Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

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kaufmannphillips
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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by kaufmannphillips » Sun Jul 29, 2012 8:51 pm

steve wrote:
I was not aware that Judaism had ever produced the social results you are advocating.
I am not aware of everything that's going on out there, but here are a couple of case studies.
kaufmannphillips wrote:
But centuries of "Christian results" speak well enough for themselves.

steve wrote:
I was not aware that there have been centuries of "Christian results" from which to draw any conclusions. In my limited knowledge of history, I am not aware of even one century in which most people (including most who call themselves "Christians") have followed Christ's teachings. Therefore, as someone cleverer than me once quipped, "Christianity has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult, and not tried."
Again - we have an old discussion here: shall we gauge Christianity by its adherents or by its paragons?

But either way, we have centuries where Christianity has been unequal to handling the scope of human poverty.
steve wrote:
When someone asked you how you define the needs of the poor, you said that they have always been the same—food, clothing, shelter, healthcare, education. Without diminishing the validity of these needs, I would place (further back in the consideration) two other assets: the need for 1) character and 2) social (preferably family) connections.
Character formation would fall under the scope of education. Social connections are well-deserving of attention.
steve wrote:
Good character would include a good work ethic, which would be loathe to take charity without having done everything possible to earn one's way...
The last bit is overwrought. Rather, good character would be loathe to take charity without having made a decent effort at contribution to society. A slow-witted paraplegic might have to labor 100 hrs/wk to "earn their way" in an unregulated market. A society with good character would not require this of them. Rather, a society with good character will require that its constituents make decent efforts that befit their respective abilities.
steve wrote
Good character would include ... a lack of covetousness of what others have acquired...
One issue here is that people can acquire things that they cannot rightly retain for themselves.

A parable: There are one hundred smoots living in a forest. Every year, ten thousand smootberries ripen in the fall. Each smoot depends upon these berries to sustain them through the ninety-eight days of winter, eating one smootberry a day.

But then, one golden autumn, Dexter Smoot designs a smootberry harvesting machine, with which he can pick ten smootberries for every one that his fellow smoots are able to harvest. Dexter builds four machines and forms a partnership with three other smoots; and at the end of autumn, the remaining ninety-six smoots find themselves with only seventy-three or so smootberries in their pantries.

Dexter Smoot and his partners are thrilled with their success; since they each have seven hundred-plus smootberries, they proceed to paint their huts smootberry-red, and dye their caps in smootberry-juice, and take up the sport of smootberry-dodgeball, which is gratifyingly splattery.

What then will the other ninety-six smoots do, in the face of their shortfall? If this were a Grimm’s fairytale or a historical narrative, chances are they would rush the four colleagues, seize their smootberries, and play dodgeball with their ignominiously-removed heads. But in this parable, they resort to Elder Smoot, who intervenes to help the four partners see the wrongness of their ways, paving the way for redistribution of the remaining resources.


In our world, as in the smoot forest, it is possible for individuals to acquire resources that they cannot rightly retain for themselves.
steve wrote:
Social connections provide a safety net for those who, despite their very best intentions and diligent efforts, are unable to work and support themselves. If someone has good character, all other things being equal, this will enhance his social connections. When people of good character are connected socially (preferably as family members, or members of a voluntary association, like a religion), their voluntary working and sharing together will generally preclude any one of them dying of starvation or exposure. Given such connections, even in a dire economic environment, those who gather much will have no extra, while those who gather little will generally have no lack.
Of course, there are numerous occasions where the means of one social web are insufficient to the needs of its participants, and meanwhile, neighboring webs are abundant with unneeded resources. These disparities are far from uncommon, given social tendencies toward stratification and cliquishness between economic classes.

Furthermore, a nation is a social web - a real "social connection." When a nation establishes policies, this is "voluntary working and sharing together," insofar as nationhood is a voluntary association.
steve wrote:
As for healthcare, well, no one, including the government can guarantee anyone that he or she will be healthy. All health care availability is relative and limited to 1) the existence of remedies for a range of medical emergencies, and 2) the quantity of medicines and health workers available in proportion to the number of sick people. No government, no family, no amount of money, can guarantee that people will not get sick and die. We must content ourselves with such medical interventions as we may obtain without violating the rights of others, and then entrust ourselves to the hands of God.
If I see a man nearby who is trying to strangle a woman, there is no guarantee that I will be able to stop him. Does this mean I am not obligated to try, according to my capacity to do so?

The mere fact that there are limits to medical efforts does not vacate one's obligation to try to do what one can.

Now, if my neighbor is in critical need of medical attention, and the only obstacle to their receiving it is financial, then what right would I maintain to extraneous resources that I have on hand?

If my neighbor needs an appendectomy, but is denied it for lack of finances, what right do I have to hoard my Hawaiian vacation fund? Shall I excuse myself by entrusting my neighbor to the hands of G-d?

When I hoard what is necessary for my neighbor, but unnecessary for me, what I do is not right. And no one has a right to do what is not right.
steve wrote:
Many say that socialistic systems are a detriment to the nurturing of these phenomena, in that socialism does not encourage a non-covetous work ethic among the poor recipients of government welfare, and it does not encourage family and friends to voluntarily assist their poor, since it is assumed that some bureaucracy has assumed that responsibility.
There are different models of socialism. A decent socialist system will involve not only decent financial participation by citizens, but also their decent participation in labor. And if the system ensures that all citizens receive decent and equitable compensation for their labors, this not only would encourage labor, but also would temper covetousness.

As for family and friends assisting the poor - I will note once more the issue of stratification and cliquishness: poor people tend to have poor family and friends, and wealthy people tend to have wealthy family and friends. So relegating assistance to family and friends means that, as ever, poor circles will tend to bear the heavy burden (greater needs with lesser resources) and wealthy circles will tend to bear the light one (lesser needs with greater resources).

And is this fair? Should persons who have won the "friends & family" lottery enjoy ample satisfaction of their needs and luxuries besides, while those who did not win the lottery must do without and even suffer and die?

What is more, this sort of arrangement stands to poison the development of relationships that transcend economic class: on one hand, there is significant disincentive for a wealthy person to make a poor friend or intermarry with a poor family, when this increases the likelihood of having to subsidize those persons; on another hand, there is significant incentive for a poor person to play the "gold-digger," forming friendships and intermarrying for financial advantage.

How much better it is for persons to form friendships and family relationships without an eye to fiscal repercussions! Then the question is not "Can I afford to feed her three kids?," but rather "Can I love and edify these people?" On the flip side: the question is not "How will we eat if I don't marry this guy?," but rather "Will this fella feed my soul and the souls of my children?"

When a national agency attends to the material needs of citizens of all classes, then familial bonds and friendships can be formed more on the basis of the heart, and less on the basis of the stomach (so to speak).
kaufmannphillips wrote:
As for government policy - "establishing a healthy economic environment" involves legislation that mandates certain business practices: e.g., profit-sharing; employee participation in corporate governance; minimum compensation tied to the Consumer Price Index.

steve wrote:
What is your transcendental source of an ethic that regards these specific policies as essential to "fairness" or "healthiness" in an economic system?
The transcendental dynamic is equitablity. Equitability is not only basic to intuitive "fairness"; it derives from the principle of each person loving their neighbor as themself.

When one loves one's neighbor as oneself, this demands balance: their decent hopes, desires, and ambitions become as compelling as one's own; their well-being becomes as precious as one's own; their well-needed skill and effort become as respectable as one's own.

And so:
~ profit-sharing derives from recognizing that all participants in yielding a profit should equitably share in that profit, as a matter of equitable respect;
~ employee participation in corporate governance derives from equitable respect for each participant's insight and dignity;
~ minimum compensation derives from equitable concern for each participant's needs, and from equitable respect for each participant's contribution.

When participants in an economic system are deeply concerned about equitability, this yields a more balanced system - one less distorted by narrow vectors of interest and ambition - and this redounds to the healthiness of the system. Indeed, one common dynamic in unhealthiness (be it physical, mental, or social) is disproportion.
steve wrote:
I have been poor most of my life. Like most people, I am quite sensitive to being treated "unjustly." I worked at minimum-wage jobs for twelve years—most of them after the birth of my first child. However, even when we were dirt poor, it never occurred to me that my employers owed me a share of the company profits beyond the wage at which I had agreed to work, nor that I had any rightful claim to the making of decisions for a company that I neither founded nor owned.
It is not astonishing that it didn't occur to you; it can be difficult to escape the conventional thought of the society that we grow up in. But our society has warped hermeneutics: it is willing to commoditize a person's life and abilities, rather than engaging employment as an interpersonal relationship.

When Cassie looks at an employee as a commodity - as a quantity to be manipulated and used in the furtherance of her business - then so long as she can keep an adequate employee at the rate, she will pay minimum wage without the slightest concern. But if Cassie looks at an employee as a person - and not only a person, but her neighbor - then she will treat her employee with respect and with concern for their needs, and will pay them accordingly (if she is able).

And if Cassie looks at an employee as a participant in the business - not just a tool - then she will treat her employee with respect, and will involve them in the decision-making process of a business that they are building/operating/making together.

Cassie must ask herself: does my business use people?; or is it made up of people? Our society has become very comfortable with the notion that employers may use people, basically as appliances. But one cannot love one's neighbor and simply use them.
steve wrote:
As for minimum compensation, I was willing to work for what they offered. If I and other employees were not willing to work for what they offered, the company would have had to offer more to induce our participation. If I was not content with the wage, but other employees were content with it, I had the option of finding an employer who would treat me better—or else to be self-employed.
In an economy where there is a labor surplus - and where employers do not love their employees - one is hard put to seek better wages. And of course, many people are not adequately skilled or temperamentally suited to be self-employed; that is no sin, and no reason to have to settle for less than a living wage.
steve wrote:
Justice has to do with upholding the "rights" of other people—not their desires, nor even their needs. I have no intrinsic right to the fruits of another man's labor, nor has he the right to mine—though I am at liberty to sacrifice what is mine by right in order to assist another. My assistance to the poor, meeting their needs, is not a matter of justice, on my part, but of mercy.
Our ways of thinking about justice and mercy and “rights” may be profoundly different.

:arrow: I will characterize “justice” as that which accords with and accrues toward a holistic right state of being. One may compare this with biblical diction – q.v., the tz-d-q triad (see link1, link2).

What is more - when one considers tzedaqah (cf. link1, link2, Deuteronomy 24:13) and what it means to be a tzaddiq (see Psalm 37:21/25f., Proverbs 21:26, cf. Daniel 4:27), one may consider that there is more to justice than some persons imagine – particularly in terms of mercy and charity.

Incidentally, in Jewish tradition tzedaqah came to be the conventional term for charity (link1, cf. link2). Even in antiquity, the translators of the Septuagint often rendered tzedaqah with eleemosune, a Greek term based upon eleeo (mercy).

Accordingly, justice and mercy are not separate ethical matters; rather, justice and mercy are indivisible. Indeed, justice is mercy, and mercy is justice; justice is a merciful thing to do, and mercy is a just thing to do. And when justice is not attentive to the fulfillment of what is merciful, it is less than just; when mercy is not attentive to the fulfillment of what is just, it is less than merciful.

:arrow: You wrote: “Justice has to do with upholding the "rights" of other people…

Present-day Americans are inheritors of a philosophical tradition that emphasizes individual rights. Yet, different people in our society will cherish different catenae of "rights."

I don't have a catena - just a basic principle: "rights" are claims to the fulfillment of what is right. It is right for people to speak no slander; thus, Clarence claims a "right" not to be slandered. It is right for people to make restitution for fraud; thus, Shlomo claims a "right" to receive restitution for fraud.

It is right for people with resources to provide for widows and orphans; thus, Naomi and Annie claim a "right" to receive provisions from people with resources.

What is more - it is right for people to be merciful, in certain cases; thus, in certain cases, Ella claims a "right" to mercy. And rightfully so.

In all these matters, people claim a “right” to the fulfillment of what is right. So when one considers that justice is “that which accords with and accrues toward a holistic right state of being,” one can see that justice naturally will involve concern for "rights" – yet not just for some curtailed catena of “rights,” but for all rightful claims to fulfillment of what is right.

:arrow: You wrote: “Justice has to do with upholding the "rights" of other people—not their desires, nor even their needs.

How can this be so, if it is right to love one’s neighbor as oneself? As I have stated previously, when one loves one’s neighbor as oneself, then their decent hopes, desires, and ambitions become as compelling as one's own, and their well-being becomes as precious as one's own. This is right; and justice is about being in accord with and accruing toward holistic right.

Accordingly, justice has to do with engagement of the needs and decent desires of other people, in a way that is equitable with the way one engages one’s own needs and decent desires.

:arrow: You wrote: “I have no intrinsic right to the fruits of another man's labor, nor has he the right to mine…

Even under American convention, individual “rights” are understood to have limits. A classic example: the individual’s legal right to freedom of speech does not entitle them to unnecessarily cry “Fire!” in a crowded theatre. In such a circumstance, the individual’s “right” does not extend so far as to afford the unwarranted endangerment of others.

From my perspective, individual “rights” are fundamentally circumscribed according to their impact upon a holistic right state of being. To insist on individual rights to an extent that is detrimental to a holistic right state of being would be myopic. Indeed, at such an extent these “rights” would cease to be right – and thus would cease to be “rights.”

And so – an individual’s “right” to hold property comes into tension with another individual’s “right” to receive charitable provision. How shall these “rights” be resolved?

Once again to the well: one shall love one’s neighbor as oneself. From this we find that the principle for resolution is equitability.

And from this, we find that others have an equitable “right” to our attention and our consideration and our emotion and our hope and our desire and our ambition and our time and our abilities and our labors and our resources. And likewise, we have a “right” to theirs.

If somebody wishes to retain an exclusive “right” to the fruits of their heart and their mind and their hands, then – very simply – that person must take care not to have any neighbors. (Even then, they could not sustain such a “right,” if G-d was their neighbor – and chances are G-d would direct some measure of his “right” to engaging other people … thus breaching the unencumbered privilege of isolation.)

:arrow: You wrote: “I have no intrinsic right to the fruits of another man's labor, nor has he the right to mine—though I am at liberty to sacrifice what is mine by right in order to assist another.

Some people may wish to imagine that justice is an obligation, but mercy is not. In their view, justice is requisite; mercy is optional.

But if, in a certain instance, mercy is the right thing to do, then it is not merely optional; indeed, it is obligatory. It is never the case that the right thing to do is merely optional.

:arrow: You wrote: “My assistance to the poor, meeting their needs, is not a matter of justice, on my part, but of mercy.

But if the mercy is the right thing to do, then it is a matter of justice.

And if it is not the right thing to do, then it is not mercy.
steve wrote:
As a Christian, I am committed to both justice and to mercy. However, justice is an objective value, which must be upheld by every government. Mercy cannot be dictated by law. It is not objective, but subjective, personal and voluntary.
Justice is hardly objective; just ask a few people about how “justice” should handle the Aurora shooter.

In our society, we don’t just pass one dictate – “Do justice” – and run with it. Rather, we articulate a variety of laws that (hopefully) accrue toward the fulfillment of justice. And of course, these laws reflect subjective notions of justice that are found in our society.

The same would hold for mercy. One example – we could articulate a law that requires citizens to spend a certain amount of time monthly in some sort of service to disabled persons. That is more easily prosecutable than a vague “Do mercy.” And it might be consistent with subjective notions of mercy – and the responsibility to be merciful – in our society.
steve wrote:
If the government takes my money forcibly and gives it to a poor person, no one in this picture is being merciful. Bureaucrats are giving away the fruits of another man's (not their own) labor, and I am not acting through mercy but coercion.
Once again, some people may wish to think differently about justice and mercy: they may wish to imagine that justice is an enforceable obligation, but mercy is not.

I fail to see why the government would have the province to make people act rightly by abstaining from evil deeds, yet would not have the province to make them act rightly by performing good deeds. In either case, the individual’s heart might not be in accordance with their activity; in either case, potential detriment to others would be avoided; in either case, the individuals’ behavior would be directed into a healthier practice, which could in turn affect their mind/heart and the minds/hearts of those who dwell with them.

I will reiterate, for there are some Christians who see no value in doing the right thing if the heart is not right. On one hand, right-hearted or not, doing the right thing spares others from the harm of doing the wrong thing. And on another hand, right-hearted or not, doing the right thing can contribute to character formation: perhaps the doing will yield a breakthrough experience that transforms the heart; perhaps the doing will gradually yield a force of habit that contributes to the slow evolution of the heart; perhaps the doing will bring one into contact with others who are doing likewise, and their company will affect the development of the heart.
steve wrote:
If fairness means "justice," we will get on fine together in this discussion. However, if you are using the word "fairness" to mean "equal standards of living for all, regardless of the value of their labor," then I am going to have to hold out for a more rational defense of such a definition than I have seen presented.
:arrow: “Equitability” is a complex concern, which is not reduced to “equal standards of living for all, regardless of the value of their labor.”

We may differ on valuation of labor. I would consider decent effort by a disabled worker to warrant a decent living, even if their productivity was less than that of an average decent worker.

:arrow: I will warn against excessive attachment to rationality. Of course, I use rationality as a tool. But it is not the only tool, and there is no rational way to substantiate that human rationality is capable of discerning everything that is worth discerning.
steve wrote:
The Bible says taxes are "due" to the government because its agents are full-time workers in the service that God has assigned to them. This service is said to be the punishment of criminals and the praise of good behavior. ...

However, when a government arbitrarily decides to provide and charge for services that neither God nor the law of the land (in our case, the Constitution) authorizes, and to do so over the protests of the majority of its population at that, there is nothing that enables the government to do this but force.
:arrow: The Constitution can be construed quite reasonably to authorize building of roads and funding for public education and subsidization of citizens’ needs.

:arrow: I am unaware of where the bible claims to be the final word on political science. Of course, you may identify where I might have overlooked this claim.

As for the bible’s view on government, I will reiterate: national leaders are frequently spoken of as shepherds; and shepherds have a responsibility not only to defend their flock, but to pasture and water it as well. How did Joseph respond to the impending famine in Egypt? With a laissez-faire policy? Even Herod melted down palace gold to feed the needy in time of famine.

So what does a good shepherd do? A good shepherd doesn't leave lagging sheep to learn by consequences. No - a good shepherd swats and cajoles and carries and nurses and patiently and sacrificially does what is feasible, trying to help the laggards through.

Beyond this – sometimes the shepherd makes arrangements to obtain water and pasturage from other parties. Indeed, the shepherd may shear the flock and exchange the wool for access to grazing land and water. Now, some of the sheep may give more wool than others, but the good shepherd takes as much wool as is needed to ensure that the entire flock is fed and watered.

Indeed, the shepherd also will seek to provide veterinary care. If one or two of the sheep are ill, the good shepherd may exchange wool from many sheep, just to hire a veterinarian for the few.

And indeed, the good shepherd provides for things that the sheep might bleat their objections to. The shepherd might impose sheep dip on an entire complaining flock – and once again, the shepherd might exchange wool to do it.

In our society, every voter is a shepherd. And if I am a voter, the question is: will I be a good and prudent shepherd, or will I be a neglectful and naive shepherd? Do I expect the flock will naturally take care of itself, or do I expect that it will be necessary to intervene, in multiple ways, to make sure that all are cared for?

thrombomodulin
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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by thrombomodulin » Mon Jul 30, 2012 9:00 am

kaufmannphillips wrote: In socialism, the axial interest is society - how society will be structured, so as to meet the needs and interests of society. In capitalism, the axial interest is stuff - how stuff will be managed, so as to yield and acquire more stuff.

In one, the economy is about people; in the other, people are about the economy (n.b., the phrase "human capital"). In one, the significance of stuff is what it can do for people; in the other, the significance of people is what they can do for stuff.
Candlepower wrote:
By the way, Human Action is the title of the monumental work by Ludwig Von Mises. In it, he demolishes socialism. You ought to read it. It will help you understand economics.
If you "understand" it, how's about you make the points yourself. Surely that would be more advantageous for readers here than a ~900-page reading assignment.
Kaufmannphillips - your comment indeed reveals an ignorance of Human Action. For, in this work Mises expresses that the ends sought after pertain to the satisfaction of that which humans desire. The focus is on the needs and interest of human beings - not on stuff. The content of this book represents the foundation of capitalism: Mises, among other things, develops praxeology, subjective value theory, and carefully considers the crucial question of whether the means employed would attain the end sought after. Given your very high degree of interest in refuting capitalism as being inferior to socialism, I concur with Candlepower that you ought to read and gain an understanding of this work. As a follower of Mises's I will do my best to represent his argument as we continue to dialog on this forum, but understand that getting the information from a novice like myself in a very summarized form, is going to be inferior to reading from an expert in full detail.
kaufmannphillips wrote: all human efforts at justice involve the imposition of values upon others ....Et Frederic Footballeur a dit...
Right - but the issue is not whether or not there should be an absence of impositions, but rather discerning which impositions are just or unjust. The capitalist position is that the right to impose exists over the property that one owns, but does exist over property that one does not own.

Thus, one should say of the "Footballeur": I dispute the right to impose these plays contra the wishes of the owner of the playing field. The owner of the playing field may admit whichever players as he wishes (e.g. those who abide by certain rules), or expel those who disregard his wishes (e.g. those who do not abide by a curfew). I do not dispute my teammates' right to invent strategic plays, to practice them, to employ them in the midst of competition with other teams. He may do whatsoever he wishes - on his own property. Whether or not a player is wiser or more foolish is irrelevant.
kaufmannphillips wrote: Even under American convention, individual “rights” are understood to have limits. A classic example: the individual’s legal right to freedom of speech does not entitle them to unnecessarily cry “Fire!” in a crowded theatre. In such a circumstance, the individual’s “right” does not extend so far as to afford the unwarranted endangerment of others.
...
An individual’s “right” to hold property comes into tension with another individual’s “right” to receive charitable provision. How shall these “rights” be resolved?
On page 52 and 53 of For a new liberty, Murray N Rothbard observes that a correct ethical analysis of this case involves the application of property rights. Thus he demonstrates that one need not "circumscribe rights", but rather that property rights are foundational and the notion of a "right of free speech" should be rejected altogether. One avoids conflict by affirming negative rather than positive statements: For example, no conflicts result from the affirmation "you shall not murder", but conflicts can result from affirming "has a right to life". Another example: One should affirm than one person may not take property that belongs to another (i.e. "thou shall not steal") rather than one has a right to take ownership of stuff (i.e. "a right to receive provision").

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by steve » Mon Jul 30, 2012 7:28 pm

kaufmannphillips,

I will not have time over the next four weeks to reply to your post. However, I do not agree with your definition of "rights." My having a need does not give me an enforceable right to have the government force my neighbor to be charitable toward me. God, of course, has the right to require my neighbor to be charitable, or else to face consequences that God alone has the right to exact. "Vengeance is mine; I will repay." But this does not mean that any human agency—government, society, church or family—possesses God's right to punish a man's lack of mercy.

You made many references to things that are "right" to be done. I am an advocate of doing right things—whether they are enforceable by law or not. I am not a believer in unrestrained government power to enforce every outcome that the mood of its officers may categorize as "the right thing" for me to do.

You said that justice is not objective, and as a case in point, alluded to differing human opinions about what ought to be done to the Aurora shooter. I did not say that all people are equally informed about, or in sympathy with, the objective justice defined by God. However, God has defined justice, and has differentiated it from mercy and other qualities. Justice has its own range of meaning, as defined, I believe, in the second tablet of the decalogue. There, a person's right to his life, the inviolability of his marriage, his property, and his good name are safeguarded as rights not to be violated by others (all of these can be forfeit by the man's own criminal behavior, but not when the man is himself not a criminal). In the following chapters of Exodus, it makes it clear that these are the rights, which, if violated, should incur criminal penalties. This would define the function of government as defined by Paul and Peter.

You suggested that the government has as much right to force a man to do good as it has to for him not to do evil. This is neither self-evident, nor would a Christian, like myself, find any support for it in the teaching of Jesus or the New Testament. There is a difference. When I do what is unjust, I harm an innocent victim. When I withhold mercy in a given instance, I am not hurting anybody. For example, if there are ten beggars at my door, and I help five of them, but withhold assistance from the the remainder (either because I have reached the end of my expendable resources or I have judged that the remainder of my charity could more wisely support a better cause), I have not deprived the five who must then go beg elsewhere of any right that they possess. On the other hand, if I rob even one man, I have victimized him and violated his right to his property. It is good for the government to prosecute me for the latter, but the government has no right to tell me to whom my charity must be given.

Your idea of a business as an egalitarian collective is certainly not the only model that satisfies all participants. When employed, I myself prefer to leave the management to managers. I can decide whether or not they are offering me a fair wage. If not, there are options to me other than moving myself into a management role that does not appeal to me. Such collectives as you describe exist for those who desire them. They can exist under a free-enterprise system (like Israel's kibbutzim), for those attracted to such things. They should not be forced upon those who prefer a different model. A single man, without children, like yourself, might understandably find such community rewarding, as a sort of surrogate family. When I was single, I always lived in Christian community houses, for that very reason. When a man has a family for which to provide, I think, he will generally find the communal economy detrimental to a healthy family sovereignty.

You say that, in an economically depressed society, where there is a surplus of unemployed labor, my suggestions do not produce such ideal results as we would like. However, it may be unrealistic to anticipate ideal standards of living (regardless of political policies) during economically depressed seasons. We do have a tendency to become spoiled in times of easy prosperity, but we have no intrinsic right to it. My impression is that the countries that have communistic economies have created permanent economic depression for their citizens, except in cases, like China, where many of the features of western capitalism have been introduced. In a free-enterprise economy, it seems that such depressions come and go, whereas, in Communist countries, depression is essentially the norm.

Your parable about the berries presupposes a static and never-increasing quantity of berries that must be shared among the gatherers. In this, it does not correspond to the real world in which economies operate. Of course, you have already identified yourself as a communist, and, as such, the "pie-model" of wealth must be presupposed. There is one pie, and it must be divided equally. There will never be any more pies, so the man who gets a bigger share necessarily does so at the expense of another man, who must then settle for less. On this model, wealth and resources (more pies) are not able to be produced by labor and innovation, they just exist to be distributed.

In the real world, real wealth is laboriously mined, grown from the ground, harvested from renewable resources, reshaped by artisans and skilled builders, invented by ingenuity and manufactured by labor. There is not simply a certain amount of stuff to go around, so that we just need to think of the best method for getting equal amounts into everybody's hands. On this, we may simply have to disagree, since the pie-model is foundational to the communist's conception of justice. It is, however, not demonstrably valid, nor in keeping with the biblical teaching about generating wealth.

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by Paidion » Mon Jul 30, 2012 8:07 pm

Does Paul in this passage recommend the sharing of goods among Christians? Even if only temporarily?

I do not mean that others should be eased and you burdened, but that as a matter of equality your abundance at the present time should supply their want, so that their abundance may supply your want, that there may be equality. As it is written, "He who gathered much had nothing over, and he who gathered little had no lack."
(2 Corinthians 8:13-15)
Paidion

Man judges a person by his past deeds, and administers penalties for his wrongdoing. God judges a person by his present character, and disciplines him that he may become righteous.

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steve
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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by steve » Tue Jul 31, 2012 8:16 am

Yes, he absolutely does. However, he does not authorize the government to enforce this sharing. Like every Christian virtue, it is voluntary.

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Homer
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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by Homer » Tue Jul 31, 2012 9:04 pm

Interesting quote in Kathleen Parker's column in today's Washington Post:

Inasmuch as the welfare state is an instrument of centralized government, it is in conflict not only with personal freedom but also with Catholic teaching, as John Paul II noted in his 1991 encyclical “Centesimus Annus.” He wrote that the intervention of the state deprived society of its responsibility, which “leads to a loss of human energies and an inordinate increase of public agencies, which are dominated more by bureaucratic ways of thinking than by concern for serving their clients, and which are accompanied by an enormous increase in spending.”

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by steve7150 » Sat Aug 04, 2012 9:56 pm

Inasmuch as the welfare state is an instrument of centralized government, it is in conflict not only with personal freedom but also with Catholic teaching, as John Paul II noted in his 1991 encyclical “Centesimus Annus.” He wrote that the intervention of the state deprived society of its responsibility, which “leads to a loss of human energies and an inordinate increase of public agencies, which are dominated more by bureaucratic ways of thinking than by concern for serving their clients, and which are accompanied by an enormous increase in spending.”






Amen, and it should be self evident that the welfare state is an utter failure on every level to benefit humans. It drains energy, ambition,creativity,freedom and responsibility and creates dependency and an entitlement mentality within it's citizens and encourages laziness and child like behavior.
Every single socialistic country that is not lucky enough to be sitting on an ocean of natural resources is sliding into a sinkhole of debt and lack of productivity that they may never get out of.
The list starts with the Eurozone , I.e. Greece,Spain,Portugal,Italy,France,Ireland to start and is closely followed by almost any welfare state economy you can think of.
The crux of the problem with liberalism, socialism, welfare state societies is that they don't accept the human condition which left to it's own devices is like water, which will over time find the lowest level.
Even the Chinese who have only recently ventured into Capitalism called the Southern European Union "slothful".

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by Bud » Sat Aug 04, 2012 10:46 pm

Steve 7150, you wrote:
"The crux of the problem with liberalism, socialism, welfare state societies is that they don't accept the human condition which left to it's own devices is like water, which will over time find the lowest level." I am not a liberal or a socialist etc. I am I suppose an idealist, with Jesus being my ideal. It seems to me that Capitalism fails also if left to the unredeemed.
Malachi 3:16 Then those who feared the LORD spoke to one another, and the LORD gave attention and heard [it,] and a book of remembrance was written before Him for those who fear the LORD and who esteem His name. (NASB) :)

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by john6809 » Sun Aug 05, 2012 11:09 am

steve wrote:Yes, he absolutely does. However, he does not authorize the government to enforce this sharing. Like every Christian virtue, it is voluntary.
2 Corinthians 9:7 says, "So let each one give as he purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity; for God loves a cheerful giver." It seems to me that one of the central themes of Christianity is this idea that God is not interested in forcing people to do things that are right. He would desire that we do right out of a heart that is inclined to Him. That is what makes worship so pleasing to God. He won't force us to worship Him which makes it one of the very few things that we can actually give to God. Same goes with obedience and giving. It is to be voluntary with cheerfulness. God does have a way of evening things out but, judging from the story of the rich man and Lazarus, sometimes He chooses to do this in the next life. For some to suggest that rich men ought to be forcibly robbed of what they earned to even things out in this life seems inconsistent with scripture.

I like coffee - a lot! When somebody makes a fresh pot in our home, usually each person helps themselves. It would be alright for me to ask my wife to bring me a cup of coffee (and sometimes I do) and she would do so willingly and cheerfully. However, in my experince, the best tasting cup of coffee is the one that is delivered voluntarily, without my requesting it, but rather because it is a known fact that I would like a cup of coffee. I would not enjoy my coffee if I had forced my wife to deliver it to me. Unfortunately our society seems to think that they have a God-given right to be served with things they have not worked for.
"My memory is nearly gone; but I remember two things: That I am a great sinner, and that Christ is a great Savior." - John Newton

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Re: Alcohol & Welfare Programs: Topics on today's show

Post by steve7150 » Sun Aug 05, 2012 1:02 pm

" I am not a liberal or a socialist etc. I am I suppose an idealist, with Jesus being my ideal. It seems to me that Capitalism fails also if left to the unredeemed.










Yes Bud i agree with you. I just think the welfare state is uniquely structured to appeal to the lowest common denominator in humans and is about as an uninspiring system as anyone could create.
Capitalism is flawed because humans are flawed but i think it has mostly worked in this country at least through the 1990s. We now seem to be descending into socialism.

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