healthcare through the NHS. Even Mrs Thatcher said, “The NHS is safe in our hands.” You are trying to import American attitudes into Europe where all that they will do is to damage the Catholic Church by associating it with extreme right wing fringe politics.
The desire to be free of government interence in one’s personal life is not only an American attitude. It is natural to anyone who values their freedom and is wary of the expansion of government powers over the citizens. Only someone who doesn’t value freedom would identify this attitude with extreme right wing fringe politics.

Margaret Thatcher was against socialism. If she safeguarded the government health care system it was because she wasn’t willing to dump people who were already dependent upon it. People need to be gradually weaned off of it.
America is not the world. The Catholic Church has to deal with the world, not just with America.
The Catholic Church is concerned with human freedom as well as human material welfare.
The bishops ought to know better than to give to the government responsibilities that belong to the Church and to local communities.
The current coalition government of the United Kingdom (not just England) supports the NHS and has not the slightest intention of abolishing it. To do so would be electoral suicide. You appear to have little understanding of either UK or European politics. Wisely the Catholic bishops over here have chosen to ignore what you are saying.
The government health care system will eventually be abolished since it provides shabby services at long waiting periods,denys treatment to people who are considered too expensive,and because there will not be enough tax money to sustain it. Public sentiment is turning against it,if the horror stories about it in English newspapers are any indicator. It also has to go because God will not allow a system that provides abortions and lets people die to be perpetuated much longer.
 
The position of the Bishops on this issue is the same as their position on the Pro-Life movement. The way I see it these are not a left or right stance they are a moral stance. Christ did not say hand over your jacket, as long as you have a spare. I realize that we have limitations and that is what the secular government does, but from the Churches perspective they have to take the high road.

As much as I agree with the Churches position and advocacy on these Social issues. I won’t vote for them. I will vote according to the Pro-Life agenda, but that is because I am not taking the moral high ground.
The position of the bishops ought to be guided by prudential judgement in regard to the proper ordering of responsibilities. No government can be trusted with taking care of people’s personal needs. Until socialistic ideas began to spead in the mid-1800’s,Catholic bishops never considered it the responsibility of the government,or even of society as a whole,to take care of the poor,needy and sick. It was always the proper responsibility of individual persons,families,parishes,monasteries and convents.
I am selfish. I am looking out for my family, my neighborhood, my city, my country, not all mankind. The fact that I am selfish does not negate the obligation of the Church to teach according to Christ’s teaching.
That’s not a matter of being selfish,those are proper loyalties for an individual man. It is impossible for us to be responsible for all mankind.
 
The position of the bishops ought to be guided by prudential judgement in regard to the proper ordering of responsibilities. No government can be trusted with taking care of people’s personal needs. Until socialistic ideas began to spead in the mid-1800’s,Catholic bishops never considered it the responsibility of the government,or even of society as a whole,to take care of the poor,needy and sick. It was always the proper responsibility of individual persons,families,parishes,monasteries and convents.

That’s not a matter of being selfish,those are proper loyalties for an individual man. It is impossible for us to be responsible for all mankind.
Give me a history lesson. I doubt it would be of similar quality to the writings of Henry CK Liu. Ok, tell me of a historical society that has thrived (defined by its material welfare and social stability) because of its adherence to “subsidiarity” (assign “proper responsibility of individual persons,families,parishes,monasteries and convents” [or similar religious institutions]) and the promotion of private charity instead of welfare statism.

Are they any historic basis for the values you advocate? Do you have ANY evidence that shows the private charity is more effective at the remediation of poverty?
 
I didn’t say that it did. You were the one who brought up the Republican Party.
I was responding to a post of yours in which you mentioned the Republican Party:
It just so happens that Republican Party … (Emphasis added)
The desire to be free of government interence in one’s personal life is not only an American attitude. It is natural to anyone who values their freedom and is wary of the expansion of government powers over the citizens. Only someone who doesn’t value freedom would identify this attitude with extreme right wing fringe politics.
You have no idea how politics works in Europe. Any party that tried to stand in the UK on a platform similar to that of the Republican Party in America would get slaughtered in the polls. Far too much military spending and far too little spending on social issues. You are attempting to drag down the Catholic Church in Europe by making it into a partisan political organisation for what in European terms is a fringe party. America is not the world and not all of us think like Americans. We have different histories and different priorities.
Margaret Thatcher was against socialism. If she safeguarded the government health care system it was because she wasn’t willing to dump people who were already dependent upon it. People need to be gradually weaned off of it.
She was indeed against Socialism and she was also a good politician who could recognise electoral suicide when she saw it. You are trying to persuade Catholic Bishops to go where she didn’t. That is not a wise thing to do.
The Catholic Church is concerned with human freedom as well as human material welfare.
The bishops ought to know better than to give to the government responsibilities that belong to the Church and to local communities.
In England the officially established Church is the Church of England. In Scotland it is the Church of Scotland. In neither case is it the Catholic Church. Your ignorance of how things are organised here is leading you into error. The Catholic Bishops here know how things are organised here and have wisely chosen to reject your advice.
Public sentiment is turning against it,if the horror stories about it in English newspapers are any indicator.
Do not believe everything that you read in the newspapers. See the many posts on this site about how the newspapers treated the child abuse scandal. Newspapers have agendas, and the Daily Mail and Sun do not hide their agendas very carefully.
It also has to go because God will not allow a system that provides abortions and lets people die to be perpetuated much longer.
God lets every single human die. Why should he make an exception now?

rossum
 
Give me a history lesson. I doubt it would be of similar quality to the writings of Henry CK Liu. Ok, tell me of a historical society that has thrived (defined by its material welfare and social stability) because of its adherence to “subsidiarity” (assign “proper responsibility of individual persons,families,parishes,monasteries and convents” [or similar religious institutions]) and the promotion of private charity instead of welfare statism.

Are they any historic basis for the values you advocate? Do you have ANY evidence that shows the private charity is more effective at the remediation of poverty?
The Servile State.
 
Belloc then makes his case for the natural instability of pure capitalism and discusses how (as he believes) attempts to reform capitalism will lead almost inexorably to an economy where state regulation has removed the freedom of capitalism and thereby replaced capitalism with the Servile State, which shares with ancient slavery the fact that positive law (as opposed to custom or economic necessity by themselves) dictates that certain people will work for others, who likewise must take care of them.
From the wikipedia entry

Sounds like Schumpeter (famous for “creative destruction”)
Schumpeter’s most popular book in English is probably Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy. This book opens with a treatment of Karl Marx. While he is sympathetic to Marx’s theory that capitalism will collapse and will be replaced by socialism, Schumpeter concludes that this will not come about in the way Marx predicted. To describe it he borrowed the phrase “creative destruction”, and made it famous by using it to describe a process in which the old ways of doing things are endogenously destroyed and replaced by new ways.
Schumpeter’s theory is that the success of capitalism will lead to a form of corporatism and a fostering of values hostile to capitalism, especially among intellectuals. The intellectual and social climate needed to allow entrepreneurship to thrive will not exist in advanced capitalism; it will be replaced by socialism in some form. There will not be a revolution, but merely a trend in parliaments to elect social democratic parties of one stripe or another. He argued that capitalism’s collapse from within will come about as democratic majorities vote for restrictions upon entrepreneurship that will burden and destroy the capitalist structure, but also emphasizes non-political, evolutionary processes in society where “liberal capitalism” was evolving into democratic socialism because of the growth of workers’ self-management, industrial democracy and regulatory institutions.[8] Schumpeter emphasizes throughout this book that he is analyzing trends, not engaging in political advocacy. In his vision, the intellectual class will play an important role in capitalism’s demise. The term “intellectuals” denotes a class of persons in a position to develop critiques of societal matters for which they are not directly responsible and able to stand up for the interests of strata to which they themselves do not belong. One of the great advantages of capitalism, he argues, is that as compared with pre-capitalist periods, when education was a privilege of the few, more and more people acquire (higher) education. The availability of fulfilling work is however limited and this, coupled with the experience of unemployment, produces discontent. The intellectual class is then able to organize protest and develop critical ideas.
(again wikipedia)

Schumpeter made a correct prediction for Europe. But Belloc’s prediction of a servile state, at least in Europe, has not come to fruition.
 
I was responding to a post of yours in which you mentioned the Republican Party:
I mentioned it in response to your claim that I wanted the Catholic Church to follow the political program of the Republican Party. You’re identifying the disapproval of socialistic means to help people with mere political ideology. It is about principles of natural law and prudential judgement,from which conservative ideology comes. political ideology. Does the support of government health care come from principles of natural law and prudential judgement,or from pragmatism?
You have no idea how politics works in Europe. Any party that tried to stand in the UK on a platform similar to that of the Republican Party in America would get slaughtered in the polls.
Not if it could persuade the electorate that it is wrong for the government to be doing what neighbors,families,communities and churches should be doing. The people of the British Isles have always cherished their freedom and self-sufficiency.
 
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