In an mentary produced for Ave Maria Radio and Catholic Exchange, Paul Kengor says it is “incumbent among Catholics to learn more about this blessed concept of subsidiarity.” As part of this education, he mends “The Principle of Subsidiarity” by David A. Bosnich in Acton’s Religion & Liberty quarterly.
Here’s some of what Kengor, a professor of political science and executive director of the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College, had to say:
I’m convinced, from study after study, and years of observing public policy, from the New Deal to the Great Society, that addressing poverty in the narrow federal, collectivist way preached by modern progressives—in the language of “social justice”—is counter-productive, fostering rather than lessening dependency.
In fact, the long experience of economies shows that those titled toward collectivism—to a single central e so unproductive and lacking in prosperity that they can’t produce the very wealth that progressives want to redistribute in the first place. That’s the self-defeating danger that social-justice engineers face as they shift private charity to a federal collective.
Listen to Kengor’s mentary, “Subsidiarity Over Social Justice,” and access the transcript, at Catholic Exchange.