P
Petaro
Guest
I can only agree. Many Australians don’t understand that our general standard of living is higher than in the USA. Our minimum wage is 16 dollars an hour, most people who hold property in the capital cities hold over a million in assets. Our Health system is free to all and our medium income levels are on par with most western countries at $1114 per week.I would also disagree with some of the statements of the article.
Some (especially US Americans) like to talk about the failures of socialism. Yet, sitting in a western country where people don’t have to hold down 2 (and I have never met, or heard of, an Australian holding 3) to support their families, where health care is affordable, education within reach, I wonder what they’re so scared of.
There is a middle ground between US capitalism and North Korean communism and I’ve never understood why so many people (again, especially US Americans) don’t understand this. That middle ground that so many western countries have managed to achieve is what people want. For everyone. Those in the west who live in countries like the US, and those in the African nations who face violence and hungry everyday.
What I hear Pope Francis saying isn’t evil. It isn’t a unjustified preoccupation with the poor. It is common sense. Those who stand against him need to reconsider their views.
We really have no concept of the generational poverty now building up in Greece and other PIG nations with Europe, much less half of Asia and Africa.
The Pope is right in looking for a distributional change at a world level, not necessarily Gardens of the week for everyone.