"The kind of man who wants the government to adopt and enforce his ideas is always the kind of man whose ideas are idiotic." ~ H.L. Mencken
The Fraud of "Social Justice"
Submitted by Anthony Gregory on Wed, 2010-09-08 03:00
Carl L. Bankston III on the cultural origins of this redistributivist horror.
0
Your rating: None
User Login
Search This Site
Recent comments
-
8 hours 10 min ago
-
9 hours 58 min ago
-
10 hours 50 min ago
-
1 day 18 hours ago
-
2 days 17 hours ago
-
3 days 1 hour ago
-
3 days 2 hours ago
-
3 days 5 hours ago
-
3 days 5 hours ago
-
3 days 15 hours ago
Root Strikers
Supporters
Merchandise
User Map
Latest Tweets
New recommended column on STR: Your Citizenship Is a Ticket to Serfdom http://t.co/mTj57vnTVR
2 weeks 5 days ago
New recommended column on STR: Where Zero Tolerance Is Overdue http://t.co/KCsQwiHVQC
3 weeks 3 days ago
New recommended column on STR: The Voluntary Voice (Book Review #4) http://t.co/6QCn3oykFR
4 weeks 3 days ago







Reprint Rights
Comments
The concept of "social justice" is Catholic in origin and older than this author would suggest. In the 1840s, Father Luigi Taparelli used the phrase to criticize the major economic theories at the time for ignoring moral philosophy and for undermining the unity of society by dividing it into competing classes. Since then, the Catholic Church has been clear about its condemnation of both socialism and unrestrained capitalism.
In Pope Pius XI’s 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo Anno, he praised laws that “undertake the protection of life, health, strength, family, homes, workshops, wages and labor hazards, in fine, everything which pertains to the condition of wage workers, with special concern for women and children,” but noted, “it is gravely wrong to take from individuals what they can accomplish by their own initiative and industry and give it to the community.”
I wrote column about this misunderstanding: http://www.politicalchristian.org/wordpress/2010/03/31/marxism-and-socia...
"Social Justice" is a term that has largely been hijacked by Statists and leftists, but the Church has condemned its mutant strain (liberation theology).
This author's arguments are good the way he sets up his paper, but his paper is seriously lacking in historical depth and context.