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Hamlet123
Guest
[/QUOTE]I think that in order to have a well-run country that takes care of its most vulnerable and supports a robust private sector, we have to acknowledge that we need both the public and private sectors.
The more government has regulated the more businesses have slowed down or failed. Regulation hurts the poor, confused the markets and stimies inventiveness. The auto industry would have many more companies producing cars and employing people if it weren’t for regulations. The Act of 1944 was stealing and in the long run it DID NOT help. The GI bill created many colleges that put out cheap diplomas. The GI bill created housing problems.How do you come to that conclusion? There is no time in history where a government did a better job of helping people that the Free Market or the Catholic Church. In fact, government giving creates envy and is stealing, as Centismus Annus says. Siocialim is a sin
Catholic Social teaching does not say to force people to be charitable!The idea that taxes and government are bad and that socialism is the way to go, does not measure up to Catholic Social Teaching. CST has always taught that there is a place for the government to step in and collect taxes to pay for programs to help the poor
A safe measure of how the country is doing could be seen in how the poor are doing. If the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer (as is the case in our country right now) that is an indication that taxes are too low and there is not enough entitlement programs.and at the same time CST has always taught that the state should not be over intrusive in regulating the free market.
If the rich get richer (I pray) then the poor loose their status and become either somewhat less poor, middle class and many many of these poor became rich as a result of the rich getting richer
We need the public sector for one thing: safety - period. The public sector has done more to create an immoral society than any other factor. Leave the people alone. Give freedom a chance. Read Fr. Sicrico’s new book “Defending the Free Market”On the other hand if the rich are staying the same or not growing in wealth, then there is a problem with too much tax or entitlement. The balance should be that the rich are growing in wealth and the poor are being lifted out of poverty. Again, we need both the public and private sectors. They balance each other.