mercoledì 30 aprile 2025

MAY DAY 2025 - GOOD WORK

  According to Pope Francis


To "recover" a social idea, embedded 

in the Social Doctrine of the Church, 

we like to propose the "manifesto" 

of good work and good business,

 launched by the Argentine pontiff


 

by Mario Bozzi Paths


May 1st, Labor Day, this year cannot fail to be marked by the recent death of Pope Francis, a “Peronist” Pontiff, he said, and therefore populist and sensitive to labor issues. It is to “recover” a social idea, rooted in the Social Doctrine of the Church, very different from the genericism of certain journalistic “reconstructions” read in recent days, that we like to re-propose the “manifesto” of good work and good business, launched by Pope Francis, during his pastoral visit to Genoa, on May 27, 2017, on the occasion of the meeting with the workers of Ilva. It is a manifesto that we feel we should share for its ethical-social value and that we propose, in its essentiality, for its “programmatic” strength.


  Pope Francis: 

*The dignity of work

It is important to recognize the virtues of workers. Their need is the need to do the job well because the job must be done well. Sometimes it is thought that a worker works well only because he is paid: this is a serious disregard for workers and work because it denies the dignity of work that begins precisely in working well for dignity, for honor.

The good entrepreneur

The true entrepreneur knows his workers because he works alongside them, he works with them. Let's not forget that the entrepreneur must first of all be a worker! If he does not have this experience of the dignity of work he will not be a good entrepreneur. He shares the workers' efforts and shares the joys of work, of solving problems together, of creating something together.

He who sells his people sells his own dignity

No good entrepreneur likes to fire his people! Who thinks he can solve the problem of his company by firing people is not a good entrepreneur, he is a merchant. Today he sells his people, tomorrow he sells his own dignity. An illness of the economy is the progressive transformation of entrepreneurs into speculators. The entrepreneur should not be confused with the speculator, they are two different types. The speculator is a figure similar to the one that Jesus in the Gospel calls a mercenary, to contrast him with the good shepherd. He sees the company and workers only as means to make profit, he uses the company and workers to make profit, he does not love them. Firing, closing, moving the company do not create any problem for him, because the speculator uses, exploits, eats people and means for his profit.

Against the faceless economy

When the economy is inhabited by good entrepreneurs, companies are friends of the people. When it passes into the hands of speculators, everything is ruined. It is a faceless, abstract economy. Behind the decisions of the speculator there are no people, and therefore you do not see the people to be fired and cut.

When the economy loses contact with the faces of real people it becomes faceless and therefore ruthless. We must fear speculators, not entrepreneurs.

Work is a friend of man and man is a friend of work.

Lack of work is much more than the loss of a source of income to live. Work is also this, but it is much more, by working we become more people, our humanity flourishes, the Social Doctrine of the Church has always seen work as participation in the creation that continues thanks to the hands, mind and heart of workers. On earth there are few greater joys than those experienced by working. Just as there are few greater pains than when work crushes, humiliates, kills. Work is a friend of man and man is a friend of work. Through work men and women are anointed with dignity.

Building the social pact

The entire social pact is built around work, when people don't work, work poorly or work little, democracy enters into crisis, the entire social pact enters into crisis. This is also the meaning of the first article of the Italian Constitution: Italy is a Republic founded on work. We can say that taking away people's jobs or exploiting people with unworthy or poorly paid work is unconstitutional, according to this article! If it were not founded on work, the Italian Republic would not be a democracy because the place of work has always been occupied by privileges, castes, and incomes.

The social goal to be achieved is not income for all, but work for all

We must look at technological transformations and not resign ourselves to the ideology that imagines a world where perhaps half or two thirds of workers will work, and the others will be supported by a social security check. It must be clear that the social objective to be achieved is not income for all, but work for all. Because without work for all there will be no dignity for all. The work of today and tomorrow will be different, perhaps very different, think of the industrial revolution. There will be a revolution, but it will have to be work, not pensions! Not pensioners, work! You retire at the right age, it is an act of justice but against the dignity of people to send them into retirement at 35-40 years old, with a state check.

 The excesses of competition

The values of work are changing very quickly and many of these values of big business and big finance are not in line with the human dimension and therefore with Christian humanism. The emphasis on competition, in addition to being an anthropological error, is also an economic error because it forgets that business is mutual cooperation. When you create a system that puts workers in competition with each other, maybe it can obtain some advantage in the short term but it ends up undermining that fabric that is the soul of every organization and so when a crisis arrives the company frays and implodes, because there is no longer any rope that holds it up. This competitive culture is a mistake, it is a vision that must be changed if we want the good of business, workers and the economy.

The excesses of meritocracy

Another value that is actually a disvalue is meritocracy, which is so much praised today and is very fascinating. Beyond the good faith of the many who invoke it, meritocracy is becoming an ethical legitimation of inequality. The new capitalism, through meritocracy, gives a moral guise to inequality, because it interprets people's talents not as a gift but as a merit, determining a system of cumulative advantages and disadvantages. Thus, if two children are born with different talents or social and economic opportunities, the economic world will interpret the different talents as merit, and will reward them differently. And so, when those two children retire, the inequality between them will have multiplied. A second consequence of the so-called "meritocracy" is the change in the culture of poverty. The poor are considered undeserving, and therefore guilty. And if poverty is the poor's fault, the rich are exempted from doing anything. This is the old logic of Job's friends who wanted to convince him that he was to blame for his misfortune, but this is not the logic of the Gospel and of life. Meritocracy in the Gospel is found in the figure of the elder brother of the prodigal son who despises his younger brother and thinks he must remain a failure. The father instead thinks that no son deserves the acorns of the pigs.

 The dignity of work

Those who lose their job and can't find another one feel they are losing their dignity. Like those who are forced to accept bad and wrong jobs. There are still bad and wrong jobs in illegal arms trafficking, pornography, gambling and in all those companies that do not respect workers and the environment, like those who are paid a lot because work takes up their whole life, without hours. Without work you can survive, but to live you need work and the choice is between surviving and living. A monthly state check that allows you to support your family does not solve the problem. The problem must be solved with work for everyone.

 Work and the Party

A paradox of our society is the presence of a quota of people who would like to work and cannot, or others who would like to work less, but cannot because they have been bought by companies. Work becomes a brother when next to it there is a party, free time. Without this, it becomes slave labor, even if overpaid. In families where there are unemployed people it is never truly Sunday, because there is no work on Monday. To celebrate holidays it is necessary to be able to celebrate work, they go together, one marks the time of the other. Consumption is an idol of our time, consumption is the center of our society and therefore pleasure. Today there are new temples open 24 hours, which promise salvation, points of pure consumption and pure pleasure. Work is toil, and sweat, when a hedonistic society sees and wants only consumption, it does not understand the value of toil and sweat, it does not understand work. All idolatries are experiences of pure consumption. Without rediscovering a culture that values toil and sweat, we will not find a new relationship with work and we will continue to dream of the consumption of pure pleasure."

 Work and consumption

Work is the center of every social pact, not a means to be able to consume. Between work and consumption there are many things, all important and beautiful: freedom, honor, dignity, rights for all. If we sell work to consumption, we will soon sell these sister words too.

Spirituality of work

Many of the most beautiful prayers of our parents and grandparents were prayers of work recited before, after and during work. Work is present every day in the Eucharist whose gifts are the fruit of the earth and the work of man. The fields, the sea, the factories, have always been altars from which beautiful and pure prayers have risen that God has welcomed and collected, recited but also said with the hands, the sweat, the fatigue of the work of those who did not know how to pray with their mouths. God has welcomed all these and continues to welcome them even today. For this reason I would like to end with a prayer: the come Holy Spirit: "Send us a ray of light, come father of the poor, of workers and of workers".

@barbadilloit



 

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