Rome Stoops to Conquer Chapter III. Winning The Worker
The papal encyclical “Quadragesimo Anno” made a timely appearance. It was completed in May, 1931, and placed in the hands of the American bishops as an instrument of propaganda. It is an astute document, capable of being interpreted in a liberal sense; capable also of being employed as a check to radicalism. It enfolds splendid shibboleths and a few fiery phrases to arouse labor to a sense of the “progressiveness” of Rome. On the other hand, it is drawn up with an eye to conserving all the important interests of capital. It is both liberal and conservative; profound and platitudinous; practical and too general for application. It is called, for the purposes of Catholic propaganda, “a charter of freedom for the worker,” but in reality it is a sheet anchor for the old social order of capitalism and competition.
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