A Carmelite Blessed!!
Embryonic Genocide: Thousands of Human Embryonic Persons Killed in the U.K. - International - Catholic Online
Caritas in Veritate - Pope Benedict XVI
47. The strengthening of different types of businesses, especially those  capable of viewing profit as a means for achieving the goal of a more humane  market and society, must also be pursued in those countries that are excluded or  marginalized from the influential circles of the global economy. In these  countries it is very important to move ahead with projects based on subsidiarity,  suitably planned and managed, aimed at affirming rights yet also providing for  the assumption of corresponding responsibilities. In development programmes,  the principle of the centrality of the human person, as the subject  primarily responsible for development, must be preserved. The principal concern  must be to improve the actual living conditions of the people in a given region,  thus enabling them to carry out those duties which their poverty does not  presently allow them to fulfil. Social concern must never be an abstract  attitude. Development programmes, if they are to be adapted to individual  situations, need to be flexible; and the people who benefit from them ought to  be directly involved in their planning and implementation. The criteria to be  applied should aspire towards incremental development in a context of solidarity  — with careful monitoring of results — inasmuch as there are no universally  valid solutions. Much depends on the way programmes are managed in practice.  “The peoples themselves have the prime responsibility to work for their own  development. But they will not bring this about in isolation”[114].  These words of Paul VI are all the more timely nowadays, as our world becomes  progressively more integrated. The dynamics of inclusion are hardly automatic.  Solutions need to be carefully designed to correspond to people's concrete lives,  based on a prudential evaluation of each situation. Alongside macro-projects,  there is a place for micro-projects, and above all there is need for the active  mobilization of all the subjects of civil society, both juridical and physical  persons.
International cooperation requires people who can be part of the  process of economic and human development through the solidarity of their  presence, supervision, training and respect. From this standpoint, international  organizations might question the actual effectiveness of their bureaucratic and  administrative machinery, which is often excessively costly. At times it happens  that those who receive aid become subordinate to the aid-givers, and the poor  serve to perpetuate expensive bureaucracies which consume an excessively high  percentage of funds intended for development. Hence it is to be hoped that all  international agencies and non-governmental organizations will commit themselves  to complete transparency, informing donors and the public of the percentage of  their income allocated to programmes of cooperation, the actual content of those  programmes and, finally, the detailed expenditure of the institution itself.
 
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