SOCIAL CREDIT
In an address last evening Miss M. HKing’ spoke on the philosophy of Social Credit, and indicated the precise points ot impact of this philosophy with the artificial barriers built during the ages that had in more recent times been cloaked in the familiar phrases so often spoken by economists, financiers, politicians, and theologians, such as “ the law of supply and demand,” “ inflation,” “we must economise,” “ nothing can be done until human nature is changed,” and so on.' All these assertions, Miss King said, had no practical bearing on the actual recording mcchapism that could bo used in the moving of goods and services into consumption up to saturation point to the benefit of all. Many instances wore quoted showing what Miss King described as the unreasoned and dogged resistance to realistic progress in inductive thinking that could be achieved through education in applied economic theory and by the constant checking of theory and ideas with practical individual human experience.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 23908, 11 June 1941, Page 11
Word Count
162SOCIAL CREDIT Evening Star, Issue 23908, 11 June 1941, Page 11
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