Capitalism, Economics, Parenting

❧Ways to Teach Economics to Your Children

Economics is not first learned in classrooms, markets, or ballot boxes. It is learned in the home. Long before children encounter taxes, debt, or inflation, they are already forming beliefs about money, work, fairness, and responsibility. If parents do not teach these truths deliberately, the State and the screen will fill the vacuum — and they will not teach freedom. Children must learn early the difference between voluntary help and forced redistribution, between charity and control, between earning and entitlement. These lessons do not require jargon or ideology. They require only simple questions, lived examples, and the courage to tell the truth plainly. A child who understands choice, consequence, and scarcity does not grow into a cruel adult. They grow into a competent one. And competence, not sentiment, is the foundation of a free society.

Art Meditations, Moral Philosophy, Parenting

Parents: You Can’t Give What You Don’t Have

Children are often shaped less by harm than by absence; the absence of moral authority and virtue in the adults who raise them. Where prudence, temperance, fortitude, and justice are weak, children inherit disorder by proximity. Take the virtue test and see where you need to grow.