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- From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
- Reply-To: covici@ccs.covici.com
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.catholic,alt.activism
- Subject: Can Economic Policy be Based on Christian Principles?: part 2
- Message-ID: <243-PCNews-124beta@ccs.covici.com>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 16:58:26 GMT
- Organization: Covici Computer Systems
- Lines: 429
-
- The following series is taken from Executive Intelligence Review V20,
- #5 and is the cover story of that issue. For further information on
- EIR, please contact me by Email.
-
-
- The anti-Christian economic doctrine
- of Michael Novak
- by Kathleen Klenetsky
-
- ``No intelligent human order ... can be run according to
- the counsels of Christianity.... An economy based upon the
- consciences of some would offend the consciences of
- others. A free economy cannot ... be a Christian economy.
- To try to run an economy by the highest Christian
- principles is certain to destroy both the economy and the
- reputation of Christianity.''--Michael Novak, {The Spirit
- of Democratic Capitalism,} 1982
-
- ``{Agape@am} as a quality of human interaction is
- possible only among persons or very small groups. The
- character of larger group relations can be described only
- rarely by mutuality but is more likely a balance of
- power.''--Robert Benne, member of the board of Novak's
- Institute on Religion and Democracy, {The Ethic of
- Democratic Capitalism}
-
- For more than a decade, Michael Novak has been
- peddling the lie that what he calls ``democratic
- capitalism'' is the economic and political system most
- compatible with Christianity in general, and with
- Catholicism in particular. In Ibero-America, where he has
- traveled extensively, and systematically built up a
- network of up-and-coming yuppy bureaucrats who subscribe
- to his ``neo-liberal'' or ``Catholic Whig'' version of
- political economy, Novak's influence has come to be
- increasingly felt through such figures as Peru's champion
- of the underground economy, Hernando de Soto, and the
- Argentine Gustavo Be@aaliz.
- Presenting himself as an ardent opponent of
- liberation theology and of doctrinal orthodoxy, Novak has
- managed to sell himself to some Catholic circles as a
- spokesman for what he claims to be a shift in Catholic
- social teachings toward ``market capitalism.''
- He has tried to portray Pope John Paul II as a
- ``Catholic Whig,'' by which he means a free-trade fanatic,
- carefully ignoring the pope's repeated attack on the
- North's looting of the South through usurious debt
- payments, and has held up the encyclical {Centesimus
- Annus} as proof that the Vatican has embraced ``market
- capitalism.'' In an essay evaluating the importance of
- {Centesimus Annus,} which was published by fellow Adam
- Smith-admirer William Buckley's {National Review,} Novak
- wrote, ``If in Vatican II, Rome accepts American ideas of
- religious liberty, in {Centesimus Annus} Rome has
- assimilated the American ideas of economic liberty.''
-
-
- - Anglo-American frontman -
-
- The truth is that what Novak preaches has virtually
- nothing to do with either Catholicism or capitalism. Novak
- is a bought-and-paid-for apologist for the looting
- policies of the Anglo-American financial oligarchy, a
- latter-day Adam Smith who, through cynical manipulation of
- religious ideas, knowingly fronts for an international
- oligarchy which is out to destroy not only the nationalist
- institutions of Ibero-America, but also the social,
- cultural, and religious influence of traditional
- Catholicism, precisely because they interfere with the
- totally anti-Christian policies of unbridled exploitation
- carried out by the international banks, the International
- Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Bank.
- ``Bought-and-paid-for'' is no exaggeration. Since the
- mid-1970s, when he aligned himself with the emerging
- ``neo-conservative'' movement--which later gave birth to the
- Project Democracy apparatus responsible for
- destabilizations throughout the Third World--Novak has
- been patronized by some of the leading moneybags in the
- financial elite.
- Novak's major base of operations since 1978 has been
- the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), a Washington
- think-tank that is one of the premier sources of
- free-trade and pro-privatization propaganda in the United
- States.
- AEI's board of trustees, Novak's employers, reads
- like a ``who's who'' of the U.S. and international banking
- establishments: Willard Butcher, former chairman of Chase
- Manhattan Bank; Robert Greenhill, president of Morgan
- Stanley & Co., Inc.; Walter B. Wriston, former chairman of
- Citicorp; and George R. Roberts of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
- & Co., are just some of its members.
- Novak's colleagues at AEI include some of the
- best-known free-enterprise nuts, ``neo-con'' activists, and
- Zionist lobby operatives, including Reagan administration
- U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick; Richard Perle; Irving
- Kristol, the father of neo-conservativism; and Samuel
- Huntington, a leading Project Democracy ideologue who also
- authored the Trilateral Commission's controversial 1975
- tract, {The Crisis of Democracy,} which called for
- restricting democracy on the grounds that its expansion
- would interfere with the imposition of economic austerity.
- Novak's other main institutional affiliation, the
- Institute on Religion and Democracy, receives its funding
- from many of the same foundations which finance AEI,
- including Smith-Richardson and Mellon Scaife.
- Novak also enjoys the patronage of such stars in the
- U.S. conservative firmament as former Treasury Secretary
- and Mont Pelerin Society muckety-muck William Simon and J.
- Peter Grace, who, in 1982, founded the American Catholic
- Committee, ostensibly as an alternative to the left-wing
- drift in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The group, which
- set up Novak as its chief spokesman and became known as
- the ``Novak Club,'' also included former Secretary of State
- Alexander Haig and Frank Shakespeare, then vice chairman
- of RKO and later U.S. ambassador to the Vatican.
- These thugs assigned Novak the job of designing a
- ``religious'' argument on behalf of Anglo-American financial
- imperialism that could be sold in Catholic Ibero-America.
- As part of that effort, Novak convened a series of
- private seminars at AEI in 1984. The ``problem'' he
- presented to those seminars, was how to sell the ``free
- market'' to two areas of the world, Ibero-America and
- eastern Europe, whose Catholic culture and philosophy were
- intrinsically opposed to the usury and human exploitation
- that characterize free-market economics.
- And how has he performed? In an interview published
- in 1989, J. Peter Grace called Novak ``one of the smartest
- people in America.'' ``Keep it in mind that Michael Novak is
- somebody who converted from socialism. There's nothing
- better than a converted socialist. He was active in the
- party, worked on all sorts of things, and suddenly said,
- `Hey, baby, this ain't the way to go.' He has written one
- of the best articles on liberation theology.... And he's
- the guy that was there in the middle of all this
- liberation and liberal stuff. And he left it.''
-
-
- - Defending the `structures of sin' -
-
- What Novak has done is to combine Aristotle with Adam
- Smith--whom he professes to be the major sources of his
- philosophical and economic inspiration--and then to dress
- up this nasty mixture in some Catholic-sounding rhetoric.
- The result is about as far from Catholic doctrine as
- one could possibly get. Like Aristotle and Smith, Novak
- explicitly denies the possibility of creating a
- political-economic system based on the Good. According to
- Novak, there can be no Christian economy, and, therefore,
- no Christian society. ``No intelligent human order ... can
- be run according to the counsels of Christianity,'' he
- declared in his 1982 opus, {The Spirit of Democratic
- Capitalism.}
- In making this assertion, Novak is guilty of a
- blatant distortion of the Catholic concept of man's
- imperfect nature, the heritage of original sin. The
- Christian acceptance of man's imperfect nature does not in
- any way imply that man is incapable of change, of
- atonement, of coming closer to God. To the contrary, the
- great good news that Christ brings to man is the
- possibility of salvation, the hope of shedding his
- sinfulness, of perfecting himself, of becoming the living
- image of God.
- If it is true, as Novak claims, that Christianity
- has no real place in the world--and that {is} the import
- of Novak's theories--then how does man, who lives in the
- world, perfect himself? Taking Novak's view to its logical
- end, the answer must be that man's ``religious'' nature is
- entirely separate from his ``temporal'' nature; and,
- therefore, man can act like a greedy, exploitative animal
- when he operates on an ``economic'' basis, and still remain
- a ``Christian.''
- With this outlook, can one seriously believe Novak's
- claims that he is an orthodox Catholic, one who, no less,
- is carrying on the spirit of such great examples of the
- Church's social teachings as the 1891 encyclical {Rerum Novarum}?
- The purpose of Novak's ``political theology'' is
- to renounce the central message of Christianity. No matter
- how much Novak may insist that religion has a role to play
- in society, in reality he considers religion (specifically,
- Catholicism) useful only to the extent that it can be
- perverted into a defense of {pagan} forms of social and
- economic organization.
-
-
- - A Calvinist in Catholic clothing -
-
- Novak's ``democratic capitalism'' differs from
- ``American System'' economics as much as his depressingly
- Calvinistic view of man does from Catholicism. He worships
- the virulently anti-Catholic Adam Smith: ``Smith may
- properly be called the father of the idea of international
- economic development,'' and developing countries should
- adopt his views as a model for their own economic
- policies, Novak told the U.N. Human Rights Commission in
- March 1981, while serving as the Reagan administration's
- emissary to that body.
- Novak has offered similar praise to Smith in
- virtually every major work he's written since then,
- holding him up as the inspiration for the United States'
- Founding Fathers and the cause of U.S. economic
- prosperity.
- This is just another one of Novak's lies. As any
- honest student of U.S. history knows, Adam Smith was a
- paid agent of the British East India Company, and it was
- precisely the free-trade system of British imperialism
- which he extolled, which the American Revolution was
- fought against. Furthermore, contrary to Novak's lying
- account, the United States developed into an economic
- powerhouse through exactly the kinds of dirigist policies,
- typified by Alexander Hamilton's National Bank, which
- Novak now insists Third World countries must reject as
- inimical to economic development.
- Trained for the priesthood, Novak began his career as
- a vocal participant in the schismatic circles around Hans
- Ku@aung who wished to exploit Vatican II to destroy the
- Catholic Church. As a seminarian in Rome during the early
- 1960s, Novak wrote about the council for the liberal
- American Catholic press.
- A prote@aage@aa of theologian Bernard Lonergan,
- Novak favored the most extreme forms of church
- ``democratization,'' (the book he published on Vatican II
- was titled {The Open Church}), denounced the Vatican's
- opposition to artificial contraception--a position he
- holds to this day--and endorsed the Senate hearings
- convened by population control fanatic Sen. Ernest
- Gruening in the mid-1960s, which set the stage for the
- U.S. government to get into the business of pushing
- contraceptives and abortion as part of its foreign policy.
- At one point during this period, Novak published an
- article entitled ``Dual Sex Eucharist,'' in which he
- advocated that women be permitted to co-celebrate the
- Eucharist with a male priest to establish sexual symbolism
- for Christ's union with the Church. Novak motivated this
- gnostic proposal on the grounds that ``woman is a better
- image of the Creator than is the male.'' Novak maintained
- that the life of Christ represented ``the humbling of the
- male.... The Christian man was expected to become, as it
- were, androgynous--to make his own the virtue of the
- feminine ideal.''
- Novak has traveled very little distance from his
- days as a firebreathing radical who advocated dual sex
- Eucharist and government distribution of contraceptives.
- In {The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism,} in which he
- trumpeted his embrace of the ``neo-conservative'' cause,
- Novak reaffirmed his neo-malthusian beliefs, claiming that
- Ibero-America's poverty, relative to the United States,
- stems in part from its high birth-rate.
- ``In computing average per capita income,'' he wrote,
- ``population is important in three ways. First, every
- newborn child lowers the average per capita income.
- Second, as the cohorts of those under age 18
- increase in proportion, the relative number of productive
- workers decreases. Third, rapidly increasing populations
- indicate that many parents have decided in favor of larger
- families, through whatever combination of motives. This is
- an admirable preference. But it has, in some but not all
- respects, economic costs. {Those who make that choice
- cannot properly blame others for its consequences.} Since
- 1940, the population of the United States had grown by 90
- million, that of Latin America by 210 million'' (emphasis
- added).
- At heart, Novak was, and remains, a Calvinist
- libertarian, who believes, as he wrote in his 1990 book,
- {This Hemisphere of Liberty: A Philosophy of the
- Americas}: ``Building an economy for saints anywhere on
- earth is useless. There are too few of them. The only
- realistic possibility is to build an economy for
- sinners--the only moral majority.''
-
-
- - Building an `economy for sinners' -
-
- The type of economic system Novak is trying to foist
- on Ibero-America, eastern Europe, and elsewhere, is indeed
- an economy for sinners--the sinners being the Walter
- Wristons and Peter Graces of this world.
- Given this outlook, it is hardly surprising that
- Novak never questions the lethal role which the IMF has
- played in the developing sector. After all, in his view,
- the IMF is merely doing its God-given job of building an
- economy for sinners.
- One of the most revealing features of Novak's
- economic writings is his approach to the foreign debt
- which is strangling the life out of Ibero-America and the
- rest of the developing sector. Despite the fact that the
- Vatican, and especially Pope John Paul II, have spoken out
- in the strongest terms against the debt burden the Third
- World has been forced to bear, Novak rarely touches on the
- the issue. And no wonder! In those rare locations where he
- has been forced to address the debt crisis, Novak has
- proffered precisely those "solutions" cooked up by the
- creditor financial institutions in order to maintain the
- debt structure.
- In one of his infrequent references to the matter, a
- 1989 presentation to an Ibero-American conference, Novak
- went to great lengths to minimize the problem, claiming
- that ``even worse than the `debt crisis' is the massive
- `capital flight' of economic gains reaped by Latin
- Americans but invested abroad.'' He then recommended a
- series of unmistakably neo-colonial measures, such as
- debt-for-equity swaps, and the ``restructuring of Latin
- American economic systems,'' through ``opening of Latin
- American economies to the economic activism of the
- `informals.'|''
- In his various writings, Novak calls for
- Ibero-America to rid itself of every remnant of
- ``mercantilism'' and ``statism,'' i.e., dirigism, and to
- replace it with a free-wheeling, unregulated ``underground
- economy'' which, he claims, can ``empower people from
- below,'' but which actually undermines any possibility for
- the kind of large-scale projects required for successful
- and enduring nation-building. In fact, what Novak
- prescribes is intended to destroy the power of the
- nation-state, leaving the countries of Ibero-America
- completely vulnerable to foreign exploitation.
- In a presentation he made to a conference held in
- Bogota@aa, Colombia in 1989, Novak ruled out ``large
- manufacturing establishments'' for Ibero-America, on the
- grounds that ``the key to the future of Latin America lies
- ... in one place only: the most rapid possible growth in
- the small business sector.... Enterprise works best from
- the bottom up.'' The conference was sponsored by the Latin
- American Bishops Conference (CELAM) in collaboration with
- the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)--the nominally Jewish
- organization run by organized crime and the dope lobby,
- which spearheaded the crusade in the United States to
- force religion out of public life and which has recently
- thrown its legal and other considerable resources into
- defending abortion and ``gay'' rights.
- Novak's Institute on Religion and Democracy
- churns out similar economic advice for Ibero-America.
- According to IRD official Larry Adams, the institute is
- promoting ``sustainable development''--the latest
- euphemism for zero growth--and ``micro-enterprises'' as
- models for Ibero-America and eastern Europe. In a 1991
- interview, Adams revealed that the IRD had begun an
- aggressive campaign the year before to get various church
- organizations which raise money for eastern Europe and the
- Third World to orient away from funding ``large
- infrastructure projects, and instead to direct this money
- into what we call micro-enterprises.'' Micro-enterprises,
- he explained, involved small-scale entrepreneurship, such
- as individually owned flower shops or taxis. He did not
- explain how micro-enterprises could construct irrigation
- systems, railroads, water and sewage treatment systems,
- and other infrastructure basic to economic progress.
- Novak prote@aage@aa Hernando de Soto is an IRD
- favorite, Adams reported. ``We believe that De Soto's
- ideas, what we call neo-liberalism, can be extremely
- useful in Latin America and eastern Europe,'' he said,
- adding that the IRD is planning to publish De Soto's {The
- Other Path} in eastern European languages, as part of its
- efforts to promote Adam Smith and the free market.
- Discussing the IRD's support for ``sustainable
- development,'' Adams said that the institute is studying
- the work of Herman Daly, a World Bank environmental
- adviser and zero-growth fanatic. ``Sustainable development
- doesn't have to mean zero growth,'' Adams claimed,
- ``although you do get into something of a dilemma when you
- come to the question of population growth. Daly's
- proposal is that people are entitled to have a certain
- number of children, and that they can sell their right to
- have children to each other, as long as the total number
- of children born in any given period isn't surpassed.''
- What a perfect merging of Adam Smith and Thomas Malthus!
-
-
- - The Protestant crusade in Ibero-America -
-
- Novak's association with the IRD brings us to another
- key aspect of his mission to ``marry'' Adam Smith and
- Catholicism: the ``protestantization'' of Ibero-America.
- Recognizing that the free market could not be sold there
- unless the influence of Catholic social doctrine were
- undermined, Novak's patrons deployed him to carry out a
- subtle campaign for Calvinist ideology within the
- Ibero-American Catholic Church, which would parallel the
- more direct Protestant fundamentalist conversion crusade.
- Novak was well suited for this job. During the early
- 1970s, toward the end of his ``left-wing'' phase, Novak
- worked for one of the foundations funded by the
- Rockefeller family, which has been in the forefront of the
- drive to extirpate Catholic influence from Ibero-America,
- in part by encouraging the spread of Protestant sects
- throughout the continent.
- After his ``conversion'' to the neo-liberal cause, Novak
- intensified his efforts.
- The IRD has functioned as a primary vehicle for this
- ``protestantization'' campaign. Since he helped found it in
- 1981, the institute has been dominated by Protestant
- groups committed to encouraging Protestant missionary
- efforts in Ibero-America specifically in order to spread
- the dogmas of Adam Smith, efforts denounced by John Paul
- II in his October 1991 visit to Brazil.
- IRD's board members include well-known Protestant
- evangelical theologian Carl Henry, Methodist evangelist Ed
- Robb of Ed Robb Ministries, Dean Curry of Messiah
- College, John Leith of the Union Theological Seminary, Ira
- Gallaway of the Mission Society for United Methodists,
- Kathy Kersten of Lutherans for Religious and Political
- Freedom, and erstwhile Lutheran minister Richard Neuhaus,
- who wrote the IRD's initial statement of principle.
- Novak, Neuhaus, and Peter Berger, another member of
- the IRD board, have long functioned as the ``religious''
- triumvirate within the neo-conservative movement.
- From its inception, the IRD functioned as a de facto
- adjunct of Reagan administration policy, especially in
- Ibero-America. One of its first tasks was to build support
- for the Nicaraguan Contras, hardly surprising given that
- another of the institute's founders was Penn Kemble, a
- pivotal figure in Oliver North's networks and the head of
- the Project Democracy-affiliated Prodemca.
- In an IRD Briefing Paper promoting the ``neo-liberal''
- model for Ibero-America, IRD fellow Amy Sherman gloated
- that ``the so-called `evangelical explosion' in Latin
- America may provide a potential source of energy for the
- capitalist revolution. For many Latins, their
- conversion ... from folk Catholicism ... will bring
- significant attitudinal and behavioral changes. These may
- complement the liberal economic reforms being imposed from
- above, if Max Weber's old argument linking the Protestant
- work ethic to the `spirit of capitalism' holds water in
- the Latin context.''
-
-
- ----
- John Covici
- covici@ccs.covici.com
-
-