The Reasonable Limits of State Activity

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Title

The Reasonable Limits of State Activity

Description

In this address to the Educational Convention in St. Louis, MO on June 24, 1919, Cardinal O'Connell warns of the dangers of government interference in business and citizens' private lives. Cardinal O'Connell saw government legislation regarding labor and business as opening the door to a socialist form of government. Consequently, he criticized Bishops' Program of Reconstruction and its call for social reform legislation that would regulate working conditions and wages.

Creator

William Cardinal O'Connell

Source

Address to the Education Convention, St. Louis, Missouri

Publisher

"Report of the Proceedings and Addresses of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting," The Catholic Educational Association Bulletin, Vol. XVI, No. 2 (November 1919), pp. 62-76.

Date

June 24, 1919

Rights

American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives

Relation

For more information on this item, visit the document page for "The Reasonable Limits of State Activity", 1919.

This item is a part of both the The 1919 Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction section and the Catholic Responses to Industrialization" section.

Citation

William Cardinal O'Connell, “The Reasonable Limits of State Activity,” American Catholic History Classroom, accessed December 22, 2024, https://cuomeka2.wrlc.org/items/show/139.

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