The Lost Condemnations of Capitalism
The Lost Condemnations of Communism of Vatican II make clear that communism is opposed to Catholic faith and morals, but so is capitalism.
The Lost Condemnations of Communism of Vatican II make clear that communism is opposed to Catholic faith and morals, but so is capitalism.
Years ago, St. John Paul II critiqued the economics of globalization, and raised serious ethical questions about the way it is implemented.
Today we are obsessed by the desire to keep prices down. Nevertheless, the cult of minimum prices can have some nasty consequences.
After the massive floods in Texas caused by Hurricane Harvey, even the harshest judge of the poor could hardly ask, “Why don’t they work?”
If capitalism is merely the use of capital, the first capitalist was the first of our ancestors to pick up a stick and use it.
There are two passages from Sacred Scripture which, taken together, illustrate well the place which economic activity should occupy in human life.
The beneficial efficiency that market competition can sometimes produce is in no way a substitute for intelligent concern for the common good.