D
damian_clarke
Guest
Sorry but why do you keep posting in bold font?What!??? where, what document!!??![]()
Just asking but it comes across like you are shouting.
Sorry but why do you keep posting in bold font?What!??? where, what document!!??![]()
The Welfare State is condemned by Bl John Paul II (Centesimus Annus) so reality needs to be faced, and the experience of Sweden and the rest of Europe shows the deficiencies highlighted by Bl John Paul II.
**Correct me if I am wrong, hasn’t the diocese of Tulsa decided to reject all government entitlements, and will use contributions as its only source of revenue… is that correct?
**
What did you say??? I can’t hear you!!!Sorry but why do you keep posting in bold font?
Just asking but it comes across like you are shouting.
Ok that is quite funny.What did you say??? I can’t hear you!!!
Some dawning here that there are differences, that’s why the Welfare State is condemned.socialcath101 #292
And the current state of welfare in the United States is radically different from Sweden. We’ve got workfare… Benefits are limited and are conditioned on job training and search efforts with eventual termination of benefits down the line regardless of employment status at completion of job training…
As the Welfare State has helped Europe to its present meltdown, many Governments have slashed its idiocies – Sweden is an example of what has happened.essie7777 #293
i am unsure though of the point you are making since the writings don’t speak out against welfare works, only the abuse of it.
Correct, and greed is a human vice which is precisely why Pope Benedict XVI teaches for you: “Society does not have to protect itself from the market, as if the development of the latter were ipso facto to entail the death of authentically human relations…Therefore it is not the instrument that must be called to account, but individuals, their moral conscience and their personal and social responsibility.” (Caritas in Veritate, 2009, #36).damian Clarke #294
The holy Father is opposed to human greed
I don’t have that information, David, please advise.David Castlen #299
Correct me if I am wrong, hasn’t the diocese of Tulsa decided to reject all government entitlements, and will use contributions as its only source of revenue… is that correct?
As the Welfare State has helped Europe to its present meltdown,
In the U.S., before being completely revamped in 1996, the “welfare system was successful at nothing except maintaining poverty.” (Rick Santorum, It Takes A Family, ISI Books, 2005, p 127).
In the 1970s to hasten Sweden’s long march towards the Social Democratic nirvana, involved expanding welfare programs, nationalizing many industries, expanding and deepening regulation, and – of course – increasing taxation to punitive levels to pay for it all.
Over the next twenty years, the Swedish dream turned decidedly nightmarish. The Swedish parliamentarian Johnny Munkhammar points out that “In 1970, Sweden had the world’s fourth-highest GDP per capita. By 1990, it had fallen 13 positions. In those 20 years, real wages in Sweden increased by only one percentage point.” So much for helping “the workers.”
Facing severe economic stagnation, Sweden began implementing several rather un-social democratic measures in the early 1990s. This included curtaining its public sector deficit and reducing marginal tax-rates and levels of state ownership. Another change involved allowing private retirement schemes, a development that was accompanied by the state contributing less to pensions.
Over the next 15 years the economy did improve although unemployment is high especially among the 15-25 year olds largely due to the level of the union-imposed minimum wage.
The HOly FAther does not condem the welfare state. Rerum is a ringing endorsement of the welfare system. The welfare state with opportunity for private endeavor is the true reflection of catholic teaching and belief.
The “views” you ridicule are contained in the teaching of Pius XI who recognised that unemployment may be the result of wages that do not understand the state of a business or the common good.essie7777 #305
The Church agrees and advocates minimum wage for example – your “views” claim this is responsible for unemployment.
you argue against a minimum wage, against a social system that protects the weak and infirm, you argue against taxes
All we get are repetitious impulsive prejudices without any foundation.damian Clarke #306
The HOly FAther does not condem the welfare state. Rerum is a ringing endorsement of the welfare system.
That’s what the State is there for – just laws as we have stated over and over, not for finagling.chevalier #310
we need legal and other safeguards. Without them the market won’t even remain free actually (once conquered by anybody, it is no longer free, there is dictate of the victors).
That’s called prejudice, and what is required is a careful understanding of economics and the Church’s social teaching and the wise, prudent, just and temperate application of these principles with fortitude.A lot of the problem with political, social and economic systems seems to me to come down to who we side with. Do we side with the landowners? Military? Farmers? Wage workers in the industry? Factory owners? Merchants?
It is always interesting to read posts where commentators try desperately to force Catholic Teaching into their political point of view.That’s what the State is there for – just laws as we have stated over and over, not for finagling.
That’s called prejudice, and what is required is a careful understanding of economics and the Church’s social teaching and the wise, prudent, just and temperate application of these principles with fortitude.
BTW an enterprise is a cooperation of employees, managers and investors for supplying goods and services that a people require at a price they are willing to pay. Not enough understand that.
Actually the opinions i disagree with are your thinly veiled attempts to promote a political point of view by manipulating Church Teachings for your own agenda.The “views” you ridicule are contained in the teaching of Pius XI who recognised that unemployment may be the result of wages that do not understand the state of a business or the common good.
CCC 2434 …."Remuneration for work should guarantee man the opportunity to provide a dignified livelihood for himself and his family on the material, social, cultural and spiritual level, taking into account the role and the productivity of each, the state of the business, and the common good."222 Agreement between the parties is not sufficient to justify morally the amount to be received in wages.
:banghead: Your own comment and quotes advocate a minimum wage, as well as a structure from which to ensure all parties cooperate. Strangely this is in direct opposition to your previous comment i was responding to as well as the one that followed this.Pope Pius XI affirms this in Quadragesimo Anno, 1931, #71: “Every effort must therefore be made that fathers of families receive a wage large enough to meet ordinary family needs adequately. But if this cannot always be done under existing circumstances, social justice demands that changes be introduced as soon as possible whereby such a wage will be assured to every adult workingman.”
But further: QA72. “In determining the amount of the wage, the condition of a business and of the one carrying it on must also be taken into account; for it would be unjust to demand excessive wages which a business cannot stand without its ruin and consequent calamity to the workers.” Thus it is incredibly foolish to ignore the practical results following from the wise consideration of “the state of the business, and the common good.”
Again taken from your comment to just prove you are maligning the intent and belief of Church leaders and teachings by trying to change what they were saying in totality … your own quote above clearly emphasizes AGAIN, that the Church is against greed and abuse of power not minimum wages or unions etc.Hence it is contrary to social justice when, for the sake of personal gain and without regard for the common good, wages and salaries are excessively lowered or raised; and this same social justice demands that wages and salaries be so managed, through agreement of plans and wills, in so far as can be done, as to offer to the greatest possible number the opportunity of getting work and obtaining suitable means of livelihood.”
, Chafuen, Ignatius, 1986, p 120 et seq.].That is precisely why the Catholic Late Scholastics favoured leaving wage determination to the ‘common estimation’ of the market, since any other method is inherently arbitrary and leads to endless complications.
[cf. *Christians For Freedom
Continued denigration of Bl JPII with no facts. His definition is what is at stake:essie7777 #312
you don’t seem to have any true understanding of complex macro economics and certainly can’t explain or define free enterprise correctly.
Absolutely YOU NEED to stop this immediately.Continued denigration of Bl JPII with no facts. His definition is what is at stake:
I never gave an interpretation of capitalism.‘If by “capitalism” is meant an economic system which recognizes the fundamental and positive role of business, the market, private property and the resulting responsibility for the means of production, as well as free human creativity in the economic sector, then the answer is certainly in the affirmative, even though it would perhaps be more appropriate to speak of a “business economy”, “market economy” or simply “free economy”.’Since here capitalism = free economy
, and reaffirmed by Bl John Paul II is the ‘fundamental human “right to freedom of economic initiative.” ’ (*Sollicitudo Rei Socialis *(On Human Concerns), Encyclical, 1987, #42), and initiative = enterprise, it is clear what the pope means.
The very term “capitalism” is a derogatory term coined by Karl Marx, and that’s perhaps why Bl John Paul II dislikes it, as he makes clear as he emphatically affirms free enterprise in Centesimus Annus.
Again, i would suggest that you actually learn something about macro economics before making such an easily refutable sweeping statement.The free economy is a set of principles developed by the Catholic Late Scholastics which may be easily followed.
No one has claimed that the Church is NOT against greed – it has been a common emphasis as a vice, nor against unions per se, so these are more red herrings.essie7777 #313
the Church is against greed and abuse of power not minimum wages or unions etc.
That’s why the revered Fr James V Schall, S.J., in *Does The Catholic Church Still Exist?, *Alba House 1994, points out re CA that “The very meaning of ‘options for the poor’ need no longer be ideological in overtones but directed instead to the very real possibilities for a poor people to overcome their own problems with the intelligent aid of those who know how to produce wealth in the first place.’ (p 178).essie7777 #315
On a Final note i will leave you with the words of John Paul II from September 27, 1998. When recalling the day’s liturgical celebration of St. Vincent de Paul, he drew our attention to “one of the great challenges which confronts our conscience, the truly intolerable contrast between that portion of mankind which enjoys every advantage of economic well-being and scientific progress and the enormous masses of those who live in conditions of extreme need.”
“It is not licit to resign ourselves to the immoral spectacle of a world in which there are still those who die of hunger, who do not have a home, who lack even the most basic education, who do not have the necessary help when they are ill, who cannot find work."