F
fnr
Guest
Subsidiarity is appropriate, and should be followed consistently. When the source of injustice is outside the scope of any one community, then subsidiarity requires that the next level up gets involved, and so on.It at least appears to me that those Catholcis who are most passionate for Social Justice often neglect a key component - subsidiarity, (CCC 1883-1885) vatican.va/archive/catechism/p3s1c2a1.htm
Essentially, the lowest level of community that can deal with an issue should be enabled and allowed to do so.
It doesn’t mean that there’s no such thing as a Catholic concern over global poverty, just local poverty. Here’s a map of the percent of children under five years, globally, with sub-normal growth:
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)
Do you suggest that we just rely on the good graces of Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe to care for his people? Or the Laotian regime?
In those cases, subsidiarity requires that at least regional (e.g. supranational) endeavors are undertaken.
Let us also not forget that a large component of injustice is defined by the geographic distribution of infrastructure, much of which is a public policy choice at the state, national, international level, not to mention the multinational level.