Webinar: Economic collapse or cooperation?
A conversation with Catholic Social Teaching specialist, John Médaille. Friday 8 August, 7pm CDT.
Friends,
“The time has come to think the unthinkable—the collapse of the American
political and economic systems,” writes American economist and Catholic Social Teaching specialist, John Médaille, presenter for a special webinar we are hosting in partnership with the Australian Cardijn Institute at 7pm CDT on Friday 8 August 2025.
“The world along with us, from Beijing to Boston, from New York to Moscow, the facade of prosperity and stability is falling apart, to reveal the rotten timbers they have been holding up the structure, but can no longer hold,” he warns.
“The truth I think is this: that economic order is built upon the natural order, and the natural order is built upon natural law or the moral order. And to depart from the moral order leads us to corrupt the natural order and destroy economic order.
“If we are to rebuild the world, I believe we must begin by reconnecting the ethical, economic, and political orders,” Médaille argues.
“The great problem with capitalism is that it tends to concentrate that which it should spread,” he suggests.
The solution, John Médaille explains, therefore lies in the direction of distributism, the economic and political philosophy that proposes an alternative to both capitalism and socialism by advocating for the widespread ownership of the means of production.
Worker co-operatives such as those at Mondragon in Spain and in Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region offer practical examples of pathways to the future, he suggests.
Join us on Friday 8 August to discuss these problems and possibilities with John.
Read John’s latest article
John Médaille, Distributism and the Continuing Crash, or, How to Rebuild the World
Webinar details
Friday 8 August, 7pm CDT US time (Saturday 9 August, 10am Sydney Australian time)
Register now
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/l0vEbd9JSIqn0WHaiIOi2w
Our speaker: John Médaille
Books
The Vocation of Business: Social Justice in the Marketplace


