Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A Suggestion for Rounding Out ‘A Call for Intergenerational Justice’
A Suggestion for Rounding Out ‘A Call for Intergenerational Justice’
Feb 11, 2026 12:00 PM

I’d like to thank Gideon Strauss of the Center for Public Justice and Jordan Ballor of the Acton Institute for their gracious and thoughtful contributions to the discussion of “A Call for Intergenerational Justice” at last night’s Open Mic Night in Grand Rapids. It was an excellent example of the kind of spirited and good natured dialogue we need in confronting the problems of poverty and the national debt.

Earlier this week I pointed out that there was indeed a lot in the “Call” to be mended. It takes the question of the debt seriously and makes hard mendations involving both cuts to federal spending and tax increases. Both will be necessary tools for addressing this issue.

My problem with “A Call for Intergenerational Justice” is that I don’t believe these two tools, while both necessary, are sufficient to address the crisis alone. In the short term cuts in federal spending will affect many adversely and tax increases will place an additional burden on an economy still struggling to emerge out of a recession.

The precarious place we now find ourselves in has many causes. Government spending that has grown to unsustainable levels and tax cuts funded by borrowing (Which are, in the long term, not genuine tax cuts at all) have both played a role. But what has fueled the deficit most in recent years is the recession itself and the tragically misguided attempts by the federal government to lift us out of it.

What we desperately need is a third tool, economic liberalization, which would promote economic growth. Here are four broad principals of economic liberalization which, if they had been included, would have made “A Call for Intergenerational Justice” a document not just worth thoughtful consideration and debate but something worth getting behind:

We need to open more markets to American goods and services and open them more widely.We need to lower barriers (in the form of regulation) and cost (in the form of taxation) to doing business and creating jobs domestically.We need to lower regulatory barriers for entrepreneurs to enter the marketplace by streamlining or cutting red tape.We need to look seriously at intellectual property law and strike a better balance between rewarding innovation and petition.

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 awesomely boring future of driverless cars
As fears loom about a future filled with robot overlords, innovation continues to accelerate at breakneck pace. When es to self-driving cars, for example, panies are making significant strides with the technology, even as the masses continue to fret over a handful of related accidents and the potential for human abuses. With Waymo’s Chrysler Pacifica now plishing Level 4 autonomy, just how afraid should we be? Is a world of autonomous cars destined for apocalyptic catastrophe or dystopian indolence? According...
5 Facts about the Bill of Rights
Today is Bill of Rights Day, memoration first established byPresident Franklin D. Rooseveltto cherish the ‘immeasurable privileges which the charter guaranteed’ and to rededicate its principles and practice.” Here are five facts you should know about the Bill of Rights: 1. At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, George Mason of Virginia said that he “wished the plan had been prefaced by a Bill of Rights,” because it would “give great quiet” to the people. A motion was made that mittee...
The numbers game: Has the middle class made any economic progress?
In the Age of Information, we face an overwhelming barrage of high-minded studies and reports that claim to offer the final word on this or that. As it relates to matters of economic policy, we are pressed to lend ever increasing amounts of trust to the power of statistical analysis and the reliability of research from a variety of academics and economic planners and soothsayers. In a video seriesfor the Hoover Institution, economist Russ Roberts seeks to illuminate the limits...
Radio Free Acton: Samuel Gregg on Röpke and Keynes; Upstream on Rolling Stone magazine
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Dylan Pahman, Research Fellow and Managing Editor of theJournal of Markets and Moralityat Acton, speaks with Samuel Gregg, Director of Research at Acton, about the prolific economists Wilhelm Röpke and John Maynard Keynes, who they are, what they did, and why we should care. Then, on the Upstream segment, Bruce Edward Walker talks to author and musician Robert Dean Lurie about the 50th anniversary ofRolling Stonemagazine. Check out these additional resources on this...
A cryptocurrency? Tech stock? Bubble? What exactly has Bitcoin become?
Four years ago I wrote a series of posts on what Christians should know about bitcoin. At the time a single bitcoin was worth $266, and I wasn’t sure it’d be around for five more years. This week a single bitcoin was trading for $17,800 and it looks like it’ll be around long past my five-year mark. But the rapid and inexplicable rise in price of bitcoins has caused some people to wonder what’s going on—and even e confused what...
Acton Institute seeks to recognize doctoral students through Novak Award
The Acton Institute is now accepting applications for the 2018 Novak Award. The deadline to apply is March 15, 2018 and the nomination requirement has been removed. The award, named after distinguished American theologian Michael Novak, is open to current doctoral candidates or those who have received a doctorate in the past five years. Applicants should have studied theology, religion, philosophy, history, law, politics, economics, or related fields. The Acton Institute will select one winner to receive the USD $15,000...
The cost of Twelve Days of Christmas: $34,558.65
If you’ve been stuck at the mall listening to a song about ten Lords a-Leaping and eight Maids a-Milking you can blame the Jesuits. Rumor has it they invented the Twelve Days of Christmas song as acatechism in codefor persecuted Catholics in 16th-century England. The claim is that each of the items has a coded meaning (Old and New Testaments are the two turtle doves; three hens are the Wise Men; the Evangelists are the four calling birds; five gold...
Public goods and asteroid defense
Note: This is post #60 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. While the probability of an asteroid hitting the planet is very low, its effect would be disastrous for all of us. Who then should pay for asteroid protection? As Alex Tabarrok of Marginal Revolution University explains, public goods like asteroid defense have some unusual properties that challenge markets. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d mend watching them at 1.5 to 2 times...
Study: Anti-profit beliefs cause people to neglect the societal benefits of profit
From Pope Francis to Occupy Wall Street, there has been a notable trend recently of considering all forms of business profits to be harmful to society. Business profits—the money that remains when a business’s revenues exceed expenses—are condemned as, at best, a driver of inequality, and, at worst, an inherently unjust form of theft. This view not only persists, but seems to be growing during a period when the benefits of the profit-driven economic system should be obvious to all...
Who really benefits from Poland’s Sunday shopping ban?
Poland may soon ban shopping on Sundays. On Friday, November 24, the lower house of the Polish legislature (the Sejm) approved a Sunday shopping ban, 254-156. The ruling Law and Justice (PiS) Party has presented this as a way to uphold the nation’s Catholic character, but some on the ground warn there is more to merce ban than meets the eye. It’s true that Poland’s Catholic Bishops Conference lobbied hard for the measure, which would gradually phase out Sunday shopping...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved