Saturday, December 14, 2013

Tom Woods on the Economic Views of Pope Francis

Tom writes:
I agree that it is preposterous to call the Pope a Marxist.
However, while I can’t speak for everyone, I suspect I am not alone in being upset by the following:
(1) The passages about markets and the economy are an embarrassment and will do serious damage coming from a man in his position. Rush Limbaugh may have gone over the top, but Rush’s were passing remarks that will be forgotten by next week. The statements by Francis will be waved in our faces by left-wing Jesuits from now until the end of the world. I can’t bring myself to be especially upset by Rush when I consider matters sub specie aeternitatis.
(2) The passages about markets and the economy don’t even seem especially Christian. As Peter Bauer said of Pope Paul VI’s disastrous Populorum Progressio (1967), whose faulty understanding of economic development and its preconditions no doubt increased the level of avoidable suffering in the world, “The spirit of these documents [he includes Octogesima Adveniens] is contrary to the most durable and best elements in Catholic tradition. They are indeed even un-Christian. Their Utopian, chiliastic ideology, combined with an overriding preoccupation with economic differences, is an amalgam of the ideas of millenarian sects, of the extravagant claims of the early American advocates of foreign aid, and of the Messianic component of Marxism-Leninism.”
(3) If the Pope is going to condemn the financial system, can there be any excuse for absolute silence about the world’s central banks? If the answer is that the Pope can’t be expected to be an expert on central banking, then what is he doing making these comments in the first place?
(4) We are told Pope Francis is bold, but his alleged boldness consists of doing and saying things that please the world. This is not how I define bold. He meets with representatives from every religion on earth, to whom he is kind and generous, but he has little pastoral sensitivity left over for the kind of faithful Catholic whom the post-Vatican II popes have all too often left hanging out to dry, and whom Francis himself regularly scolds. (These folks belong to the “‘no’ Church,” while he represents the “‘yes’ Church.”) He is in no way bothered by liturgical escapades that would horrify a civilized non-Catholic (this, after all, is a man who placed a beach ball, which he’d gotten at World Youth Day, on the altar of sacrifice at St. Mary Major), but spends his time persecuting normal Catholics, as in the ongoing case of the Franciscans of the Immaculate. Meanwhile, he assures everyone that he loves them. Unless you’re a traditional Catholic, in which case you will get kicked in the teeth.
The leftist passages in Evangelii Gaudium were simply the last straw for a lot of people, quite understandably.
I went through all this more systematically in my podcast on the subject.

12 comments:

  1. Pope's just trying to get people to see ...............

    WHAT THE FLUCK!
    At the same time American society was rocked by scandal after scandal along with terrible stories of the effect of growing inequalities. Politicians were bribed, policemen arrested and beat up innocent men and women, adulterated food was sold, and terrorists threw bombs. While the gap between rich and poor grew wider and wider.

    In a gripping narrative Tarbell described how Rockefeller's agents would swoop down on a region like Pennsylvania and use all kinds of ruthless and illegal tactics to take over small businesses and destroy the enterprising entrepreners who ran them.

    Like with the farmers, Rockefeller controlled the railroads that carried the oil - but Tarbell showed that he also used bribery, fraud, criminal underselling and intimidation to destroy anyone or anything that prevented him creating his giant monopoly.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/posts/WHAT-THE-FLUCK

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  2. The Pope's chief economic advisor is Jerry Wolfgang.

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    Replies
    1. We will know for sure if he attacks Gary north and references stoning and calls Ron Paul a racist. LOL

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    2. "The Pope's chief economic advisor is Jerry Wolfgang."

      LOL!! One troll advises another troll.

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  3. Dr. Steve Pieczenik has an interesting video about the Pope. Apparently Pope Francis' was involved with the Argentinian Junta.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRSkECZqQ8s

    Dr. Pieczenik served four presidents as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State under Nixon, Ford, Carter, and Bush Sr. and was a Senior Policy Planner under president Reagan.

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  4. Dr, Woods. I cited you several times in this so I thought I'd send along a link.

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/191527880/Reply-to-Robert-and-Robert-of-Just-Right-Media-Re-APOSTOLIC-EXHORTATION-EVANGELII-GAUDIUM

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  5. Does Tom believe the Pope in infallible?

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    1. Do you even know what infallible means in the Papal context?

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    2. Yes he does, on matters of faith and morals. But that doesn't mean he has to follow every word that comes out of the popes mouth.

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    3. "Yes he does, on matters of faith and morals."

      Well, *obviously* the pope is not infallible on matters of morals. As a matter of fact, judging by the church's role in the last decades pedophelia cases, it is past high time to not deem any church official infallible in matters of morals.

      You don't judge on a man on his position or occupation (or we would have to trust politicians too), but on his individual character.

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    4. "Tom Woods"...I'm sorry, who??

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