B
Bluegoat
Guest
I guess small with regard to a radio station is relative - there’s no doubt it requires a substantial investment, but not necessarily by a corporate entity. Almost all our media is controlled by a few corporations in Canada, because independent owners have been swallowed up by them. But under different business circumstances I can easily imagine many different individual owners, or cooperatives.I think you make a number of good points, but I must quickly disagree with you about radio stations–in the US, the price of the license for an AM statiin is $35,000, making it impossible to start small.
However, your bringing up the various levels of government is important, as is your discussion of the large corporations. It seems like we have huge corporations, huge unions, and huge government.
What we actually need is a good dose of subsidiarity and mediating organizations. To me, the government is supposed to protect us from things like bigbox stores grabbing land, but it doesn’t. Unions are supposed to protect the workers, not force a closure of the employer.
But at the same time, society does have a responsibility to the least among us. To me, the government needs to encourage and support that happening, but at times assure that it happens, at the most local level possible. I don’t think the federal government should be involved in education, which should be under the control of the parents and local community, but I do see that the more overarching levels could be helpful in coordinating aide from one community to another.
It’s all a balancing act, and we are terribly out of balance.
I agree - the idea is to find the lowest level at which a function of society can effectively be weilded. What that is will depend, and a lot of times it may be shared. We see that with our health system, where almost every level of government has a role, as well as local community groups and private individuals.
The difficulty is that some people don’t understand that subsidiarity does not imply individualism. Which is why we get people not understanding the social encyclicals, thinking they are supporting communism! Individualism is an evil as much as communism is, and the political life is the formal aspect of the human community - and humans are creatures of community.
You are right that we see this movement to big organizations of every kind. What we don’t see a lot of is movement to make sure that everyone has a real stake in these organizations, or structures which push and keep governance and power at the lowest levels.
I think that part of the problem is not just the will to power by some people, but a real willingness to opt out by others, and become passive. That has to be protected against as well as those who want to accrue power, but we don’t do that well.