It demonstrates that geography is often irrelevant to the Catholic principle of subsidiarity.
It means, for example, that all the Catholic reasons for locating decisions within the family and not large communities still apply even though we are spread out across international lines.
You did not answer me questions, and what you are saying here is so vague I can’t get any meaning out of it.
Are you arguing otherwise?
I’m not arguing anything on this point because I don’t understand what you are saying.
You’ve been watching too many Hol[l]ywood movies. The Catholic principle of subsidiarity applies as well to corporations and I guarantee that mid-level managers have far more authority and lattitude than does the simlarly ranked government bueracrat. There are libraries of business management books on employee empowerment and similar ideas.
No, I actually know people in many different areas of the business world. And when push comes to shove, the bottom line is what counts. The reason they started all this control-sharing is that it made companies more money. If a manager does not make enough money, he is fired. If a division does not make enough money, it’s sold off. If another location offers a way to increase profits, the division is moved regardless of the consequences on the employees.
Hence my questions about the family above.
The concept of control-sharing which you describe was put into place because it made more money as people went for quality, so it’s not an example os subsidiarity on that account, but in addition, it is still very limited–the manager of a division could not suddenly decide to change the type of business altogether, could he?
Well, yes, you’ve defined subsidiarty well enough. What you have not defined is distributism and how it differs from subsidiarity.
Distributism is seeing economics as a one if a number of parts of one’s life, and in which there is local control as opposed to centralized control. One of the ways in which this is accomplished is to spread ownership, actual ownership, of the means of production out among the population.
This is the practical application of the principle of subsidiarity in the economic field, and in the political field. You seem to see distributism as a way to reign in businesses, but it is also a way to reign in government as well.
The LFE are all for getting rid of government control; I see the government’s role as being like a referee among the various groups which would be making their own rules rather than seeing the government as the regulator of everything. OTOH, I am not against tariffs and other protective actions if they are requested by the more local levels.
You have not explained why you chose to advocate distributism instead of subsidiarity.
To me, advocating distributism is advocating subsidiarity in the economic and political arenas. I also advocate subsidiarity in other areas of government, such as welfare (taken generally), the environment, etc.
However, I would leave foreign affairs and the military to the national government, which is mostly what it is for.
By enabling people to voluntarily come together for varioius purposes (including, especially, economic goals). That is the core idea of subsidiarity in opposition to centralization.
I think that the larger the group of people involved, the more some get in charge and others marginalized. The end result is centralization, which occurs in economic enterprises as well as governments.
The problem, instead, is that you are fixated on geographic locality and are missing out on the deeper meaning of subsidiarity.
No, no geography, but size, nexus of responsibility, authority, mediating structures but ultimately, the place of the individual and the family in society and the world.
No, I am merely pointing out that when government is bad it is really bad. That the lowest bueracrat has more power to ruin your life than the richest man. That giving power to government turns free market capitaism into crony capitalism, or worse.
Distributism is not socialism, you know. Distributists *also *believe these things about the government, and don’t want the government micromanaging.
Loosly speaking, LFE holds that government should focus on preventing violence, theft, and fraud.
Eh, not really. The government is not really the group which should be put in charge of *prevention *of these activities. What the government does is prosecute after the crime has been committed. The consequence of the hassle involved in government prosecution may or may not suffice to deter a criminally-minded person. Asking the government to be in charge of
preventionis giving way too much control over to them.
These are obviously loose terms and there are gray areas we could debate all day. I don’t think we need to resolve the gray areas in order to move this discussion forward.
(For example, health inspection is an important service. But it doesn’t have to be provied by the government. If Acme Helath Inspectors certifies that a restaurant is safe and it proves to be otherwise then Acme an be held to account on grounds of fraudulent certification.)
And I certainly agree that health inspection as well as many other functions currently allocated to the government is something could easily be accomplished by private entities. I have not run across anything contrary to this in my learning about distributism, have you?