ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

The Vatican's Monetary Wisdom

Redistribution Of Wealth Is Theft!



But they don't observe the 10 Commandments anyway, especially the one about idolatry.



See also:



Rerum Novarum

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/rerum-novarum.html



Centesimus Annus

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/centesimus-annus.html



Caritas In Veritate

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/caritas-in-veritate_05.html



The Popes Plans On Organizing Political, Economic And Religious Activities Worldwide

http://www.scribd.com/doc/22319643/Pope-Plans

Amplify’d from www.wallstreetjournal.com

The Vatican's Monetary Wisdom

More than 'greed,' fiat money and central-bank policies caused the financial crisis.

On Monday, the Vatican released an 18-page document titled "Toward Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in the Context of a Global Public Authority." Since then, it has been celebrated by advocates of bigger government the world over.

What's ignored is that the document—released to stimulate debate, not offer official doctrine—embraces a sound economic theory concerning the cause of the world financial crisis: the breakdown of the postwar Bretton Woods monetary system and the unleashing of fiat currencies and central-bank printing presses.

Let's look at a representative passage, while keeping in mind several important markers: 1971 was the year that the Nixon administration killed the gold standard, and along with it Bretton Woods and hard currencies; in the early 1980s, financial deregulation in many countries removed the last major barriers to virtually unlimited amounts of credit; and the 1990s was the decade when the drive to suppress interest rates became the common policy of central banks around the world.


Since the 1990s, we have seen that money and credit instruments worldwide have grown more rapidly than revenue, even adjusting for current prices. From this came the formation of pockets of excessive liquidity and speculative bubbles which later turned into a series of solvency and confidence crises that have spread and followed one another over the years.


A first crisis took place in the 1970s until the early 1980s and was related to the sudden sharp rises in oil prices. Subsequently, there was a series of crises in the developing world, for example, the first crisis in Mexico in the 1980s and those in Brazil, Russia and Korea, and then again in Mexico in the 1990s as well as in Thailand and Argentina.

The speculative bubble in real estate and the recent financial crisis have the very same origin in the excessive amount of money and the plethora of financial instruments globally.






Bloomberg

Under the gold standard, there was a check on the whim of financial masters. The Vatican seems to understand this.


This is sophisticated economic analysis. People are occupying Wall Street, blaming capitalism, speculation and greed, but rare is the analysis that traces all these problems back to the structural change in money that was brought about in the early 1970s.

We went from a hard-money regime, in which there were restrictions on the power of central banks and financial institutions to create money and credit, to one where money became purely paper. There were no restrictions remaining on the power of governments to finance unlimited debt. Banks could create credit seemingly without limit. Central banks became the real power in the world economy.

None of this was true under a gold standard. That system limits the expansion of credit by an indelible physical fact. There was a limit, a check, a rule that went beyond the whim of financial masters and politicians. The Vatican seems to understand this.

But discerning the disease and finding the cure are very different undertakings, and here the document falls short. It imagines a new world central bank and political authority that will rule without "any partial vision or particular good" but rather seek "the common good." Its decisions should "be made in the interest of all, not only to the advantage of some groups, whether they are formed by private lobbies or national governments."

Somehow, with an intelligence never before discovered in government bureaucracies, these proposed global authorities would create "socio-economic, political and legal conditions essential for the existence of markets that are efficient and efficacious."

Contrary to what is being said, this document presumes the existence and continuation of "free and stable markets." The problem is that the Vatican imagines that a "world central bank" and a "global public authority" can do this with more competence than national governments that have a checkered history in this regard.

It was centralization that caused this mess in the first place. Central banks created paper money, easy and limitless credit, and the moral hazard that accompanies them. Why should we believe that more centralization is the solution when experience suggests precisely the opposite?

Many people who favor free markets worry about the implications of the Vatican document. And there is no question that it will be used around the world to stir up political mischief. It will also be used to convince the Catholic faithful that big-government solutions are morally justified. But let's not forget that there are really two parts to the document: the diagnosis and the prescription. We should embrace the former and eschew the latter.


Fr. Sirico is president of the Acton Institute in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Read more at www.wallstreetjournal.com
 

Martin Richling: Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor and Divisive “Heretic” Par Excellance: Update I

Amplify’d from theunhivedmind.com

Martin Richling: Jesuit Temporal Coadjutor and Divisive “Heretic” Par Excellance: Update I

Posted by EJP on Oct 28th, 2011

http://www.vaticanassassins.org/2011/10/martin-richling-jesuit-temporal-coadjutor-and-divisive-heretic-par-excellance/

In finalizing my exposure of Martin Richling as the divisive heretic that he is, who, I suspect is secretly working for the Jesuit Papacy, I must first premise this article with an apology. It was me who recommended this man having befriended me in the past. It was me who ASSUMED (making an ASS out of ME) that he was sound in the faith and therefore recommended my supporters, friends, brethren and church members to be instructed at his website. You have my deepest apologies and God has this confession of sin as per I John 1:9. All of this damage inflicted by heretic Martin Richling is MY FAULT and I am truly sorry!

Now, to the foremost doctrines of this notable heretic, Martin Richling (hereinafter, “MR”). This is a succinct summation of points taken from my broadcast “Biblical Truth in History and Prophecy” given on Monday and Tuesday, October 24th and 25th, 2011, hosted by Liberty Radio Live. Please review at your interest. Before beginning with my points the following preface was neglected to be stated on either broadcast.

PREFACE

In the beginning of his “Bible School” on-line videos (which I consider to be essentially condescending, brainwashing sessions) he teaches the AV1611 is the ONLY Authority for the English-speaking Christian. Notice he departs from the Apostle Paul’s doctrine of Final Authority followed by all the Protestant and Baptist Churches as per their publilc confessions of faith. This means the underlying Hebrew and Greek Scriptures (Hebrew Masoretic Text and Greek Textus Receptus—the basis for both the German Luther Bible and the English Tyndale Bible, the AV1611 in its final form) which Scriptures God has DIRECTLY INSPIRED (II Timothy 3:16) and PROVIDENTIALLY PRESERVED (Proverbs 12:6-7) can be discarded into the trash can. This is the doctrine of heretics Dr. Peter Ruckman and his sister heretic, Gail Riplinger—who, as a woman, should never be teaching doctrine in the first place! This, my friends, is the damnable doctrine of “duel inspiration,” specifically, that we, since 1611, have a newly authoritative, Directly Inspired English Bible that replaces the first (and only) Directly Inspired Hebrew and Greek Bible. As Ruckman states, “the English corrects the Greek!” This is MR’s first and foremost heresy, it to serve as the foundational springboard into a heresy-fraught world of iniquity. For the true Church/Body of Christ has never embraced such a doctrine in its 1900-year history save with the beginning of heretic Peter Ruckman in the early 1960s. This doctrine is novel; this doctrine is new; this doctrine is unknown to the past history of the Church/Body of Christ; this doctrine is unfounded in the DIRECTLY INSPIRED Word of God—the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures. For in no place do JEHOVAH’s Hebrew and Greek Scriptures state that a TRANSLATION will replace their final authority as being the Directly Inspired and Providentially Preserved Word of God. No Place!

Now God has chosen to build his Church/Body of Christ with translations—translations from the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures. Christ has not built his Church/Body of Christ by circulating his Hebrew and Greek Scriptures among the nations, his ministers insisting that all nations be first instructed in Hebrew and Greek. It is a matter of simple history that God has built his Church with multiple translations—translations derived from the DIRECTLY INSPIRED and PROVIDENTIALLY PRESERVED Hebrew and Greek Scriptures. (This is why the Jesuits in their damnable Counter-Reformation Council of Trent (1545-1563), utterly curse translating the Bible into the “vulgar tongues” of the common man. This is what both Luther and Tyndale accomplished for which they were forever “accursed and condemned” by Satan’s Roman Papacy!)

And why does Satan’s Roman Papacy prohibit the translating of the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures (which are not “the Scriptures” according to the Council of Trent, but rather Jerome’s wicked Latin Vulgate!)? Because those translations are also “the Scriptures,” “the Word of God” and are “Inspired”—-though INDIRECTLY by translation. (In departing from this critical fulcrum of truth the Dean Burgon Society (DBS), via Dr. D. A. Waite, loses its balance therefore contending that no translation is “inspired,” of course not directly inspired, but not even indirectly inspired! Your Editor finds this INCREDIBLE to hold that the AV1611 is considered by the DBS to be “the Scriptures” and “the Word of God,” but not “Inspired.” Thus, the Dean Burgon Society appears to be, Neo-Orthodox, i.e., holding that the translations merely “contain” the Word of God, but are not—in their word-for-word entirety—the Word of God!) Therefore, every word, phrase, sentence and paragraph are INDIRECTLY inspired in every Reformation Bible TRANSLATION derived from the Hebrew Masoretic Text and Greek Textus Receptus—even the clarifying phrases as found in the AV1611 as per “he hath quickened” (Ephesians 2:1), “the free gift came” (Romans 5:18), “God forbid” (Romans 6:2), “but he that acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also,” (I John 2:23), etc. To the exclusion of “God forbid” (which is a wonderful paraphrase for a powerful Greek phrase), these are clarifying phrases, inserted by the Spirit-led (Romans 8:14), learned and godly forty-seven men, which have been copied and repeated from nearby scriptures within the text and thus are “the Scriptures” added for a better understanding of the passage at hand.

This is called “the principle of clarification,” which principle was employed throughout the text of every Reformation Bible translation. Luther did this; Tyndale did this; and the AV1611 translators perfected the principle evidenced by the highest prose of any English Bible including the Geneva Bible! Though we have the Scriptures—the Indirectly Inspired Word of God—in our epic English AV1611 translation, the principle of clarification must be employed in certain instances. This principle of clarification is set forth in the Presbyterian Westminster Confession of Faith (1647) hammered out in Scotland about the time of the end of the Black Pope’s First Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648). As recited on pages 17-20 in your Editor’s 92-page “Confession of Faith” under “The Church” found on his website, we read in Chapter I, Article VIII of the Westminster Confession:

“The Old Testament in Hebrew, (which was the native language of the people of God of old,) and the New Testament in Greek, (which at the time of the writing of it was most generally known to the nations,) being immediately inspired by God, and by his singular care and providence kept pure in all ages, are therefore authentical; so as in all controversies of religion, the church is finally to appeal unto them. But because these original tongues are not known to all the people of God, who have the right unto and interest in the scriptures, and are commanded, in the fear of God, to read and search them, therefore they are to be translated into the vulgar language of every nation unto which they come, that the word of God dwelling plentifully in all, they may worship him in an acceptable manner, and, through patience and comfort of the scriptures, may have hope.” [Emphasis added]

The following are examples of clarifying a few words in our AV1611 with their underlying Greek source words. We are not correcting the text, but merely clarifying the text, giving further understanding while vindicating our AV1611 Reformation Bible:

1. Matthew 28:1

Av1611 reads “In the end of the sabbath, . . .”. The noun translated “sabbath” is plural, “sabbaths.” This is translated in the singular to focus on the sabbath after which Christ arose early in the morning of the First Day (6:00 pm Saturday night to 6:00 am Sunday morning, as Hebrew days are first Evening and then Morning). Hence, we have no error in translation but a clarification is needed. Why the plural form of the noun, while in the same verse the same noun in its plural form is used for the entire week of days which is no surprise? Because in AD 32 the Passover fell on a Wednesday-night/Thursday-day (6:00pm-6:00am). The following day Thursday-night/Friday-day was not the regular sabbath, but “an High Day,” the first day of the feast of Unleavened Bread (John 19:31). This day was to be a sabbath to Israel, a holy convocation, no work to be done therein (Lev. 23:7). This was the first sabbath occurring on the 15th of Nisan (Thursday-night/Friday-day). Then came the normal, weekly Sabbath (Friday-night/Saturday-day), hence the second consecutive sabbath. Obviously, there were two consecutive, back-to-back “sabbaths” which fact is recorded in Matthew 28:1.

2. Revelation 10:6

AV1611 reads “. . . that there should be time no longer.” The noun for “time” is “chronos” which meaning is determined by the text. Here it concerns a period of time that has elapsed and should be understood to mean “delay of time,” not merely time. For when the seventh trumpet sounds and the Second Coming of Christ occurs, all the mystery of God is to be finished and all the prophets have foretold is to be finished or completed—which includes Christ’s Second Coming to Israel and finally sitting on his earthly throne of David (Luke 1:32-33 as per Isaiah 9:6-7), the throne of his glory (Matthew 25:31). Thus, time is not at an end, but the delay of time between the suffering of Christ and the glory that should follow (I Pet. 1:11) is completed, is finished, is no longer.

3. John 21:15-17

AV1611 translates two separate Greek nouns for love as “love” throughout the narration. The first noun is “agapas” meaning a sacrificial love. The second is “phileo” meaning a fondness. Christ asks Peter if he has a sacrificial love for him; Peter answers that he is fond of him. The second time Christ asks Peter if he has a sacrificial love for him. Peter again replies that he is fond of him. The third time Christ asks Peter if he is even fond of him. Peter was grieved and said that Christ did know that he was fond of Christ. Now there is no error in translation, as it was correct and adhered to the principle of brevity with simplicity for memorization purposes. But the entire narration cannot be fully understood without knowing the difference between the two Greek verbs employed therein.

Clarification Summarized

These are examples of the right use of clarifying the AV1611 or any other Reformation Bible translation with its directly inspired and preserved Master, the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures as defined above. The AV1611 is not corrected for there are no errors; rather, it is enhanced. The men generally responsible for this high responsibility are the pastor-teachers and teachers, men who have been given those spiritual gifts by the Holy Spirit (Eph. 4:11). It is for this reason these men, who are in fact elders in the faith and engaging in this difficult and taxing responsibility of laboring in “word and doctrine” for the edification of the Church/Body of Christ, are to be given “special honor” by other believers in the local Church (I Tim. 5:17), but not a blind obedience. It is these men who are to guard the flock of God from wolves seeking to devour the Lord’s people as stated in Acts 20:29-30:

“For I know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock.

“Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.”

Martin Richling is one such ravenous wolf speaking perverse things while drawing disciples after himself. Other heresies of MR are as follows:

1. MR believes the Romans’ Road is “the road to hell.”

2. MR believes the gospel is Romans 3:24-26 as opposed to gospel defined by the Apostle Paul in I Corinthians 15:1-4.

3. MR believes in a novel doctrine, uniquely of his own creation, which he titles “The Establishment Commandment” supposedly found in Romans 16:25-26. He preaches that one is not established in the faith unless one embraces this heresy which acts as a springboard into a cesspool of other heresies.

4. MR believes that the city of Revelation 17 is not Rome but Vatican City. Only Rome was built on seven hills/mountains (the underlying Greek word being translated both “mountain” and “hill” in Luke 9:28, 37) and remains so to this day as per Revelation 17:9. Vatican City, on the other hand, was created by Jesuit Pope Pius XI and Fascist Italian dictator Benito Mussolini in 1929 via the Lateran Treaty facilitated by Jesuit Pietro Tacchi-Venturi.

5. MR believes that the Christian is not to be aware of the doctrines, deeds and history of the papacy now under full sway of the devil’s military Society of Jesus. He perverts the true meaning of Romans 16:19 as a justification for his discouraging any pursuit of knowledge of the Jesuit Order, while ignoring the clear exhortation of II Corinthians 2:11, that we should not be ignorant of “the devices” of Satan—which devices include his greatest second cause, the Society of Jesus/Society of Horus!

In conclusion, the Word of God has given its verdict for convicted heretic Martin Richling:

Romans 16:17-18

“Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them.

“For they that are such serve not our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly; and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple.”

Titus 3:10-11

“A man that is a heretick after the first and second admonition reject;

“Knowing that he that is such is subverted, and sinneth, being condemned of himself.”

Galatians 1:6-9

(For all those who now blindly follow this obstinate heretic, heed this warning):

“I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you unto the grace of Christ unto another gospel;

“Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ.

“But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which you have preached unto you [I Corinthians 15:1-4], let him be accursed.

“As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have received [I Corinthians 15:1-4], let him be accursed.”

UPDATE:

The following is an analysis of the above article by Dr. Phil Stringer, Pastor of Ravenswood Baptist Church, Chicago. Phil is also a member of the Dean Burgon Society, one of the founders of the King James Bible Research Council and my personal friend. My reply follows his anaylsis.

Thanks for sending this. I have never heard of Martin Richling. I spent a few minutes on his website and was quickly turned off when he claimed to have correctly interpreted every verse of the Bible. His pride overwhelms him and this is where cults come from. No one is as accomplished as he thinks he is.

There is much good in your analysis of the doctrine of Scripture. I have thought the terminology “directly inspired” and “indirectly inspired” might be a real contribution to the horrible debate going on now.

However “inspired” is not a Bible word. Webster gives several definitions and under some of them your statement about Scripture is correct. But there is not a Bible definition of the word “inspired” and God forbids us to attack one another over the definition of words. Your criticism of Dr Waite is overdone. The difference between you and Dr. Waite is semantical and not doctrinal or practical.

The difference between you and Dr Riplinger is doctrinal and practical and you point it out well.

I do not say everything the way that Dr. Waite does but I respect him greatly and know his loyalty to the word of God. Differing with him is fine, none of us is above being disagreed with.

Your article would be better if you rephrased your statement about Dr. Waite or eliminated it all together.

May God bless your faithfulness to him.

Pastor Phil Stringer

Dear Pastor Stringer,

Thank you for your analysis as I respect you as being a true man of God.

As to the issue of the word “inspired,” and D. A. Waite’s refusal to state the AV1611 English Reformation Bible is “inspired,” even though indirectly, I shall reply.

Indeed, the word “inspired” does not occur in the AV1611 Bible. Rather the word “inspiration” occurs as per II Timothy 3:16:

“All scripture is given by inspiration of God (lit. “god-breathed”) and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness that the man of God might be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.”

If “all scripture,” herein being the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures, is “given by inspiration of God,” can we not say that “all scripture” is “inspired?” Do not we use this abbreviation “inspired” in our biblical discussions, the term being descriptive of the biblical phrase “inspiration of God?” Do we not state that the scriptures are “inspired” in our teachings? And if we are forbidden to use the term “inspired” because it does not occur in the English Bible, then we must be bound by that principle with regard to the term “Trinity” in reference to “the Godhead,” the term “Trinity” also never occurring in the AV1611 Bible. Clearly God is a Tri-une God—known as “The Trinity” in common discussion—and thus there is no contradiction of terms, though “Trinity” is not in the translation text.

The same principle must be extended to our discussion of the term “inspired.” Though not to be found in the entirety of “the Word of God,” it is descriptive of “inspiration of God” and thus there is no contradiction of terms. Hence, any Reformation Bible Translation, springing from the Hebrew and Greek scriptures inspired and preserved by God, not only is considered to be “the Scriptures,” but also “the Word of God.” To this conclusion, Dr. Waite would not disagree. But to then assert, when teaching Biblical doctrine, that the AV1611 is “the Scriptures” and “the Word of God,” and then deny that it is not “given by inspiration of God” serves as an indirect attack upon the reality that the translation is “All Scripture” and is “the Word of God.”

In conclusion, if the AV1611 Reformation English Bible does not carry the mark of being “inspired” (i.e., “given by inspiration of God”), then we are precluded from calling our blessed AV1611 “the Scriptures” or “the Word of God.” This is my basic contention and I cannot retract. It is not a matter of semantics evidenced by the logical conclusions of both sides of this issue. When Brother Waite will admit that the AV1611 is “the Scriptures,” is “the Word of God,” and is therefore, by necessity in being the scriptures, “given by inspiration of God”—although indirectly via translation—I must hold to my conclusion above. For carried to its logical conclusion, Dr. Waite’s position opens the door to the Jesuitical and infidel doctrine of “higher textual criticism,” specifically the denial of any Reformation Bible translation being “the Scriptures” or “the Word of God.” This leads to furthering the Jesuit Order’s wicked Counter-Reformation in its military quest of destroying the Lord’s grand and glorious Protestant Reformation. That destruction includes every Protestant and Baptist people enjoying the secured liberty of freedom of conscience within nations enjoying Constitutional government specifically limiting the powers of its leaders contrary to the design of Papal Roman absolutism.

Lord bless,

Brother Eric

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Occupy Wall Street to Attack US Freedoms With Constitutional Convention?

Redistribution Of Wealth Is Theft!



See also:



Rerum Novarum

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/rerum-novarum.html



Centesimus Annus

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/centesimus-annus.html



Caritas In Veritate

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/caritas-in-veritate_05.html



The Popes Plans On Organizing Political, Economic And Religious Activities Worldwide

http://www.scribd.com/doc/22319643/Pope-Plans

Amplify’d from www.rightsidenews.com

The Daily Bell

? We have to concentrate all of our resources into one single attack – making sure we take corporate money out of politics. The only way to do that is to bypass the corporate owned Congress and the Supreme Court – and pass a Constitutional amendment. We must pass an amendment saying that corporations are not people and they do not have the right to spend money to buy our politicians. – Wolf-PAC, Cenk Uygur @ AmpedStatus

Liberate_Wall_Street_600
Dominant Social Theme: Look, the US is broke. Corporations have ruined it. Now we have to kill corporate "personhood" and then the US will be good again and there will be equality and justice for all.
Free-Market Analysis: Leftist commentator and "Young Turk" Cenk Uygur has announced the formation of Wolf-PAC to campaign for a constitutional convention. His call to action was featured on the AmpedStatus website run by David DeGraw, one of the original founders of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

We've been covering the increasing leftist tilt of Occupy Wall Street and Uygur's disingenuous video announcement fits right into this pattern. Multinational corporations are a kind of Frankenstein's monster, the bastardized creation of the US judicial system. But the way to pare back their influence is to go to the heart of the matter – the US's corrupt judiciary and monetary system – not to create an unpredictable constitutional convention that might have significant anti-freedom ramifications or do away with constitutional protections entirely. (What's left of them, anyway.)

for the world along with a global tax on transactions. It seems to us that it becoming increasingly difficult for anyone to deny the collusion between the great central banking families and their enablers and co-conspirators ... including the Vatican and Jesuit "Black Church." The Anglosophere elite is moving RAPIDLY toward world government, far more rapidly than one might have expected even a few years ago. See our article @ www.thedailybell.com/3111/Occupy-Wall-Street-Demands-Global-

In fact, a constitutional convention has been a dream of US leftists for a century or more. Constitution.net tells us that as far back as 1932, the Socialist Party's platform included proposed changes to the Constitution, and many of these changes seem to parallel what Cenk and others want now. From Constitution.net:

The Socialist Party's 1932 platform included many proposed changes to the Constitution. One group concerned voting and elections, including popular election of the President and the ability to hold national referenda. Judicial review would be specifically barred. Workers' rights would be protected and child labor barred; nationalization of industry would also be permitted and promoted. Finally, they advocated an easing of the requirements for ratification of constitutional amendments.

We can see here the concentration on the "popular election of the President and ability to hold national referenda." This parallels Occupy Wall Street's calls for "direct democracy." Nothing changes except the various disguises that the Left uses to promote its destructive agenda. Uygur is a lawyer who has worked for prestigious American firms. He surely knows that there are likely no limits on what can happen during a constitutional convention. One could end up with an entirely different and even MORE authoritarian system. Is that what he REALLY wants?

Franklin Delano Roosevelt attempted to push through permanent price and wage controls in the 1930s. Only a Supreme Court decision narrowly averted his plans. But Occupy Wall Street non-leader/leaders seem to be in the process of reviving those plans and more.

Of course, the damage would likely run deeper than mere "Leftism." As we try to illustrate virtually every day, Leftism is the stepchild of the Anglosphere power elite, a hypocritical and manipulative conjuring of "people power" by the banking elites that Occupy Wall Street purports to despise.

There is considerable evidence that Occupy Wall Street is funded by these powerful elements, as others and we have illustrated in numerous articles. The great central banking families (and their political, military, religious and financial colleagues and enablers) have been plotting world government for a century or more and see the US Constitution as an impediment. Leftism suits their purpose.

Occupy Wall Street under the guise of populist people power may well be a kind of Trojan Horse designed to further the aim of the "one world" crowd. A constitutional convention is a kind of promotion, a sub-dominant social theme that has been rattling around for years in the modern era and has now again come to the fore. Such elements, supported by American Intel agencies, hijacked part of the classical liberal (and libertarian) Tea Party and now apparently are setting up Occupy Wall Street in opposition to it.

The two movements, intended as expressions of people's rage, are to be sanitized and reconfigured to parallel the right/left Hegelian dialectic under which the Democratic and Republican parties now operate. This process is ongoing and one reason why we've written that libertarian elements in Occupy Wall Street ought to think about going off on their own.

A constitutional convention is fraught with risks – and could easily spin out of control. A likely scenario is that it could be hijacked by powerful interests that would then ram through an anti-freedom, populist agenda of their own and declare it passed by a majority of states whether or not it actually was. Similarly, the 16th Amendment on the income tax was apparently never actually passed, but was announced as passed even though only TWENTY states were in legal compliance, according to modern research available on the 'Net.

We have covered previously a call by Kalle Lasn, founder of Adbusters magazine based in Vancouver, B.C., to protest at the upcoming G20 while demanding a one-percent tax on financial transactions. You can read our article on this here: "Occupy Wall Street Demands Global UN Tax and Worldwide G20 Protest."

This is probably something of a ruse as UN leaders have been calling for such a tax for years. Adbusters is one of the founders of Occupy Wall Street. Lasn is also in bed with the power elite Soros crowd, which helps fund his magazine, as reported definitively over at LewRockwell.com.

Ironically, Cenk's announcement brought a yelp of dismay from the Leftist Daily Kos where David Dickinson posted the following:

A Constitutional Convention Is Dangerous: With a constitutional convention, the entire constitution can be re-written. That is the purpose of constitutional conventions. The members of the convention are not bound by any restrictions that we might wish to place on them. That means that the entire structure of our government can change. That means that the Bill of Rights could disappear. In fact, since our Constitution defines what the United States of America is, and since that constitution would no longer exist, our country would no longer exist. It would be replaced by an entirely new country.

In his comments, Cenk cited the fabulous product of the work of our founding fathers. He used the fact that what they did turned out to be pretty good as an assurance that what we would come up with now would also be equally good. But that assurance is completely unjustified, and to understand that all that needs to be examined is our current political climate.

Where are today's Thomas Jeffersons and Benjamin Franklins? Who would sit on today's Committee of Detail? John Boehner and Harry Reid? Make no mistake: those who are politically powerful today would determine what would be in our next constitution, yet they are the very people whom we oppose. And we must not forget that many state legislatures, who also would have a significant say in who sits at a convention, are controlled at least in some part by ALEC.

We can do that with an amendment and without writing a new constitution. Do we really want to take the risk of a completely unpredictable future when an amendment would solve the immediate problem? ... Personally, I think that a constitutional convention is a very dangerous undertaking.

As we have pointed out many times, the best way to end the destructive elements of the American empire – and bring back prosperity and peace – is to eliminate the current mechanism of central banking. Central banks the world over, led by the Fed, print money from nothing. They cause ruinous booms and busts and fund militarism, corporatism and all the other ills that both the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street claim to be concerned about.

Conclusion: Remove the Fed (and central banking generally) and return the country to the competitive money system that included gold and silver and Leviathan will begin to wither, including the increasingly authoritarian judiciary that created the current corporate personhood. This can be done via political and economic pressure and needs no unpredictable constitutional convention, global transaction tax or any other kind of dangerous social engineering. Congressman Ron Paul's ideas are correct in this regard. First ... End the Fed.

Read more at www.rightsidenews.com
 

Full Text: Note on financial reform from the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace

Redistribution Of Wealth Is Theft!



But they don't observe the 10 Commandments anyway, especially the one about idolatry.



See also:



Rerum Novarum

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/rerum-novarum.html



Centesimus Annus

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/centesimus-annus.html



Caritas In Veritate

http://inquisitionnews.blogspot.com/p/caritas-in-veritate_05.html



The Popes Plans On Organizing Political, Economic And Religious Activities Worldwide

http://www.scribd.com/doc/22319643/Pope-Plans

Amplify’d from www.news.va

Full Text: Note on financial reform from the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace

2011-10-24 Vatican Radio



Please find, below, an unofficial translation of the Note on the reform of the international financial and monetary systems in the context of global public authority, released Monday by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.



******************



Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace



TOWARDS REFORMING
THE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL AND MONETARY SYSTEMS IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBAL PUBLIC AUTHORITY



Vatican City
2011



Table of Contents



Preface



Presupposition



Economic Development and Inequalities



The Role of Technology and the Ethical Challenge



An Authority over Globalization



Towards Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in a way that Responds to the Needs of all Peoples



Conclusions



Preface




“The world situation requires the concerted effort of everyone, a thorough examination of every facet of the problem – social, economic, cultural and spiritual. The Church, which has long experience in human affairs and has no desire to be involved in the political activities of any nation, ‘seeks but one goal: to carry forward the work of Christ under the lead of the befriending Spirit. And Christ entered this world to give witness to the truth; to save, not to judge; to serve, not to be served.’”



With these words, in the prophetic and always relevant Encyclical Populorum Progressio of 1967, Paul VI outlined in a clear way “the trajectories” of the Church’s close relation with the world. These trajectories intersect in the profound value of human dignity and the quest for the common good, which make people responsible and free to act according to their highest aspirations.



The economic and financial crisis which the world is going through calls everyone, individuals and peoples, to examine in depth the principles and the cultural and moral values at the basis of social coexistence. What is more, the crisis engages private actors and competent public authorities on the national, regional and international level in serious reflection on both causes and solutions of a political, economic and technical nature.



In this perspective, as Benedict XVI teaches, the crisis “obliges us to re-plan our journey, to set ourselves new rules and to discover new forms of commitment, to build on positive experiences and to reject negative ones. The crisis thus becomes an opportunity for discernment, in which to shape a new vision for the future. In this spirit, with confidence rather than resignation, it is appropriate to address the difficulties of the present time.”



The G20 leaders themselves said in the Statement they adopted in Pittsburgh in 2009: “The economic crisis demonstrates the importance of ushering in a new era of sustainable global economic activity grounded in responsibility.”



The Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace now responds to the Holy Father’s appeal, while making the concerns of everyone our own, especially the concerns of those who pay most dearly for the current situation. With due respect for the competent civil and political authorities, the Council hereby offers and shares its reflection: Towards reforming the international financial and monetary systems in the context of global public authority.



This reflection hopes to benefit world leaders and all people of good will. It is an exercise of responsibility not only towards the current but above all towards future generations, so that hope for a better future and confidence in human dignity and capacity for good may never be extinguished.



Cardinal Peter K.A. Turkson +Mario Toso



President Secretary





Presupposition



Every individual and every community shares in and is responsible for promoting the common good. Faithful to their ethical and religious vocation, communities of believers should take the lead in asking whether human family has adequate means at its disposal to achieve the global common good. The Church for her part is called to encourage in everyone without distinction, the desire to join in the “monumental amount of individual and collective effort” which men have made “throughout the course of the centuries ... to better the circumstances of their lives.... [T]his human activity accords with God’s will.”



1. Economic Development and Inequalities



The grave economic and financial crisis which the world is going through today springs from multiple causes. Opinions on the number and significance of these causes vary widely. Some commentators emphasize first and foremost certain errors inherent in the economic and financial policies; others stress the structural weaknesses of political, economic and financial institutions; still others say that the causes are ethical breakdowns occurring at all levels of a world economy that is increasingly dominated by utilitarianism and materialism. At every stage of the crisis, one might discover particular technical errors intertwined with certain ethical orientations.



In material goods markets, natural factors and productive capacity as well as labour in all of its many forms set quantitative limits by determining relationships of costs and prices which, under certain conditions, permit an efficient allocation of available resources.



In monetary and financial markets, however, the dynamics are quite different. In recent decades, it was the banks that extended credit, which generated money, which in turn sought a further expansion of credit. In this way, the economic system was driven towards an inflationary spiral that inevitably encountered a limit in the risk that credit institutions could accept. They faced the ultimate danger of bankruptcy, with negative consequences for the entire economic and financial system



After World War II, national economies made progress, albeit with enormous sacrifices for millions, indeed billions of people who, as producers and entrepreneurs on the one hand and as savers and consumers on the other, had put their confidence in a regular and progressive expansion of money supply and investment in line with opportunities for real growth of the economy.



Since the 1990s, we have seen that money and credit instruments worldwide have grown more rapidly than revenue, even adjusting for current prices. From this came the formation of pockets of excessive liquidity and speculative bubbles which later turned into a series of solvency and confidence crises that have spread and followed one another over the years.



A first crisis took place in the 1970s until the early 1980s and was related to the sudden sharp rises in oil prices. Subsequently, there was a series of crises in the developing world, for example, the first crisis in Mexico in the 1980s and those in Brazil, Russia and Korea, and then again in Mexico in the 1990s as well as in Thailand and Argentina.



The speculative bubble in real estate and the recent financial crisis have the very same origin in the excessive amount of money and the plethora of financial instruments globally.



Whereas the crises in the developing countries that risked involving the global monetary and financial system were contained through interventions by the more developed countries, the outbreak of the crisis in 2008 was characterized by a different factor compared with the previous ones, something decisive and explosive. Generated in the context of the United States, it took place in one of the most important zones for the global economy and finances. It directly affected what is still the currency of reference for the great majority of international trade transactions.



A liberalist approach, unsympathetic towards public intervention in the markets, chose to allow an important international financial institution to fall into bankruptcy, on the assumption that this would contain the crisis and its effects. Unfortunately, this spawned a widespread lack of confidence and a sudden change in attitudes. Various public interventions of enormous scope (more than 20% of gross national product) were urgently requested in order to stem the negative effects that could have overwhelmed the entire international financial system.



The consequences for the real economy, what with grave difficulties in some sectors – first of all, construction – and wide distribution of unfavourable forecasts, have generated a negative trend in production and international trade with very serious repercussions for employment as well as other effects that have probably not yet had their full impact. The costs are extremely onerous for millions in the developed countries, but also and above all for billions in the developing ones.



In countries and areas where the most elementary goods like health, food and shelter are still lacking, more than a billion people are forced to survive on an average income of less than a dollar a day.



Global economic well-being, traditionally measured by national income and also by levels of capacities, grew during the second half of the twentieth century, to an extent and with a speed never experienced in the history of humankind.



But the inequalities within and between various countries have also grown significantly. While some of the more industrialized and developed countries and economic zones – the ones that are most industrialized and developed – have seen their income grow considerably, other countries have in fact been excluded from the overall improvement of the economy and their situation has even worsened.



After the Second Vatican Council in his Encyclical Letter Populorum Progressio of 1967, Paul VI already clearly and prophetically denounced the dangers of an economic development conceived in liberalist terms because of its harmful consequences for world equilibrium and peace. The Pontiff asserted that the defence of life and the promotion of people’s cultural and moral development are the essential conditions for the promotion of authentic development. On these grounds, Paul VI said that full and global development is “the new name of peace”.



Forty years later, in its annual Report of in 2007, the International Monetary Fund recognized the close connection between an inadequately managed process of globalization on the one hand, and the world’s great inequalities on the other. Today the modern means of communication make these great economic, social and cultural inequalities obvious to everyone, rich and poor alike, giving rise to tensions and to massive migratory movements.



Nonetheless, it should be reiterated that the process of globalisation with its positive aspects is at the root of the world economy's great development in the twentieth century. It is worth recalling that between 1900 and 2000 the world population increased almost fourfold and the wealth produced worldwide grew much more rapidly, resulting in a significant rise of average per capita income. At the same time, however, the distribution of wealth did not become fairer but in many cases worsened.



What has driven the world in such a problematic direction for its economy and also for peace?



First and foremost, an economic liberalism that spurns rules and controls. Economic liberalism is a theoretical system of thought, a form of “economic apriorism” that purports to derive laws for how markets function from theory, these being laws of capitalistic development, while exaggerating certain aspects of markets. An economic system of thought that sets down a priori the laws of market functioning and economic development, without measuring them against reality, runs the risk of becoming an instrument subordinated to the interests of the countries that effectively enjoy a position of economic and financial advantage.



Regulations and controls, imperfect though they may be, already often exist at the national and regional levels; whereas on the international level, it is hard to apply and consolidate such controls and rules.



The inequalities and distortions of capitalist development are often an expression not only of economic liberalism but also of utilitarian thinking: that is, theoretical and practical approaches according to which what is useful for the individual leads to the good of the community. This saying has a core of truth, but it cannot be ignored that individual utility – even where it is legitimate – does not always favour the common good. In many cases a spirit of solidarity is called for that transcends personal utility for the good of the community.



In the 1920s, some economists had already warned about giving too much weight, in the absence of regulations and controls, to theories which have since become prevailing ideologies and practices on the international level.



One devastating effect of these ideologies, especially in the last decades of the past century and the first years of the current one, has been the outbreak of the crisis in which the world is still immersed.



In his social encyclical, Benedict XVI precisely identified the roots of a crisis that is not only economic and financial but above all moral in nature. In fact, as the Pontiff notes, to function correctly the economy needs ethics; and not just of any kind but one that is people-centred. He goes on to denounce the role played by utilitarianism and individualism and the responsibilities of those who have adopted and promoted them as the parameters for the optimal behaviour of all economic and political agents who operate and interact in the social context. But Benedict XVI also identifies and denounces a new ideology, that of “technocracy”.



2. The Role of Technology and the Ethical Challenge



The great economic and social development of the past century, with their bright spots and serious shadows, can also be attributed in large part to the continued development of technology and more recently to advances in information technologies and especially their applications in the economy and most significantly in finance.



However, to interpret the current new social question lucidly, we must avoid the error – itself a product of neo-liberal thinking – that would consider all the problems that need tackling to be exclusively of a technical nature. In such a guise, they evade the needed discernment and ethical evaluation. In this context Benedict XVI's encyclical warns about the dangers of the technocracy ideology: that is, of making technology absolute, which “tends to prevent people from recognizing anything that cannot be explained in terms of matter alone” and minimizing the value of the choices made by the concrete human individual who works in the economic-financial system by reducing them to mere technical variables. Being closed to a “beyond” in the sense of something more than technology, not only makes it impossible to find adequate solutions to the problems, but it impoverishes the principal victims of the crisis more and more from the material standpoint.



In the context of the complexity of the phenomena, the importance of the ethical and cultural factors cannot be overlooked or underestimated. In fact, the crisis has revealed behaviours like selfishness, collective greed and the hoarding of goods on a great scale. No one can be content with seeing man live like “a wolf to his fellow man”, according to the concept expounded by Hobbes. No one can in conscience accept the development of some countries to the detriment of others. If no solutions are found to the various forms of injustice, the negative effects that will follow on the social, political and economic level will be destined to create a climate of growing hostility and even violence, and ultimately undermine the very foundations of democratic institutions, even the ones considered most solid.



Recognizing the primacy of being over having and of ethics over the economy, the world’s peoples ought to adopt an ethic of solidarity as the animating core of their action. This implies abandoning all forms of petty selfishness and embracing the logic of the global common good which transcends merely contingent, particular interests. In a word, they ought to have a keen sense of belonging to the human family which means sharing the common dignity of all human beings: “Even prior to the logic of a fair exchange of goods and the forms of justice appropriate to it, there exists something which is due to man because he is man, by reason of his lofty dignity.”



In 1991, after the failure of Marxist communism, Blessed John Paul II had already warned of the risk of an “idolatry of the market, an idolatry which ignores the existence of goods which by their nature are not and cannot be mere commodities.” Today his warning needs to be heeded without delay and a road must be taken that is in greater harmony with the dignity and transcendent vocation of the person and the human family.



3. An Authority over Globalization



On the way to building a more fraternal and just human family and, even before that, a new humanism open to transcendence, Blessed John XXIII’s teaching seems especially timely. In the prophetic Encyclical Pacem in Terris of 1963, he observed that the world was heading towards ever greater unification. He then acknowledged the fact that a correspondence was lacking in the human community between the political organization “on a world level and the objective needs of the universal common good”. He also expressed the hope that one day “a true world political authority” would be created.



In view of the unification of the world engendered by the complex phenomenon of globalization, and of the importance of guaranteeing, in addition to other collective goods, the good of a free, stable world economic and financial system at the service of the real economy, today the teaching of Pacem in Terris appears to be even more vital and worthy of urgent implementation.



In the same spirit of Pacem in Terris, Benedict XVI himself expressed the need to create a world political authority. This seems obvious if we consider the fact that the agenda of questions to be dealt with globally is becoming ever longer. Think, for example, of peace and security; disarmament and arms control; promotion and protection of fundamental human rights; management of the economy and development policies; management of the migratory flows and food security, and protection of the environment. In all these areas, the growing interdependence between States and regions of the world becomes more and more obvious as well as the need for answers that are not just sectorial and isolated, but systematic and integrated, rich in solidarity and subsidiarity and geared to the universal common good.



As the Pope reminds us, if this road is not followed, “despite the great progress accomplished in various sectors, international law would risk being conditioned by the balance of power among the strongest nations.”



The purpose of the public authority, as John XXIII recalled in Pacem in Terris, is first and foremost to serve the common good. Therefore, it should be endowed with structures and adequate, effective mechanisms equal to its mission and the expectations placed in it. This is especially true in a globalized world which makes individuals and peoples increasingly interconnected and interdependent, but which also reveals the existence of monetary and financial markets of a predominantly speculative sort that are harmful for the real economy, especially of the weaker countries.



This is a complex and delicate process. A supranational Authority of this kind should have a realistic structure and be set up gradually. It should be favourable to the existence of efficient and effective monetary and financial systems; that is, free and stable markets overseen by a suitable legal framework, well-functioning in support of sustainable development and social progress of all, and inspired by the values of charity and truth. It is a matter of an Authority with a global reach that cannot be imposed by force, coercion or violence, but should be the outcome of a free and shared agreement and a reflection of the permanent and historic needs of the world common good. It ought to arise from a process of progressive maturation of consciences and freedoms as well as the awareness of growing responsibilities. Consequently, reciprocal trust, autonomy and participation cannot be overlooked as if they were superfluous elements. The consent should involve an ever greater number of countries that adhere with conviction, through a sincere dialogue that values the minority opinions rather than marginalizing them. So the world Authority should consistently involve all peoples in a collaboration in which they are called to contribute, bringing to it the heritage of their virtues and their civilizations.



The establishment of a world political Authority should be preceded by a preliminary phase of consultation from which a legitimated institution will emerge that is in a position to be an effective guide and, at the same time, can allow each country to express and pursue its own particular good. The exercise of this Authority at the service of the good of each and every one will necessarily be super partes (impartial): that is, above any partial vision or particular good, in view of achieving the common good. Its decisions should not be the result of the more developed countries' excessive power over the weaker countries. Instead, they should be made in the interest of all, not only to the advantage of some groups, whether they are formed by private lobbies or national governments.



A supranational Institution, the expression of a “community of nations”, will not last long, however, if the countries’ diversities from the standpoint of cultures, material and immaterial resources and historic and geographic conditions, are not recognized and fully respected. The lack of a convinced consensus, nourished by an unceasing moral communion on the part of the world community, would also reduce the effectiveness of such an Authority.



What is valid on the national level is also valid on the global level. A person is not made to serve authority unconditionally. Rather, it is the task of authority to be at the service of the person, consistent with the pre-eminent value of human dignity. Likewise, governments should not serve the world Authority unconditionally. Instead, it is the world Authority that should put itself at the service of the various member countries, according to the principle of subsidiarity. Among the ways it should do this is by creating the socio-economic, political and legal conditions essential for the existence of markets that are efficient and efficacious because they are not over-protected by paternalistic national policies and not weakened by systematic deficits in public finances and of the gross national products – indeed, such policies and deficits actually hamper the markets themselves in operating in a world context as open and competitive institutions.



In the tradition of the Church’s Magisterium which Benedict XVI has vigorously embraced, the principle of subsidiarity should regulate relations between the State and local communities and between public and private institutions, not excluding the monetary and financial institutions. So, on a higher level, it ought to govern the relations between a possible future global public Authority and regional and national institutions. This principle guarantees both democratic legitimacy and the efficacy of the decisions of those called to make them. It allows respect for the freedom of people, individually and in communities, and at the same time, allows them to take responsibility for the objectives and duties that pertain to them.
According to the logic of subsidiarity, the higher Authority offers its subsidium, that is, its aid, only when individual, social or financial actors are intrinsically deficient in capacity, or cannot manage by themselves to do what is required of them. Thanks to the principle of solidarity, a lasting and fruitful relation is built up between global civil society and a world public Authority as States, intermediate bodies, various institutions – including economic and financial ones – and citizens make their decisions with a view to the global common good, which transcends national goods.As we read in Caritas in Veritate, “The governance of globalization must be marked by subsidiarity, articulated into several layers and involving different levels that can work together.” Only in this way can the danger of a central Authority’s bureaucratic isolation be avoided, which would otherwise risk being delegitimized by an excessive distance from the realities on which it is based and easily fall prey to paternalistic, technocratic or hegemonic temptations.
However, a long road still needs to be travelled before arriving at the creation of a public Authority with universal jurisdiction. It would seem logical for the reform process to proceed with the United Nations as its reference because of the worldwide scope of its responsibilities, its ability to bring together the nations of the world, and the diversity of its tasks and those of its specialized Agencies. The fruit of such reforms ought to be a greater ability to adopt policies and choices that are binding because they are aimed at achieving the common good on the local, regional and world levels. Among the policies, those regarding global social justice seem most urgent: financial and monetary policies that will not damage the weakest countries; and policies aimed at achieving free and stable markets and a fair distribution of world wealth, which may also derive from unprecedented forms of global fiscal solidarity, which will be dealt with later.On the way to creating a world political Authority, questions of governance (that is, a system of merely horizontal coordination without an authority super partes cannot be separated from those of a shared government (that is, a system which in addition to horizontal coordination establishes an authority super partes) which is functional and proportionate to the gradual development of a global political society. The establishment of a global political Authority cannot be achieved without an already functioning multilateralism, not only on a diplomatic level, but also and above all in relation to programs for sustainable development and peace. It is not possible to arrive at global Government without giving political expression to pre-existing forms of interdependence and cooperation.



4. Towards Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in a way that Responds to the Needs of all Peoples
In economic and financial matters, the most significant difficulties come from the lack of an effective set of structures that can guarantee, in addition to a system of governance, a system of government for the economy and international finance.What can be said about this prospect? What steps can be taken concretely?
With regard to the current global economic and financial systems, two decisive factors should be stressed. The first is the gradual decline in efficacy of the Bretton Woods institutions beginning in the early 1970s. In particular, the International Monetary Fund has lost an essential element for stabilizing world finance, that of regulating the overall money supply and vigilance over the amount of credit risk taken on by the system. To sum it up, stabilizing the world monetary system is no longer a “universal public good” within its reach.The second factor is the need for a minimum, shared body of rules to manage the global financial market which has grown much more rapidly than the real economy. This situation of rapid, uneven growth has come about, on the one hand, because of the overall abrogation of controls on capital movements and the tendency to deregulate banking and financial activities; and on the other, because of advances in financial technology, due largely to information technology.



On the structural level, in the latter part of the last century, monetary and financial activities worldwide grew much more rapidly than the production of goods and services. In this context, the quality of credit tended to decrease to the point that it exposed the credit institutions to more risk than was reasonably sustainable. It is sufficient to look at the fate of large and small credit institutions during the crises that broke out in the 1980s and 1990s, and finally in the 2008 crisis.
Again in the last part of the twentieth century, there was a growing tendency to define the strategic directions of economic and financial policy in terms of ‘clubs’ and of larger or smaller groups of more developed countries. While not denying the positive aspects of this approach, it is impossible to overlook that it did not appear to respect the representative principle fully, in particular of the less developed or emerging countries.The need to heed the voices of a greater number of countries has led to expanding the relevant groups; for instance, there is now a G20 where there was once just a G7. This has been a positive development because it became possible to include developing and emerging countries with larger populations in shaping the economy and global finance.



In the area of the G20, concrete tendencies can thus mature which, when worked out properly in the appropriate technical centres, will be able to guide the competent bodies on the national and regional level towards consolidating existing institutions and creating new ones with appropriate and effective instruments on the international level.
Moreover, the G20 leaders themselves said in their final Statement in Pittsburgh 2009: “The economic crisis demonstrates the importance of ushering in a new era of sustainable global economic activity grounded in responsibility”. To tackle the crisis and open up a new era “of responsibility”, in addition to technical and short-term measures, the leaders put forth the proposal “to reform the global architecture to meet the needs of the 21st century,” and later the proposal “to launch a framework that lays out the policies and the way we act together to generate strong, sustainable and balanced global growth”.Therefore, a process of reflection and reforms needs to be launched that will explore creative and realistic avenues for taking advantage of the positive aspects of already existing forums.
Specific attention should be paid to the reform of the international monetary system and, in particular, the commitment to create some form of global monetary management, something that is already implicit in the Statutes of the International Monetary Fund. It is obvious that to some extent this is equivalent to putting the existing exchange systems up for discussion in order to find effective means of coordination and supervision. This process must also involve the emerging and developing countries in defining the stages of a gradual adaptation of the existing instruments.In fact, one can see an emerging requirement for a body that will carry out the functions of a kind of “central world bank” that regulates the flow and system of monetary exchanges similar to the national central banks. The underlying logic of peace, coordination and common vision which led to the Bretton Woods Agreements needs to be dusted off in order to provide adequate answers to the current questions. On the regional level, this process could begin by strengthening the existing institutions, such as the European Central Bank. However, this would require not only a reflection on the economic and financial level, but also and first of all on the political level, so as to create the set of public institutions that will guarantee the unity and consistency of the common decisions.
These measures ought to be conceived of as some of the first steps in view of a public Authority with universal jurisdiction; as a first stage in a longer effort by the global community to steer its institutions towards achieving the common good. Other stages will have to follow in which the dynamics familiar to us may become more marked, but they may also be accompanied by changes which would be useless to try to predict today.In this process, the primacy of the spiritual and of ethics needs to be restored and, with them, the primacy of politics – which is responsible for the common good – over the economy and finance. These latter need to be brought back within the boundaries of their real vocation and function, including their social function, in consideration of their obvious responsibilities to society, in order to nourish markets and financial institutions which are really at the service of the person, which are capable of responding to the needs of the common good and universal brotherhood, and which transcend all forms of economist stagnation and performative mercantilism.
On the basis of this sort of ethical approach, it seems advisable to reflect, for example, on:a) taxation measures on financial transactions through fair but modulated rates with charges proportionate to the complexity of the operations, especially those made on the “secondary” market. Such taxation would be very useful in promoting global development and sustainability according to the principles of social justice and solidarity. It could also contribute to the creation of a world reserve fund to support the economies of the countries hit by crisis as well as the recovery of their monetary and financial system;
b) forms of recapitalization of banks with public funds making the support conditional on “virtuous” behaviours aimed at developing the “real economy”;c) the definition of the domains of ordinary credit and of Investment Banking. This distinction would allow a more effective management of the “shadow markets” which have no controls and limits.
It is sensible and realistic to allow the necessary time to build up broad consensuses, but the goal of the universal common good with its inescapable demands is waiting on the horizon. Moreover, it is hoped that those in universities and other institutions who educate tomorrow's leadership will work hard to prepare them for their responsibilities to discern the global public good and serve it in a constantly changing world. The gap between ethical training and technical preparation needs to be filled by highlighting in a particular way the inescapable synergy between the two levels of practical doing (praxis) and of boundless human striving (poièsis). The same effort is required from all those who are in a position to enlighten world public opinion in order to help it to brave this new world, no longer with anxiety but in hope and solidarity.



Conclusions
Under the current uncertainties, in a society capable of mobilizing immense means but whose cultural and moral reflection is still inadequate with regard to their use in achieving the appropriate ends, we are invited to not give in and to build above all a meaningful future for the generations to come. We should not be afraid to propose new ideas, even if they might destabilize pre-existing balances of power that prevail over the weakest. They are a seed thrown to the ground that will sprout and hurry towards bearing fruit.As Benedict XVI exhorts us, agents on all levels – social, political, economic, professional – are urgently needed who have the courage to serve and to promote the common good through an upright life. Only they will succeed in living and seeing beyond the appearances of things and perceiving the gap between existing reality and untried possibilities.
Paul VI emphasized the revolutionary power of “forward-looking imagination” that can perceive the possibilities inscribed in the present and guide people towards a new future. By freeing his imagination, man frees his existence. Through an effort of community imagination, it is possible to transform not only institutions but also lifestyles and encourage a better future for all peoples.Modern States became structured wholes over time and reinforced sovereignty within their own territory. But social, cultural and political conditions have gradually changed. Their interdependence has grown – so it has become natural to think of an international community that is integrated and increasingly ruled by a shared system – but a worse form of nationalism has lingered on, according to which the State feels it can achieve the good of its own citizens in a self-sufficient way.
Today all of this seems anachronistic and surreal, and all the nations, great or small, together with their governments, are called to go beyond the “state of nature” which would keep States in a never-ending struggle with one another. Globalization, despite some of its negative aspects, is unifying peoples more and prompting them to move towards a new “rule of law” on the supranational level, supported by a more intense and fruitful collaboration. With dynamics similar to those that put an end in the past to the “anarchical” struggle between rival clans and kingdoms with regard to the creation of national states, today humanity needs to be committed to the transition from a situation of archaic struggles between national entities, to a new model of a more cohesive, polyarchic international society that respects every people's identity within the multifaceted riches of a single humanity. Such a passage, which is already timidly under way, would ensure the citizens of all countries – regardless of their size or power – peace and security, development, and free, stable and transparent markets. As John Paul II warns us, “Just as the time has finally come when in individual States a system of private vendetta and reprisal has given way to the rule of law, so too a similar step forward is now urgently needed in the international community.”Time has come to conceive of institutions with universal competence, now that vital goods shared by the entire human family are at stake, goods which the individual States cannot promote and protect by themselves.
So conditions exist for definitively going beyond a ‘Westphalian’ international order in which the States feel the need for cooperation but do not seize the opportunity to integrate their respective sovereignties for the common good of peoples.It is the task of today’s generation to recognize and consciously to accept these new world dynamics for the achievement of a universal common good. Of course, this transformation will be made at the cost of a gradual, balanced transfer of a part of each nation’s powers to a world Authority and to regional Authorities, but this is necessary at a time when the dynamism of human society and the economy and the progress of technology are transcending borders, which are in fact already very eroded in a globalized world.
The birth of a new society and the building of new institutions with a universal vocation and competence are a prerogative and a duty for everyone, with no distinction. What is at stake is the common good of humanity and the future itself.In this context, for every Christian there is a special call of the Spirit to become committed decisively and generously so that the many dynamics under way will be channelled towards prospects of fraternity and the common good. An immense amount of work is to be done towards the integral development of peoples and of every person. As the Fathers said at the Second Vatican Council, this is a mission that is both social and spiritual, which “ to the extent that the former can contribute to the better ordering of human society, it is of vital concern to the Kingdom of God.”
In a world on its way to rapid globalization, the reference to a world Authority becomes the only horizon compatible with the new realities of our time and the needs of humankind. However, it should not be forgotten that this development, given wounded human nature, will not come about without anguish and suffering.Through the account of the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11:1-9), the Bible warns us how the “diversity” of peoples can turn into a vehicle for selfishness and an instrument of division. In humanity there is a real risk that peoples will end up not understanding each other and that cultural diversities will lead to irremediable oppositions. The image of the Tower of Babel also warns us that we must avoid a “unity” that is only apparent, where selfishness and divisions endure because the foundations of the society are not stable. In both cases, Babel is the image of what peoples and individuals can become when they do not recognize their intrinsic transcendent dignity and brotherhood.
The spirit of Babel is the antithesis of the Spirit of Pentecost (Acts 2:1-12), of God’s design for the whole of humanity: that is, unity in truth. Only a spirit of concord that rises above divisions and conflicts will allow humanity to be authentically one family and to conceive of a new world with the creation of a world public Authority at the service of the common good.





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