Joseph’s Reviews > Tea Party Catholic: The Catholic Case for Limited Government, a Free Economy, and Human Flourishing > Status Update

Joseph
is on page 64 of 272
Unhappily, the connection between business, economic freedom, and human flourishing has never been especially obvious for some Catholic Americans. Despite the long and honorable history of American Catholics in business, many American Catholics... remain somewhat suspicious of private enterprise and the market economy more generally.
— Mar 09, 2016 07:35AM
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Joseph
is on page 175 of 272
Social justice is thus another way of describing our obligation to contribute to the common good, with the emphasis being upon people receiving what they are owed. Obviously the state has a role in this... Equally significant, however, is the emphasis upon society pursuing this end. It follows that social justice is not and cannot be the government's exclusive concern.
— Mar 21, 2016 07:21PM

Joseph
is on page 150 of 272
"Secularism" today, however, often denotes a distinct set of beliefs which hold that any religious-motivated action is unacceptable in the public square. Such secularism has nothing to do with maintaining a healthy distinction between spiritual and temporal authority. Rather it is about the state effectively prohibiting or unduly restricting religiously motivated acts outside the freedom of worship.
— Mar 17, 2016 07:09PM

Joseph
is on page 150 of 272
"Secularism" today, however, often denotes a distinct set of beliefs which hod that any religious-motivated action is unacceptable in the public square. Such secularism has nothing to do with maintaining a healthy distinction between spiritual and temporal authority. Rather it is about the state effectively prohibiting or unduly restricting religiously motivated acts outside the freedom of worship.
— Mar 17, 2016 07:09PM

Joseph
is on page 148 of 272
...what is at stake is knowledge of the truth and our ability to arrange our lives on the basis of what we discern to be the truth, consistent with the freedom of others to do the same. Truth is thus the foundation of religious liberty, but truth is also the goal of religious liberty.
— Mar 16, 2016 07:11PM

Joseph
is on page 135 of 272
The point of religious tolerance was, to [Charles] Carroll's mind, not the promotion of religious indifferentism (the self-evidently false position that all religions are basically the same and therefore equally meaningful or meaningless). Rather it was to create conditions in which people could argue about their respective religions' claims of truth without such differences leading to tragedies...
— Mar 14, 2016 07:01PM

Joseph
is on page 129 of 272
Well, we agree on the insidiousness of fiat money.
— Mar 13, 2016 07:13PM