Posts Tagged ‘Roman Catholic Economics’
Ecclesiastical Megalomania, Ep.1: Introduction
Posted in Videos, tagged Ecclesiastical Megalomania, John Robbins, Roman Catholic Economics, Roman Catholic Social Teaching on April 17, 2020| Leave a Comment »
Mexico, Mass Migration, and the Example of Moses Part 12: Strangers No Longer, Odds and Ends (A)
Posted in Immigration, Politics, tagged Antichrist, Babylonian Harlot, Exsul Familia, Roman Catholic Economics, Roman Catholic Politics, Roman Catholic Social Teaching, Roman Church-State, Strangers No Longer, Universal Destination of Goods on November 18, 2018| 1 Comment »
We seek to measure the interests of all parties in the migration phenomenon against the guidelines of Catholic social teaching and to offer a moral framework for embracing, not rejecting, the reality of migration between our two nations.
– USCCB and the Catholic Bishops of Mexico in Strangers No Longer
Over the past three weeks (please see here, here and here), this author has examined in some detail the document Strangers No Longer
(SNL), authored jointly by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and their counterparts in Mexico. The main purpose of SNL, as the quote at the top of the page indicates, is to bring to bear the Social Teaching of the Catholic Church on the issue of migration between Mexico and the United States.
The three preceding posts on SNL represent my attempt to demonstrate some of the serious, antichristian ideas in the document. To that end, I have analyzed the errors in three broad categories, noting that SNL is 1) a Marian document, 2) a socialist document, and 3) a globalist document.
After considering the express and implied propositions found in SNL, it is this author’s conclusion that the ideas put forth by the bishops in SNL are not only harmful to the people of the United States, but destructive to the point that they imply the end of the United States as an independent nation. Further, it is this author’s contention that the implied collapse of the US is not some accidental by-product of the ideas found in SNL, but actually one of the bishops’ intended effects.
That said, today I would like to turn my attention to a few additional issues in SNL. These are issues that may not fit neatly into one of the three categories listed above – Marian, socialist, and globalist – but which nevertheless are worthy of commentary.
Mexico, Mass Migration, and the Example of Moses Part 4: Rome and the Enormous Lies of Exsul Familia
Posted in Immigration, Roman Catholicism, Uncategorized, tagged Economics, Exsul Familia, Immigration, Migration, Refugees, Roman Catholic Economics, Roman Catholic Social Teaching, Roman Church-State, Rome and Immigration, Universal Destination of Goods on July 15, 2018| 4 Comments »

Mexican president elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador believes that mass migration to the United States is the right of all North Americans and all people throughout the world. Further, he promised to defend that right. So where did Lopez Obrador get such a strange idea? From the teachings of the Roman Church-State, of course.
Have you ever stopped to think about your property? Specifically, have you ever considered the question, By what right do I own anything?
Since this is a blog post, you’re probably reading these words on some sort of electronic device. Maybe you’re using a smart phone or a tablet or a desktop or laptop computer. So let me ask my original question to you in a little different way, By what right do you claim ownership of the electronic device you’re using to read this post?
Suppose you’re reading this post on your tablet. Perhaps you’d say to me, “I own this table, because I went to the store and bought it.”
Okay, but let’s take that back another step and ask this question, By what right did the store sell you the tablet? You may say to me, “Well, the store bought it from an electronic wholesaler.”
But then that raises a further question, Where did the wholesaler get the right to sell the tablet to the store where you bought it. “From the manufacturer or course,” you may reply.
Alright, so how did the manufacturer rightfully get the parts to assemble the tablet? “The manufacturer bought them from a supplier,” you may retort.
This is really becoming tiresome, I know. But still, I can’t help asking, Just where did the parts supplier get the materials, the silicon for example, to manufacture the integrated circuits that are essential to making your table work?
“Well, quite obviously, the parts manufacturer bought the silicon from a silicon supplier,” you would answer.
“Very well,” I’d reply, “but let me ask you this, Since the base materials for silicon metal used to make your device’s integrated circuits are gravel and items such as coke, coal and wood chips, where did the supplier of silicon get the right to use these items?”
“They bought them from gravel and coal miners and from suppliers of wood products,” would likely be you answer.
Alright already. So where did the gravel miners, the coal miners and the suppliers of wood products get the right to use the land from which they took the raw materials?
“Naturally, they bought the land from Old MacDonald, who figured he could do better by selling his land to the coal miners than spending the rest of his life raising chickens and cows and pigs.”
Okay, okay, okay. Lest this become overly wearisome for the both of us, let me ask just one last question. Where did Old MacDonald get the title to his farm in the first place?
“Well, I guess he bought it from the previous owner, maybe it was the bank or some other farmer.”
But, BUT, BUT!…No, I’m not going to go there. I promised that would be the last question, and I’ll keep my word.
I hope, though, that this somewhat annoying line of questioning has raised your curiosity about the issue of ownership. Just how is it that we can claim the right to own something? Is it even possible to rightly claim ownership, that is, the exclusive right to use and dispose of a particular good or service, or should we all be collectivists holding all things in common?
Now you may be thinking at this point, “Steve that’s all very interesting, but just what on earth does any of this have to do with your main point of refuting Exsul Familia, Rome’s position paper on immigration, migration, and refugee resettlement?
The short answer is, quite a lot. Let’s take a look at it.
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