Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
From the Cold War to China, human flourishing is what really matters
From the Cold War to China, human flourishing is what really matters
Apr 24, 2025 6:21 AM

To achieve flourishing, we must have economic and religious freedom and a culture which grasps the unique value of the human person. Communism cannot be outproduced. It must be refuted in the realm of ideas by presenting a pelling alternative.

Read More…

A second Cold War has been brewing between global superpowers. The recent G-7 summit was merely the latest incident in the struggle for global hegemony between China and the U.S.

The seven western powers who met for the summit released a statement condemning the Chinese government for its treatment of the Uyghur people, as well as its crackdowns in Hong Kong and lack of transparency in handling the COVID-19 outbreak and pandemic. Looking back to the Cold War, the U.S. has already weathered a major conflict with munist superpower. Looking forward, we are facing a similar confrontation – transcendent in nature with risk of a violent conflict.

But we often oversimplify the Cold War, thinking of it only in terms of the material factors at play. In doing so, we ignore human flourishing as the foundation of a successful society. Likewise, the current conflict with China is not merely a battle of physical production; it is a struggle between two different views of the human person and of society.

One defining moment etched in our collective memory is Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s gaping at the myriad options in an American grocery store in 1989. The choice, quality, and availability of items provided a stark contrast to the typical Russian grocery store. The picture still brings to mind the abundance of capitalism pared to mand economy.

We often think of capitalism only in terms of its ability to outproduce other systems. Again, this is how we recall the end of the Cold War: The U.S. outproduced the USSR and emerged victorious. While that view may be technically correct, it is plete.

Wilhelm Röpke, the German free market economist, saw the conflict differently. As he wrote in his 1960 book, The Humane Economy:

One of the oversimplifications by which social rationalism distorts the truth is that Communism is a weed particular to the marshes of poverty and capable of being eradicated by an improvement in the standard of living. This is a fatal misconception. Surely everyone must realize by now that the world war against Communism cannot be won with radio sets, refrigerators, and widescreen films. It is not a contest for a better supply of goods – unfortunately for the free world, whose record in this field cannot be beaten. The truth is that it is a profound, passing conflict of two ethical systems in the widest sense, a struggle for the very conditions of man’s spiritual and moral existence.

Röpke’s insight is crucially missing in our current discussion about the future geopolitical balance between China and the U.S. The G-7 statement rightly focuses on the downsides of an authoritarian system, the lack of religious freedom in the Uyghurs, the lack of political freedom in Hong Kong, and the lack of freedom of the press in Wuhan. But behind each of these freedoms is a very specific view of what a human is.

Michael Novak once wrote that “without certain conceptions of history, nature, munity, and the limited state, the very notion of ‘human rights’ makes little sense.” Either man is a being created by God and endowed with inherent dignity or he is an automaton of the state, valuable only to achieve its ends. But he cannot be both.

In terms of raw manufacturing power, China far surpasses the U.S. If the conflict is primarily about who can produce the most stuff, the jury is still out on who will prevail. According to AEI’s Dan Blumenthal, “disinformation, censorship, and propaganda are pillars of the Chinese Communist Party’s grand strategy.” Thus, a fall in production does not necessitate the fall of the system. Even if China was plunged into an economic recession, tight controls of information could allow them to maintain control.

The key isn’t merely to learn a lesson from the Cold War, it’s learning the right lesson. We must remember that mere production is neither the end of a society nor is it the sole byproduct of a market economy. Instead, the aim of a society should be to create flourishing for its members.

As Röpke explained:

If we want to be steadfast in this struggle, it is high time to bethink ourselves of the ethical foundations of our own economic system. To this end, we need bination of supreme moral sensitivity and economic knowledge. Economically ignorant moralism is as objectionable as morally callous economism. Ethics and economics are two equally difficult subjects, and while the former needs discerning and expert reason, the latter cannot do without humane values.

Gross domestic product alone doesn’t capture whether the various ends of a people are satisfied. China may be able to manipulate production and improve GDP, but the gain in material wealth is only a small fraction of what makes human life worth living.

To achieve flourishing, we must have economic and religious freedom and a culture which grasps the unique value of the human person. Communism cannot be outproduced. It must be refuted in the realm of ideas by presenting a pelling alternative.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The happiness conundrum
This piece from the Scientific American examines the difficulty that human beings have achieving happiness even in a world characterized by material prosperity. “Once average annual e is above $20,000 a head, higher pay brings no greater happiness,” writes Michael Shermer, in the context of Richard Lay૚rd’s observation that “we are no happier even though average es have more than doubled since 1950.” Shermer examines various reasons that increases in objective well-being don’t necessarily correspond to increases in subjective well-being,...
The power of amazing grace
Rarely have I seen a movie that moved me the way Amazing Grace did last evening. The new film, which opened across America on Friday, is the story of the life-long struggle of William Wilberforce to end slavery and reform British society in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The movie pel Christians to understand how culture can be truly altered by incrementalism, deep faith, sheer perseverance, and quite often with great personal sacrifice. When the anti-slavery movement began...
Profit of doom
In a follow up to The Goracle’s energy bill imbroglio, Bill Hobbs has this stunner today: As the controversy over global warming hypemaster Al Gore’s voracious energy-eater mansion rolls on, there’s an angle I think merits deeper investigation than it is currently getting. In its original story, The Tennessean reported that Gore buys “carbon offsets” pensate for his home’s use of energy from carbon-based fuels. As Wikipedia explains, a carbon offset “is a service that tries to reduce the net...
Advanced technology for eternal truth
Have you heard about Logos Bible Software? Here’s a bit about the founding of pany from the February NewsWire update (and on their blog here): “A couple of young Microsoft programmers with their entire careers of high-pay and lucrative Microsoft stock options ahead of them, dropped everything to join a partner and risk it all on pursuing their dream.” The story continues: “They weren’t satisfied with using their skills to help businessmen have access to the latest and greatest in...
Trickle-down decadence
Anthony Esolen, from the March issue of Touchstone: The most bountiful alms that the rich can give the poor, apart from the personal donation of their time and means, are lives of virtue to emulate. It is their duty. But when they use their means to buy off the effects of vice, or, worse, to celebrate it, that is an offense against those whom Jesus called ‘little ones,’ and no amount of almsgiving can lighten the millstone. Read the whole...
Mugabe’s bread machine falling apart
This made me think of this. From the NYTimes: “Zimbabwe’s economy is so dire that bread vanished from store shelves across the country on Wednesday after bakeries shut down, saying government price controls were requiring them to sell loaves at a loss. The price controls are supposed to shield consumers from the nation’s rampant inflation, which now averages nearly 1,600 percent annually.” From the poem, “The Incredible Bread Machine”: Now bread is baked by government. And as might be expected,...
In defense of boring problems
Bjorn Lomborg has a better Powerpoint presentation than Al Gore. He’s also a more captivating speaker, and uses decent logic in his presentations. Is there any way we can get him an Oscar for the following 17 minute tour-de-force? Via Planet Gore, where a bunch of contemptible low-lifes hang out and engage in that filthy practice on a par with Holocaust denial – Climate Change Skepticism. I shudder just thinking about it. Oh, and Jay Richards blogs there too, the...
A Faustian bargain
As a follow-up to the rather wide-eyed optimism I expressed in a post almost a year ago, the city of Grand Rapids has rejected the sole bid application received for development of property on the Grand River. Duane Faust’s group did submit materials by the deadline, but the application lacked $65,000 in fees. reports that there were two other developers in the running, but “Faust’s bid was the only offer e into the city offices on Friday, but without $65,000...
U.S. high schools learning less
U.S. high school students are taking harder classes, receiving better grades, and from every indication in recent data, leaning much less than their counterparts fifteen years ago. Go figure. All the talk about spending more money and about improving testing and teacher standards and the end result is that two decades of educational reform may not have improved things overall. The U.S. Department of Education released two studies Thursday that raised very tough questions. David Driscoll, missioner of education for...
Is Catholicism green?
Over at Planet Gore, I responded to Catholic layperson named Mary Colwell who seems to have her theological priorities out of whack: plains that the Catholics are not consistently green, and hopes things will improve. She speaks as a Catholic, but I wonder where she’s getting her theology. She tells readers: “What is the true nature of our relationship with the earth? Get this right and everything else will begin to fall into place.” That’s the Green Gospel speaking. Jesus...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved