The EU, as it exists, must be destroyed!!

Twenty years ago, I was an ardent PanEuropean. I belonged to Aktion Österreich Europa, the Austrian section of the International PanEuropean Union, dedicated to an United Europe, "One, Christian and Traditional, from the Atlantic to the Urals." In the ensuing twenty years, I have seen the beautiful vision of Mollet, Adenauer and De Gasperi be hijacked by the anti-Catholic, anti-life left wing.

This article shows yet another attempt to destroy what is left of Christendom. If this Satanic plan is accepted, Poland, Malta, Lithuania and those other States who wish to cling to their Catholic past will be stymied! DESTROY THE EU!!!

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    New Book From ACS Leader

    Since this weekend is celebrated as Canada Day (July 1st) and Independence Day (July 4th) for our American and Canadian readers - the majority of DR readers - we'd like to present something goof for them to buy and read that will make them laugh and think.

    This is the latest book by Dale Ahlquist, co-founder and president of the American Chesterton Society, which recently had it's 25th Annual Conference. Called Common Sense 101: Lessons from G.K. Chesterton, the book goes through much of the wit and wisdom of Distributism's co-founder. It is a easy read, chock full of little gems Chesterton spread in both his books and essays. Some of them touch on Distributism, others on family life and faith. All are good to ponder.

    We encourage you to pick up this book and read it...several times. Then recommend it to interested family members and neighbors. Neither you nor they will be dissapointed.

    I will be taking the weekend off, and the other contributors will post as they see fit. We at the DR wish a Happy Fourth of July to all our American readers, and a Happy Canada Day to our Canadian readers.


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    GM, Ford Workers Get the Boot

    As presented on the MSNBC news website, and noted on the controversial Rense.com website, the Financial Times of London reports that General Motors (GM) will shed about 25% of it's total "Blue-collar" workforce by the end of 2006.

    About 30,000 workers will be leaving the automobile giant, taking advantage of a deal involving both early retirement and severance packages.

    One of it's rivals, Ford, is also facing hard times as the Financial Times reports that 10,000 of it's workers also have accepted similar buyout deals. This is in addition to a boycott of it's products led by the American Family Association (AFA) to protest Ford's promotion of the so-called "homosexual marriage" agenda. As reported in their May 25th "ActionAlert", Ford stock value has gone down 13% since the boycott began.

    Part of the problems these auto giants - including Chrysler - are undergoing stem from the fact they have grown too big over the years. With the elimination over the decades of rivals like Nash Motors, Durant Motors, Studebaker, AMC and DeLorean - as well as the crushing of potential rival Tucker Motors - the "Big Three" have had little to fear from domestic competition. This only gave the way for foreign rivals to meet the needs of the American driver.

    Further, it never entered the minds of the Big Three to allow greater worker participation in both ownership and managment. In other words, the Distributist model of a car company never even occured to them. Hence, the current problems with GM and Ford, and both workers and economy are paying for them.

    Pray for those being let go from these two car giants, as well as their families.

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    Slovakia Takes a Left Turn...For The Worse

    According to the Prague Daily Monitor of the Czech Republic, the pro-socialist Smer-Social Democrat party - led by Robert Fico - won what looks like to be the majority of seats in the weekend elections for Slovakia's parliament. The center-right SDKU-DS party was second, and the Slovak National Party was third. Election turnout was low, about 55 percent.

    The current prime minister, Mikulas Dzurinda, shackled his country to the increasingly neo-Soviet European Union. Although he has introduced a flat tax on business and personal income, brought foreign investment into his country and strengthened its currency, according to the CeskeNoviny news website, unemployment is still high. According to the EUobserver, unemployment is at a high of 11 percent. And according to the British news website Monsters and Critics, both social spending cuts and the raising of consumer taxes made things worse.

    Fico promised the Smer would roll back some of the reforms that the current Dzurinda government put into place. But it may not necessarily happen, according to the news website EurActiv.com. Dzurinda could continue with his current coalition government and also add the support of former authoritarian premier, Vladimir Meciar and his HZDS party. The HZDS got a little under 9% of the vote. The current prime minister is confident that Fico and the Smer will not be able to form a government and reverse his reforms, according to a report from Reuters.

    The only good news was the Czech Communist party, the KSS, were kicked out of parliament for having far too few votes.

    From a Distributist standpoint, the current elections do not bode well at all.

    1) None of the new parliament's six parties seem committed to expanding support for worker-owned and managed cooperatives into the industrial and financial sectors.

    2) Small farmers and farmer co-ops are now threatened under EU regulations to merge with European agribusinesses or be disolved, as was may still be happening in Poland and France.

    3) Support for social policies that defend abortion and the Sexual Revolution and oppress homeschoolers may still be in place.

    4) Neither major party even considers permanent withdrawl from the UN, the EU, NATO and the WTO, reducing the nation's political sovereignty.

    5) And both Fico and Dzurinda are committed to make the Euro Slovakia's currency by 2008, reducing the nation's economic sovereignty.

    So to Distributists, it is a different boss but the same racket. Pray for Slovakia.

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    Catholic French Trade Union Defies Government

    This article, written by Ciaran Mac Guill, is from issue 82 of the Traditionalist Catholic bi-monthly magazine The Brandsma Review.

    Under the title "A TRULY CATHOLIC, TRULY INDEPENDENT TRADE UNION", Mac Guill writes of the French Federation of Christian Workers, or CFTC in their French acronym. It is the oldest trade union in French history, in existence since 1887. It has kept an eye on bog big government, big business and worker's rights within a Catholic Christian context. While organized labor has shrunk down to 10% in France, the CFTC has been steadily growing in membership.

    The Brandsma Review notes that it was the CFTC, along with people who organize the yearly Pentecost Pilgrimage to the shrine of Chartres, that exposed the government's attempt to permanently eliminate the paid holiday of Whit Monday. The dyed-in-the-wool anti-religious rulers in Paris have long wanted to get rid of the holiday, the Monday after Pentecost, as part of their unending campaign to secularize France.

    But the CFTC noted that non-Catholics also take advantage of the holiday to be with their families and travel around France, which helps their local tourism industry. Further, under French and European Union laws, workers would have to be paid overtime if working on holidays. The government scheme would mean an extra work day but no extra money earned.

    Hence the scheme is anti-Catholic and anti-worker BOTH.

    France's four other trade unions - predominantly socialistic - didn't join the CFTC's actions against the government until later because of their anti-Catholic foundations. Whether the Whit Monday holiday will be destroyed is as yet unknown to all. But the CFTC will keep tabs on the matter.

    The CFTC is also seeking to build links with similar trade unions like itself worldwide. Mac Guill says that Eastern Europe looks very promising. (It is unknown to this writer whether there is a similar union in either the US, Canada or Mexico.)

    Defending the worker against big government, big business and socialist materialism is a bedrock tradition in the CFTC. Which makes them pro-Distributist in the DR's eyes. Congratulations to the union, and God richly bless you in your efforts.

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    A Series on "Catholic Families and Capitalism"

    Mr. Stephen L. M. Heiner, who we mentioned in an earlier post, also runs four weblogs - including his main one TrueRestoration.com. He has written a prologue and three-part series of essays about the "average Catholic family" trying to survive as a Catholic family in modern-day Capitalist America. (This would also apply, I figure, in a modified way in other Western nations.)

    There is much food for thought for our Catholic readers, as well as much that may also apply to our non-Catholic audience.

    Click here for the prologue, parts one, two and three. Thank you.

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    Review of "The Free Press"

    This is a brief but favorable review of Belloc's The Free Press by Stephen L. M. Heiner of Traditional Catholic Book and Movie Reviews. He also makes some good comments about news weblogs. Enjoy.

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    US Draft Bill Up For Debate - With NO MEDIA COVERAGE!

    As is typical of the American media, important issues going through Congress do not get the coverage they deserve. If it doesn't fit the globalist's agenda, it doesn't get covered.

    So it is now with this bill that is being debated TOMORROW, JUNE 6th. This is a bill introduced by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY) called H.R.4752, the Universal National Service Act of 2006. Introduced in February of this year, it would draft all Americans - male and female - between the ages of 18 and 42 into the US military for a minimum of two years.

    And as is typical of them, there is no coverage from the media. NONE!

    So whether you support this bill or oppose it - the DR opposes it and believes you should also - telephone you representative NOW! Do not let the Congress get away with debating this important issue without national media coverage!

    Thank you for your time, prayers and swift action.

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    How We Won the War in Iraq

    I am amazed at the number of people who oppose the war in Iraq, but are pushing us to become involved in another war in Darfur. "This is different," they say, "This is genocide, and we cannot remain indifferent!" Well, perhaps not. But we will have no better chance of "winning" a war in Darfur than we have of winning in Iraq. In fact, Iraq is, militarily, a trivial problem compared to Darfur. Darfur is the size of Texas, but with little or no infrastructure and a scattered population. There are no "high-valued" targets, but mostly widely scattered villages that will be difficult, if not impossible, to defend. The most important feature of modern warfare is logistics, the supplies without which no modern army can exist. Yet, without an infrastructure of roads and other facilities, there is no way to deliver these supplies except by the most cumbersome and expensive means. The countryside is too poor to provide any support; everything--ammunition, food, gas, even water--will have to be delivered by air or cross-country convoys, which themselves will be highly vulnerable to attack. Darfur could easily swallow up 100,000 troops without them having any appreciable effect, except to become targets of opportunity. And increasing the size of the army will only increase the logistical nightmare. No foreign army, American, African, or European, can defend Darfur.

    Does this mean we should just ignore the "genocide," if such there be? Not necessarily. But first, we ought to be somewhat skeptical of any claims that right exists only on one side. Without looking at this specific situation too closely, I am sure that it involves tribal feuds which may go back hundreds of years and involve issues which we may not be competent to judge. But, if we feel it is necessary to choose a side (and given the propensity to use rape, slaughter, and pillage as weapons of war, it may well be), there is a way to win it. We can win the war in Darfur in the same way we won the war in Iraq.

    Now, in case some of us do not remember winning this war, let me remind you that we did win it; we won it before we invaded. We won it not throughout Iraq, but in the Kurdish Northern part of the country. We won it because the people on the ground were willing to put their lives at risk and defend their homeland. It was only necessary for the United States to change the balance of power by providing them with weapons, training, and air cover. We could have done the same thing in the Shiite south, and started to, when the elder Bush decided, quite rightly, that a Shiite Republic in the South would benefit only Iran and pose a threat to Kuwait and Arabia.

    In any case, the only army capable of defending Darfur is an army of Darfurians. All they need is weapons and training, which can be accomplished by a very small military mission, and accomplished "on the cheap." Villages willing to defend themselves have a chance of success. But if they are not willing to defend themselves, then they are indefensible, and no foreign army can make up the lack. Call this the principle of subsidiarity applied to warfare.

    Currently, we have bits and pieces of our army scattered throughout the world defending a "peace" which is not a peace. Iraq, Afghanistan, and Kossovo, drain the strength of our army without really contributing to our security; in fact, it weakens us militarily, financially, and (most importantly) morally. We lost in Vietnam because there were an insufficient number of Vietnamese willing to defend their country, and a large number of the same willing to endure any amount of hardship, suffering, and sacrifice to see us defeated; there were suberb fighting units among the South Vietnamese army, but not enough to stave off disaster. This tragedy is repeating itself in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some want us to do it all over again in Darfur. The results will be no better there than they have been in any other place.

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    Lies, Damned Lies, and Averages

    The President is perplexed, yet once again. True, he can't catch a break in Iraq, but surely he's a hero on the economy. From 2001 to 2006, incomes rose 8.6% and average family net worth rose an astounding 24%. Unemployment is down to 4.6%. In the first quarter of 2006, the economy grew at a rate of 5.3%. Everywhere you look, the statistics are up, up, UP!.

    Except the polls. The latest New York Times/CBS poll shows only 28% of people approved of his handling of the economy, and 66% disapproved. Is the public just being difficult, refusing to recognize good news when the see it, or do they know something the President doesn't? Let me help you out, Mr. President: you are looking at the averages, the people are looking at their own pocketbooks, and those are two very different views. When dealing with aggregates, averages aren't much help; the proper number to use is the median, the point which separates the upper half from the lower. And the median income has not moved at all. "Median household income has gone nowhere since the turn of the decade," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.

    Whenever anybody is using averages in regard to aggregates, they are engaging in spin doctoring, not science. For example, if we took the average of all the readers of this blog (both of them), we would get a certain number. Then if Bill Gates were to somehow chance upon this post, the average income would go up by billions of dollars. Yet none of us would have one more dime to spend. The median wouldn't move at all, or move very little. It is the median which more accurately reflects the reality.

    And the reality is pretty grim. For example, the average net worth of the American family rose 6.3% from 2001 to 2004. But for the bottom 40% of families in the same period, the median net worth actually fell. And overall, the median was only one-fourth as large as the average. So then, when the President touts the averages, he is overstating the situation for the typical American by a factor of four. This helps to continue his complete disconnect with reality (never Dubya's strong point to begin with), and, more importantly (for a politician), his complete disconnect with the voters.

    There is a good use for averages, however, and that is in comparison to medians. When there is a big disparity, as there is now, it indicates that there is a pathology in the economy. The economy is indeed expanding, productivity is indeed growing, and profits are indeed increasing. However, the disparity between averages and medians indicates that all the benefits are going to an elite group. Inequality is rising, and rising fast. Normally when this happens, there is a contraction in consumer spending which slows down the economy or drives it into recession or depression. After all, the rich simply cannot spend their income as fast as the poor and middle classes; purchasing power is lost to the economy, and the equilibrium of supply and demand is broken. Think about a CEO earning 700 times what a line worker makes. He can buy the best shoes, shirts, and housing available, but he still cannot consume 700 times the shoes, shirts and housing of the average person. This kind of disaparity disrupts an economy.

    So why aren't we in recession? Because there is another solution, two of them in fact. The first is that the cost of living can be lowered, or at least held steady, by cheap imports or by importing cheap labor. This allows wages to be kept low without impacting the standard of living. For a while. But it breaks down eventually, since the cheap imports have the effect of destroying local industry, while the workers in the foreign company are paid too little to buy anything you still produce; such schemes are not really trade at all, they are merely an arbitrage of labor rates. Net income goes down over the long term, and it must be made up by borrowing.

    The second method is even more pernicious: Usury. The elites can simply lend money to the other classes (at ruinous rates of interest) to keep up aggregate demand. Thus, wages can be held static while actual consumption rises. But this is a ponzi-scheme, and, like all ponzi-schemes, it must eventually collapse. You can increase today's consumption by a borrowed dollar only by decreasing tomorrow's consumption by that same dollar, plus interest. Eventually the load of debt gets so heavy that the whole thing must collapse.

    The economy right now is, quite literally, a house cards--credit cards. This is true at the consumer level, at the national accounts level, and at the level of trade balances. We must borrow $2B daily to stay afloat, a billion of which comes from a certain government that may not always wish us well.

    But on the other hand, the averages look good. And to a President who has been more concerned with appearances than reality, this appears to be good enough.

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    Czech Center-Right May Win

    This report, dated June 3rd, is written by Alan Crosby for the pro-globalist news service Reuters, and put up on the Swiss-based news website SwissInfo.

    Reports are that the center-right Civic Democrats will win majority control of the Czech parliament during elections this weekend. If partnered with the Christian Democrats, they will have 104 of the 200 seats in Prague's parliament.

    Their rivals, the Social Democrats, have been rocked with scandals for the last eight years. Further, many Czechs are leary of further dealings with the European Union. The Civic Democrats are against any further "integration" with the EU than what the country has currently.

    As far as we Distributists are concerned, we hope that the new government will proceed - step-by-step - to eventually leave the EU for good.

    Further, if what Crosby wrote is correct and the Czech Green Party may join the Civic Democrats and Christian Democrats in the new government, then Prague should life tax burdens and government over-regulations on both small businesses and worker-owned, worker-managed co-operatives. It should further investigate the dark dealings of the old Communist tyranny in their past.

    Also they should look to increase further development of domestic energy production - including alternative and even "fringe science" energy - so as to be more independent from both Middle Eastern and Russian sources.

    Finally, let it begin to roll back the policies that favor the Sexual Revolution, and craft policies to strenghten the traditional and extended family.

    Let's hope for the best from the new government in Prague, and pray God will guide their minds and hearts.

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