The pope's strong condemnation of income inequality and free markets
shows how much has changed in the Catholic Church since the Cold War.
The Atlantic / Nov 26 2013, 3:31 PM ET![](http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/2013/11/RTX12M6D/a059a28b7.jpg)
He couldn't be much clearer. The pope has taken a firm political stance against right-leaning, pro-free market economic policies, and his condemnation appears to be largely pointed at Europe and the United States. His explicit reference to “trickle-down” economic policies—the hallmark of Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and their political successors—is just the beginning: Throughout 224 pages on the future of the Church, he condemns income inequality, “the culture of prosperity,” and “a financial system which rules rather than serves.”
Taken in the context of the last half-century of Roman Catholicism, this is a radical move.
You can read the entire article, taken from The Atlantic, by CLICKING HERE.
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