I agree with that mostly except that money can be manipulated much easier then land, resources and services. However it is even possible to manipulate the relationships between people regarding land, resources and services.
— christian2017
The problem with using commodities and natural resources directly for barter is that they have limited application. Money have unlimited application, abstractly, hence transacting with them is much more powerful.
I agree, but during the middle ages they did have monasteries which many poor families sent their children too.
— christian2017
Even if the politics in this regard were standard, I suspect that a lot of the wealth of the church was accumulated through state funding, land ownership, or donations from the wealthy aristocracy. But this wealth came at the expense of the poor, whose rights were trumped in favor of their lords. Therefore, the pity offered in this way was not an entirely positive effect.
Many of the problems we have today are a distant extension of the industrial revolution. Automation, Globalism and money manipulation have made it hard for many poor people to be self sufficient.
— christian2017
The industrial revolution was even worse then the middle ages. And that says something. It is one of the grimmest periods in human history. When someone talks about the success of western capitalism, I always think about the initial price that was paid - slavery in south US and children working to death in Great Britain. Nonetheless, times have changed for the better.
Regarding money manipulation, as I already said - this is abuse of an instrument. This is not an excuse for the misfortune it causes, but the balance will be judged differently depending on the person's situation. If you take a non-electural government scheme for central welfare distribution, the same issue arises, because you have to rely on correctly functioning meritocratic system of appointments to office, and if it fails, you have a different kind of monster.
Regarding globalism, I am not sure what you mean. Different people have different issues with it. Do you mean the introduction of cheap labor into countries with high economic standards, cultural infusions, price pressure from imports, etc. To be honest, I do think that some of those effects are indeed abusive in a very specific technical sense (which I don't want to elaborate right now). At the same time, in any competitive situation, the person who is willing to sacrifice the most defines the expected performance - there is no level playing field. This turns any competition into terror experience for the participants. But unfortunately, I believe that natural competition is required for unbiased evaluation of performance - anything else is a test of some kind of norm or preference, which is not an objective test.
The suicide and opiod abuse rate in the US is extremely high.
— christian2017
I cannot comment on that. Maybe the capitalism in the US is managed poorly compared to other countries indeed. Yet, I don't think that I have ever seen a statement that capitalistic countries have higher suicide and substance abuse factors in general.
I would argue many modern Americans have become very fierce in their outlook on life due to the fact that in some sense American devalue human life more than any other people in the past 2000 years. I believe the Medieval man very often acted as a coward because they enjoyed life more than we do.
— christian2017
Maybe, or maybe they didn't know any better. Notice the rebellion I outlined in my second reply. It hasn't ended well for the poor folk. — simeonz
Across the board, food stamps are deceptively a form of subsidizing goods such as food. There's a lot of socialism in America if you're poor enough to qualify for it.
Marginalized minorities, don't really get that much love though. — Wallows
This problem is actually going to get much worse, and I believe may cause the dissolution of societies as we know them today. It is frequently ignored, but it is the elephant in the room, and will have to be addressed sooner or later.I don't have a problem with most of what you said. I would like to point out that automation has caused many jobs to disappear. Believe it or not automation has even taken away software development jobs. Developing software 50 years ago believe it or not was more contingent on an understanding of discrete mathematics where as in this modern age it is surprisingly much more competitive and relies more on memorizing APIs. — christian2017
I understand your sentiment, and as I said, the use of cheap labor or the export of industries is abusive, because it transfers the economical welfare accumulated through the people of one country to a different location, with the difference becoming personal wealth of the entrepreneur. Even though, personally speaking, my country can use the investments, I cannot deny that I see a "glitch" in that.As far a globalism goes, i would rather be tempted to buy a $200 dollar toaster made in my own country then a $8 dollar toaster made in china, given the fact that I would more likely be paid a living wage if i worked in a factory.
I believe people in America would be more happy with a better job and at the same time having less material possessions due to the cost of labor. — christian2017
I think that most people will agree that banking and stock trading (especially day-trading), even though being legitimate ways of making money, leave a lot to be desired in terms of ethical underpinnings.I see that we're talking about money, so I might as well comment that the only instance where I picked out the fundamentally humanistic trait of Jesus, was his encounter with lenders/shylocks/money-lenders in the Bible. I don't think there's another instance in the New Testament where Jesus is infuriated more-so than towards money-lenders. — Wallows
I think that most people will agree that banking and stock trading (especially day-trading), even though being legitimate ways of making money, leave a lot to be desired in terms of ethical underpinnings. — simeonz
My bad. I thought you were serious there. — simeonz
Yes, but money does not necessarily equate prosperity. I could make the argument that the unshaken faith of its followers is a much more important asset for any church.Semi-serious. I mean, if you account for all the years the Catholic Church has been around, and combine their liquid and non-liquid assets, along with probably being the first to invest in the stock markets, you should end up with a hefty sum of money accumulated throughout the years, no? — Wallows
Yes, but money does not necessarily equate prosperity. I could make the argument that the unshaken faith of its followers is a much more important asset any church. — simeonz
A question that arose in that thread, that concerns me is why aren't the majority of Abrahamic religions more left-leaning rather than being conservative in nature?
Now, I have no idea how to approach this question, rather than state the deviation from the norm that is the US. We had people like Max Weber, who grounded or reified the values of Christianity into Protestant work ethics and its more serious derivative being Calvinism, into being compatible with capitalism and with that enlightened self-interest.
Yet, having been influenced by the more mainstream version of Catholicism, which has been de facto eliminated from public discourse in the US, for whatever reason, I feel that socialism or in a more extreme version, even communism are the actual philosophies of Christianity, given a hard reading of the Bible.
Does anyone agree with this sentiment?
Why or why not? — Wallows
To be fair back then there weren't any machinery that made everything so accessible. So naturally people worked hard. To be fair socialism and capitalism was post Catholicisms time. We created these systems after we mastered trading. Now everyone has access to everything and everyone "can" get anything. — Reverie
In Australia, the govermment has always relied on Catholicism to supplement its health and education systems, which makes for a complex political relationship that seems to create a kind of conservative socialism - at least since the 1970s. — Possibility
The idea was that it shouldn’t matter who appeared to have political or social authority, there is a universally recognised positive ethics that transcends, rather than overrides, any illusion of external control. — Possibility
Do go on, Australia has always fascinated me... — Wallows
Cool point, man. I do wonder if the money changers and the clearing of The Second Temple by Jesus, was in any shape or manner a negative ethic shunned by Jesus? — Wallows
There is a simple and utterly natural reason for this.A question that arose in that thread, that concerns me is why aren't the majority of Abrahamic religions more left-leaning rather than being conservative in nature? — Wallows
Since about the 1850s, small groups of Catholic sisters (mostly Sisters of St Joseph) have provided low cost education and health care for remote communities where there was insufficient public education or healthcare available. — Possibility
Yeah, so why does the religiously oriented right hate on it so much, and this isn't something exclusive to the right in the US, also. Centrists like Clinton or Obama, have been staunchly opposed to anything resembling welfare, even if it is economically rational to embrace it!
Yes. Jesus was not a Christian, but a Jewish reformer. Because he preached to the "dispossessed", and understood how the Romans would react to his rabble-rousing, he anticipated a period of extreme hardship for his followers, preceding the "end of the age". That may be why he advised a communal lifestyle of mutual support : "They had all things in common". (Acts 2:42, 4:32)Christianity started off as the religion of the dispossessed. After a period of class warfare the ruling class (polytheistic) adopted the religion of the lower classes and turned it into the state religion (Constantine). This was the formation of Catholicism. A new counter revolution happened under the banner of Protestantism and this was also eventually adopted by the ruling classes (Northern Europe). The ruling class is and always will be right-wing and any religion they adopt will always be as such interpreted. — ovdtogt
he anticipated a period of extreme hardship for his followers, preceding the "end of the age". That may be why he advised a communal lifestyle of mutual support : "They had all things in common". — Gnomon
Ironically, the current Pope*1 seems to be leaning leftward — Gnomon
I agree. Most Catholics I have spoken to truly despise the words and actions of the current pope. This thread was a great topic but in heart I just don't see Catholicism as a preacher of Socialism considering the amount of individualistic freedom the Bible preaches. — Reverie
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