This blog concerns the injustice of class warfare being waged against us globally by the top 1% and what the Bible has to say about it. The cadre of bankers, Wall St. money brokers and their Washington lobbyists, who have brazenly hijacked the American government and its monetary system, will not return the power they have taken away voluntarily. Are you ready for revolution? Are we even going to need any guns? This follower of Jesus doesn't think so!
Showing posts with label inequality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inequality. Show all posts
Monday, April 1, 2019
Monday, February 18, 2019
Sunday, January 20, 2019
My Clarifications About Last Weekend's Posting to Those Who Responded (and there were a lot)
A
Supplemental Message to Those
Who
Disbelieved Last Week's Warning
by
Minister Paul J. Bern
To view
this on my website, click
here :-)
Last
week, as my regular readers know, I published a post about how there
could well be an economic reset in the world's future, starting with
the United States. I also used a lot of Bible scripture to back up my
words. I got a lot of strong positive feedback about last week's
posting, but there was a fair amount of the negative kind too,
primarily from atheists and religious conservatives. I have found
myself on the receiving end of open derision from a small but highly
vocal minority because of my “radical” views, as one man called
it. 'How could there ever be an economic reset when capitalism works
so well', was just one of the replies I received (heavily edited, of
course). Apparently many of those individuals did not bother to read
the entire article or, worse yet, just glanced at the title and the
picture, and jumped to whatever conclusion suited them for that
moment.
The
Bible has a lot to say about nonbelievers, but I'm going to quote
this week from the Book of 2nd
Peter, something I don't often get a chance to do. Peter may have
been an illiterate fisherman who dictated the two small books named
after him, but he was filled with the Holy Spirit (see Acts chapter
2), and as such he “wrote” some beautiful stuff, and I quote: “3)
Above all, you must understand that in the last days scoffers will
come, scoffing and following their own evil desires. 4) They will
say, 'Where is this ‘coming’ he promised? Ever since our
ancestors died, everything goes on as it has since the beginning of
creation.' 5) But they deliberately forget that long ago by God’s
word the heavens came into being and the earth was formed out of
water and by water. 6) By these waters also the world of that time
was deluged and destroyed. 7) By the same word the present heavens
and earth are reserved for fire, being kept for the day of judgment
and destruction of the ungodly.”
(2 Peter 3, verses 3-7)
Where
is Jesus? I thought he would have come back by now. What's the
holdup? These three questions are on the lips and minds of believers
and scoffers alike. After all, Jesus said about the End Times, 32)
“Now
learn this lesson from the fig tree: As soon as its twigs get tender
and its leaves come out, you know that summer is near. 33) Even so,
when you see all these things, you know that it is near, right at the
door. 34) Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass
away until all these things have happened. 35) Heaven and earth will
pass away, but my words will never pass away.”
(Matthew 24, verses 32-35) For those of you who may not know, 'the
fig tree' is a Biblical symbol for the nation of Israel. So these
words of Jesus, spoken when he was speaking to the Twelve about the
End Times, refer to the rebirth of the nation of Israel, which
happened in May of 1948.
“....when
you see all these things, you know that it is near, right at the
door. Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass away
until all these things have happened.”
So from these words of our Lord and Savior we can safely conclude
that the End Times that Christ spoke about in Matthew chapter 24 have
arrived, most likely beginning with the first two world wars. Since
the nation of Israel was 'born' on May 14, 1948, one could normally
conclude that one generation – roughly 70 years – away from the
nation of Israel's birth could be assumed to be 2018. But it's 2019,
people, and nothing having to do with a Second Coming of Christ is on
the horizon. It's been over 70 years, a generation plus one more
year, and still – nothing yet.
People
are beginning to have doubts because Christ's return is taking longer
than anticipated by many true believers, not to mention the skeptics.
But the apostle Peter knew through the indwelling of the Spirit
within him that this would occur. That's why he dictated the
following words as he continued in 2nd
Peter chapter 3: “8)
But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day
is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day. 9) The
Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness.
Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but
everyone to come to repentance. 10)
But the day of the Lord will come like a thief. The heavens will
disappear with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and
the earth and everything done in it will be laid bare. 11) Since
everything will be destroyed in this way, what kind of people ought
you to be? You ought to live holy and godly lives 12) as you look
forward to the day of God and speed its coming. That day will bring
about the destruction of the heavens by fire, and the elements will
melt in the heat. 13) But in keeping with his promise we are looking
forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells.”
(2nd
Peter 3, verses 8-13)
It is perfectly
normal to have generally doubtful or even pessimistic thoughts enter
our minds. It's even perfectly normal, believe it or not, to have
doubts about the Bible, about God, and about the purpose and meaning
of life itself. But
I think Peter was saying right here to stop wasting time worrying
about these matters, because they are often beyond our control –
but not all the time. In verse 8, Peter is saying as best as he could
that God is timeless, and that He operates in a higher dimension of
existence than ourselves. Since God does not experience the passage
of time like we do, his schedule, his timing, and that of humanity
often don't coincide. Often this can appear to us as if a certain
prayer to the Lord has not been answered. But oftentimes, it's not
that God isn't going to answer our prayers. He's just waiting for an
opportunity to give you even more than you asked for.
In
the very next verse, the Bible tells us plainly why Jesus will be
late in returning. “Instead
he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to
come to repentance.”
Jesus is waiting to return so that as many who want to enter into his
Kingdom, who want to be baptized in the Holy Spirit, can be brought
into it. The apostle Paul wrote, “God is not willing that anyone
should perish, but that all people come to repentance.” So there
you have it from the apostles Peter and Paul. God is going to wait
for as long as he can before shutting the door. But once that door is
shut, it will be shut forever, and then massive destruction will
come.
“....the
day of the Lord will come like a thief. The heavens will disappear
with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and the earth
and everything done in it will be laid bare. Since everything will be
destroyed in this way, what kind of people ought you to be?”
Whatever nature this colossal event is going to be will be unknown
right up until the moment it happens, there can be no doubt about
that based on what I'm reading in verse 10. All indications are that
– based on how this passage of Scripture is worded – Peter was
speaking about some kind of massive cosmic event, either a large
asteroid or comet striking the earth. I'm sorry to disappoint some of
you, it isn't going to be Nibiru which, if it does indeed exist, is
somewhere beyond Neptune right now. That's past Uranus, past Saturn
and Jupiter too. It takes Neptune, the outermost planet of the four,
80 years to go around the sun. If Nibiru is beyond that, even if it
were headed straight for us it would take 40 or 50 years to get here.
Think about it, and do the darned math while you're at at so all you
people can stop worrying about 'Nibiru'.
“11)
Since everything will be destroyed in this way, what kind of people
ought you to be? You ought to live holy and godly lives 12) as you
look forward to the day of God and speed its coming....”
God is watching each and every one of us. Not to whack us on the tops
of our heads every time we're 'bad', but because he cares for us like
a parent would their little children. If you were raising kids, would
you give them candy for breakfast, lunch and dinner? Out of the
question! Would you take them to Six Flags or Disney World every
weekend, whether they deserved to go or not? As before, completely
out of the question. We are raising responsible adults, not spoiled
brats and car thieves. Notice the part where Peter states that we
“look forward” to Christ's return and that we are to “speed its
coming”? The reason Christ has yet to return is because we are not
ready for him to do so. And that's just for the believers. The
nonbelievers would simply be swept away if Christ returned overnight.
They would all be gone, and all their belongings with them, before
morning light.
So
Peter is clearly telling us that we need to clean up our act, and
that we are rapidly running out of time to do so. Otherwise, “That
day will bring about the destruction of the heavens by fire, and the
elements will melt in the heat.....”
“The heavens” presumably means the skies above us, implying a
natural disaster of such Biblical proportions that the earth's
atmosphere may be completely burned away, similar to what apparently
happened on Mars sometime in the distant past. In that event, the
earth's surface would be unlivable, but it would be possible to have
large pockets of breathable air underground in caves. Maybe the cave
men of 100,000 years ago lived there for the same reasons, having
themselves escaped a similar calamity. Could this have been what
Peter was trying to warn us about? Nobody knows for sure, but we all
had better live each day as if that one is our last.
Monday, January 14, 2019
Free book excerpt #33 from Author & Web Minister Paul J. Bern: This time from, "Occupying America"
"Occupying America: We Shall Overcome",
by Rev. Paul J. Bern
One of the most exhaustive, comprehensive books about the “Occupy Wall St.” and “We Are The 99%” Movements written so far, as well as why they are still relevant today (Black Lives Matter, Bernie Sanders, the Yellow Vests in France, etc.). Pro-Occupy; anti-government; very dissident. Watch the author's video at http://youtu.be/Z20l9ohORN4
Excerpt of chapter five, which forecasted the downfall of the Euro back in 2012, a process that has since gotten underway....
Overall,
conditions are decidedly negative at a time financial markets are
whistling past the graveyard. Expect reality to eventually outstrip
hope. Continued wrongheaded policies assures train wreck
unpleasantness and grief. For ordinary people, it means greater
misery. Stronger economies will sink with weaker ones. In fact, world
economies are now so interlinked that a shock in one spreads
everywhere in short order, including among the strongest. It's coming
but no one knows when. Today's economic fragility is a global event.
Eurozone,
UK and US banks are broke but still operating, thanks to never ending
loans from the Fed. However, any time they spend money or lend
reserves, inflation is adversely affected. Now it's a matter of
inflate or die. Decades of accumulated government debt approaches
saturation. It's coming in a few years at most, possibly as soon as a
few months. At issue is at-risk and unpayable government debt and
zero interest rates benefiting bankers. As a result, expect greater
crisis down the road. Since the early
1960's, financial excess assured crisis conditions too great to
contain. It's been building for over 50 years. We are at the stage
now that risk is growing exponentially, as central banks and
governments aggressively intervene in markets, causing major
distortions.
From
inception, the Euro was doomed to fail. We just don't know when it
will actually occur. It's been slowly disintegrating for years. Its
demise will damage global economies in ways that may be nearly
incalculable, not to mention inconceivable. Economic and financial
dislocation is at hand. Delaying the inevitable only works so long.
Reality eventually triumphs. Europe and America are sinking. Judgment
day awaits. It could be 2012 or as late as 2016, but no later (2016
will be the year when China's economy surpasses America's if current
growth rates remain the same). When disintegration arrives, expect
harder than ever hard times. Ordinary people will be hurt most.
Bankers and 1%'ers have stashed trillions in tax havens. Friendly
governments infiltrated with 1%'ers do nothing to retrieve the money
or help troubled households survive. Welcome to “Battleground
America”, a class war of the have-it-all's versus the
have-nothing's that could degenerate into a civil cold war, the likes
of which has not been seen before. It's all downhill from here unless
global protesters stay committed long-term against conditions too
unacceptable to tolerate. That's the wild card world elites fear, and
with good reason. It's because ordinary people can change the world.
It's the only way beneficial social change ever comes!
People
everywhere are coming to the same conclusion. A mass deduction is
being formulated by the many disenfranchised, dispossessed and
disillusioned American workers, the sum of which is that the 99% has
been getting the shaft for entirely too long at the hands of the
elitists who have enslaved us all by forcing us to work for bare
subsistence wages while putting basic necessities and human rights
such as access to health care and higher education financially out of
reach. There are all kinds of ways that are legal and nonviolent
methods to fight back against the rigged political and economic
systems that stand in the way of our freedom. One such instance is
detailed in the Web posting below.
Bank
of America Gets Pad Locked After Homeowner Forecloses On It
Written
by Kelly Heffernan-Tabor, CBS News,
Jun 5, 2011
“Collier
County, Florida -- Have you heard the one about a homeowner
foreclosing on a bank? Well, it has happened in Florida and involves
a North Carolina based bank. Instead of Bank of America foreclosing
on some Florida homeowner, the homeowners had sheriff's deputies
foreclose on the bank. It started five months ago when Bank of
America filed foreclosure papers on the home of a couple, who didn't
owe a dime on their home. The couple said they paid cash for the
house.
“The
case went to court and the homeowners were able to prove they didn't
owe Bank of America anything on the house. In fact, it was proven
that the couple never even had a mortgage bill to pay. A Collier
County Judge agreed and after the hearing, Bank of America was
ordered by the court to pay the legal fees of the homeowners. The
Judge said the bank wrongfully tried to foreclose on their house.
“So,
how did it end?... After more than 5 months of the judge's ruling,
the bank still hadn't paid the legal fees, and the homeowner's
attorney did exactly what the bank tried to do to the homeowners. He
seized the bank's assets. "They've ignored our calls, ignored
our letters, legally this is the next step to get my clients
compensated," attorney Todd Allen told CBS. Sheriff's deputies,
movers, and the couple's attorney went to the bank and foreclosed on
it. The attorney gave instructions to remove desks, computers,
copiers, filing cabinets and any cash in the teller's drawers. After
about an hour of being locked out of the bank, the bank manager
handed the attorney a check for the legal fees....”
In
the wake of Occupy Wall Street's successes, it's time for some more
serious, organized direct action around the issue of debt. When
I talk to people about what we could do that would really compel
Congress and Wall Street to meet our demands or really alter the
current system, we inevitably start discussing what non-cooperation
with our own oppression would look like. What does it mean to stop
cooperating with the banks? What we inevitably end up describing is
some variation of a debt strike, simply ending our own participation
in a system that exploits us. Are debt
strikes, then, the next logical step in the fight against Big
Finance's domination of the 99 percent? Debt
really does tie the 99 percent together, it's everyone's least common
denominator, mathematically speaking. Everyone who is under the 99
percentile saw a major debt increase in the 2000's. You can talk
about the richest 1 percent making too much money, but part of what
they're making is derived from our debts. Their wealth is a claim on
the future income of the remaining 99%, and it is an indicator of a
predatory economic system that exists solely to serve the top 1%.
That debt was for many years a substitute
for wages in the pockets of many Americans. As incomes stagnated or
even shrank, credit cards and home equity filled the gap—until the
housing bubble popped, leaving millions underwater on their
mortgages, owing more than their homes were worth, and unable to get
more credit cards or even make the minimum payments on the ones they
had. In short, everybody found themselves caught in a trap.
Many have
noted that what happened in 2007 and 2008, when the banks were handed
billions in bailouts and secret ultra-low-interest loans, was
essentially a capital strike. Finance essentially said that if they
didn't get bailed out, they'd shut down the system — stop lending,
jam up the works, and make life miserable for everyone. Yet those
same banks, once bailed out, have flatly refused to do the same for a
nation of borrowers thrown into crisis by their actions. Their
argument seems simple — the borrowers knew what they were doing,
it's their obligation to pay. Most borrowers agree, and struggle to
make payments on credit cards with 20 percent interest rates,
usurious student loans for educations that didn't help them find
jobs, on homes that have plunged in value thanks to predatory
lending, and on cars and trucks that often wear out before the owner
can finish paying off the auto loan, keeping the “customer”
locked into a never-ending string of upside-down auto loans. If
someone wants to take an interrelation of violent extortion, sheer
power and total domination, and then turn it into something moral,
and most of all, make it seem like the victims are to blame, you turn
it into a relation of debt.
There
is power in numbers, and that's where the idea of an organized debt
strike comes in. One person can be hounded, harassed, and scared into
submission, but when enough of them work together, could the banks be
pressed into backing down? I firmly believe that homeowners who are
stuck with mortgages greater than the value of their homes should
band together and refuse to pay their mortgages until the banks agree
to negotiate. A kind of collective bargaining for homeowners whose
wealth was wiped out by the financial crisis, those who cannot pay
their bills, and those who can (for now) but still would benefit by
spending that money elsewhere, would be an effective tool for us to
use to retake control of our country and its government away from the
New World Order elites. This would
immediately cause a crisis for the banks, meaning they couldn't
afford to ignore the issue and would then be forced to negotiate with
homeowners.
There
should be debt forgiveness, but these guys – the student loan
profiteers – should eat it, not the government and taxpayers. The
banks should pay because they destroyed the economy, they sucked
18-year-olds into predatory loans they are stuck with for life,
accumulated well-meaning wage earners with mortgages they couldn't
repay, and credit card debt whose interest accrues faster than the
principal can be repaid, especially if you lose your job. Mother
Jones magazine notes in a late 2011 issue that banks have already
written off some $90 billion in credit card debt since 2008. Aside
from the fact, of course, that we wound up with an $8 trillion
housing bubble from just those sorts of bad loans, there is in the US
one type of debt that cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, that
follows you for life and that has the full power of the US government
behind its collection. I'm speaking, of
course, of student loans.
The student
debt bubble is officially over $1 trillion as of 2012, largely
consisting of loans made to teenagers under the premise that
education will help them earn enough money to pay off their loans.
Yet the job market is terrible (and nearly twice as terrible for
young people as it is for everyone else) and meanwhile cuts to public
education, both ideologically motivated, from conservatives, and
because of state budget crises caused by the economic crisis the
banks created, have made that education much more expensive. The
student loan bubble may not burst with a bang, but it is slowly
suffocating us. The problem is that student debt is literally debt
you carry for life. It has no statute of limitations, cannot be
discharged under bankruptcy and the government can literally deduct
it from your Social Security check.
As
credit card and housing debt become unbearable, there’s a point at
which they get written down. That point is currently too high, not
only for credit cards, housing and transportation, but especially for
student loans. Because of poor legal choices we’ve made, student
loans stay forever, they are virtually impossible to discharge under
hardship, they generate an avalanche of fees when they go bad, and
creditors can get to anything, including Social Security, to get it
repaid. Meanwhile, we have a Great Depression-like event that is
throwing college graduates into a labor market that is far too weak.
And defaults are up anyway. According to a
Wall Street Journal report in August 2011, 11.2 percent of student
loans were more than 90 days past due — and if it kept rising,
could pass credit card debt, which is at 12.2 percent but is on a
decline. Obama's new plan to help students with their loans will
provide some relief, but only for current students. Those who have
already graduated — the majority of the student loan bubble — are
ineligible. Thanks a lot, Mr. President.
Occupy Wall
Street has proven that a sizable number of Americans are in a mood to
do things for themselves rather than waiting for government action.
So a student debt strike might actually be the most powerful
statement to make, as there are literally no other options for those
stuck with the burden — many of whom form the backbone of the
occupations around the country. I think the people who would be the
first to strike would be the people who have already defaulted. Once
your credit is already tanked, the idea of giving it another hit
doesn't seem nearly as threatening. In many ways, the combination of
online/offline activism is the hallmark of the Occupy Wall Street
movement, organized with the help of hacker groups like Anonymous and
promoted through citizen media like live-streams, camera phone videos
and Twitter, but solidly grounded in real-world action.
American
homeowners who are stuck in a negative equity situation with their
homes and their mortgages are finding ways to fight back against the
rigged capitalist profit-driven economic system that has them locked
into what amounts to legalized loan sharking. For example,
delinquent borrowers facing foreclosure
are learning that they can stay in their homes for years, as long as
they're willing to put up a fight. Among the tactics: Challenging the
bank's actions, waiting to file paperwork right up until the
deadline, requesting the lender dig up original paperwork or, in some
extreme cases, declaring bankruptcy. Nationwide, the average time it
takes to process a foreclosure – from the first missed payment to
the final foreclosure auction – has climbed to 674 days from 253
days just four years ago. And while some borrowers are looking for
ways to make good with lenders and get their homes back, many aren't
paying a dime. Nearly 40% of homeowners in default as of the end of
2011 have not made a payment in at least two years. Keep up the good
work, everyone!
Many
of these homeowners are staying in their homes based on a
technicality. There is rarely any dispute over whether or not they
have stopped paying their mortgage. They're not in technical default.
They're in default because they're not paying. That's because
American homeowners have gotten wise to what the banks and other
mortgage lenders have been doing, and they are collectively realizing
that two can play that same game. Ironically enough, the banks have
given delinquent borrowers some of the ammunition they need to delay
the foreclosure process. For example, during the "robo-signing"
scandal in 2010, it was revealed that bank employees signed paperwork
attesting to facts they had no personal knowledge of. The lender's
paperwork included many different papers signed by the same employee.
The problem was that the signatures didn't match. In such instances
the courts dismiss the lender's case against the borrower, although
it can be re-filed. Because of this, borrowers are now routinely
challenging that paperwork. Those who are doing so will remain in
their homes for some time to come, while not making any payments.
Sometimes just asking the bank to produce the paperwork that shows it
is the legal holder of the mortgage note can stall or even stop a
repossession. Since mortgages are often transferred electronically,
the official paperwork often gets misplaced. In
some of the more extreme cases, borrowers will file for bankruptcy in
order to block a foreclosure. In these instances, courts order
creditors to cease their collection activities immediately. Home
auctions can be postponed as the bankruptcy plays out, which can take
months. What really needs to be done is for lenders to work harder to
find solutions that allow delinquent borrowers who can afford to make
reasonable mortgage payments to keep their homes. Speaking as a
minister of the Gospel, simply throwing people and even whole
families out in the street in the name of profit is absolutely
barbaric and utterly immoral. The fact that such things have taken
place is exactly why the Occupy and the “we are the 99%”
Movements are so successful, and that success will be greatly
magnified in the coming months, of that you can be sure. In the
meantime, there are plenty of industrious Americans who are joining
the swelling ranks of those who are boycotting their debts, as
selected excerpts from the following Web posting point out in stark
detail.
50
Ways to Leave Your Banker: What Happened When One Man Just Refused to
Pay $80,000 in Credit Card Debt
By
Kimberly Thorpe, Mother Jones
Posted on November
1, 2011
“At
last count, Steven Katz owed $80,000 on his six credit cards, and he
has no intention of paying any of it off. In fact, he'd like to show
you how to be like him—a "credit terrorist" in open
revolt against the banking system. Debtorboards.com ("Sue Your
Creditor and Win!"), a five-year-old online forum where he's
collected countless tricks and tactics for evading and repelling
persistent creditors. He's written how-to's on shielding your assets
from seizure, luring collection agencies into expensive lawsuits, and
frustrating private investigators looking for debtors on the run.
He's even infiltrated the bill collectors' forums, where he's been
tagged a "credit jihadist" and his site's been called a
"credit terrorist training camp," a label he embraces.
"Debtorboards is one of the biggest and most successful temper
tantrums ever," the 59-year-old Katz boasts. The site has more
than 10,000 members—double what it had in 2009....
“Katz
wants the millions of Americans buried in debt to stop feeling guilty
about not honoring their obligations. "People are brainwashed to
think that paying a credit card is more important than paying for the
necessities of life," he says. "Business and morality have
nothing to do with each other, according to the bankers." One of
Katz's mottos is "No one ever went to hell for not paying a
debt...."
Beside
walking away from their debts, exasperated and infuriated Americans
are in some cases walking away from the whole damned unfair economic
system, having come to the realization that the so-called “work
ethic” is a lie and always was. Working long, hard hours in a
futile attempt to save up enough money for a home, college, and
“retirement” (another myth) will only get you one thing –
TIRED! That's where the underground economy comes into the picture as
an alternative to the status
quo.
Also called the shadow or informal
economy, it's not just illegal activity like selling drugs or doing
sex work. It's all sorts of work that doesn't get regulated by the
government or reported to the IRS, and it's a far bigger part of the
economy than most of us are aware. In 2009, the underground economy
was nearly 8 percent of the US GDP, somewhere around $1 trillion.
(That makes the shadow GDP bigger than the entire GDP of Turkey or
Austria.) This doesn’t include illegal activities in this count –
only legal production of goods and services that are outside of tax
and labor laws. And that shadow economy is growing as regular jobs
continue to be hard to come by.
The Young
Women's Empowerment Project describes the “street economy” as
any way that girls make cash money without paying taxes or having to
show identification. Sometimes this means the sex trade, but other
times it means braiding hair, babysitting, selling CDs/DVDs, drugs or
other skills like sewing and laundry. A good number operate websites
online that yield an all-cash income, all one needs to succeed is a
Paypal account or a smartphone. This
underground economy goes far beyond the homeless collecting aluminum
cans or clogging day labor halls. It includes the working poor
getting cash for all forms of recycling: giving plasma, selling
homemade tamales outside shopping plazas, holding yard sales, doing
under-the-table work for friends and family, selling stuff at
pawnshops, CD, book and used clothing stores, and even establishing
tiny one-person businesses selling all kinds of dollar-store-type
merchandise at flea markets and sidewalk kiosks.
Since
so may of us have patronized or even operated these micro-businesses
at some time in the past, that means
nearly all of us have participated in some way in the underground
economy. Yet little is known or discussed about this area of our
lives, even though it touches many of us as we try to make ends meet.
People enter such arrangements because of their difficulty finding
formal employment. Think of undocumented immigrants that work as home
or office cleaners or in the construction or hospitality industries.
Employers or consumers who use workers in this way are doing so to
boost profits or lower prices. Of course documented workers also can
end up choosing to work in the underground economy but that choice,
like the choice for the undocumented, has the same basic driver –
the inability to find formal paid employment that meets a worker's
needs. I would
compare the growth of the underground economy to payday lending; a
typically undesirable practice operating in a legal gray area that
develops and thrives because it fills a need created by the failure
of public policy to address societal needs. The
informal economy, though, does not only consist of low-wage workers.
There is also an informal economy of creative professionals. By
keeping creative professional work informal, these workers avoid the
corporatist rigidity of creative work, maintaining their freedom to
be innovative and self-sufficient.
Without
solutions coming from Washington or local governments, it continues
to be up to working people to find a way to negotiate today's rough
economy. People shouldn't have to give up fundamental human rights
like access to income in retirement, paid sick days, or safety on the
job because they need work. But in a society like ours, which
tolerates high levels of unemployment (which is inexcusable in the
richest country in the world), the underground economy is often the
next best alternative to starving. While
some have been able to flourish working underground, it's important
to remember that most workers are not off the books to dodge paying
taxes or because they prefer it that way. As we see more and more
people dropping out of the formal labor market in despair, the
informal economy will remain a destination of last resort – and
will keep growing. That, in turn, is a signal that people are giving
up on the system. Why obey laws that prevent us from succeeding?
Unemployed
Americans aren't the only ones who are giving up on this rigged
economic system we are currently stuck with. A wave of discontent is
beginning to build among those who work for the system designed to
solidify the power and domination of the top 1%. In the past during
uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East, there are numerous
documented cases of the police and the soldiers being sent to quell
the demonstrations and quiet the protests, only to defect to the side
of the protesters after being ordered by their government to fire
upon unarmed civilians engaged in peaceful and nonviolent political
and social activism. If you were a cop, a soldier or in the National
Guard, and your commanding officer ordered you to kill innocent,
unarmed civilians who posed no threat to anyone, would you do so? I
sure as hell wouldn't, and I'm confident that there are multitudes
more who would share my view if asked. The only remaining question to
be answered has to do with the timing of the tipping point, and if
the system will be totally upended by such an event, or will it be
able to continue to function while repairs are made?
“In
a highly developed society, the Establishment cannot survive without
the obedience and loyalty of millions of people who are given small
rewards to keep the system going: the soldiers and police, teachers
and ministers, administrators and social workers, technicians and
production workers, doctors, lawyers. . . . They become the guards of
the system, buffers between the upper and lower classes. If they stop
obeying, the system falls.” — Howard Zinn, from “The Coming
Revolt of the Guards,” A People’s History of the United States
For
those of us who have demonstrated and marched in the Occupy movement
as I did at Freedom Plaza in Washington in early October 2011 (while
selling a few books on the side as I gleefully participated in the
underground economy), it is obvious that the police and the corporate
press serve as guards. They act as buffers between the vast majority
of the American people and the ruling “corporatocracy” (the
partnership of giant corporations, the wealthy elite, their
collaborating politicians and their armies of lobbyists). In addition
to the police and the corporate press, there are millions of other
guards employed by the corporatocracy to keep people obedient and
maintain the status quo. Most guards also perform duties besides
“guard duty.” The police don’t just protect the elite from the
99 percent; they also provide people with roadside assistance. And
mental health professionals also perform “non-guard duty” roles
such as improving family relationships. Guards certainly can perform
duties helpful for the non-elite, but the elite would be foolish to
reward us guards if we didn’t serve to maintain their system.
Even a
partial “revolt of the guards” could increase the number of
protesters on the streets from the thousands to the millions. For
example, many teachers went into their profession because of their
passion for education, but they soon discover that they are not being
paid to educate young people for democracy, which would mean
inspiring independent learning, critical thinking, and questioning
authority. While teachers may help young children learn how to read,
they are employed by the corporatocracy to socialize young people to
fit into a system that was created by and for the corporatocracy. The
corporatocracy needs its future employees to comply with their rules,
to passively submit to authorities, and to perform meaningless
activities for a paycheck.
If you are
comfortably at the top of the hierarchy, you reward guards to make
your system work. In addition to the police, the corporate press,
mental health professionals, and teachers, there are clergy,
bureaucrats, and many other guards in the system, all of whom are
given small rewards to pacify and control the population. Some guards
have rebelled from their pacification and control roles, but at least
as many have not. I will go out on a limb just a little here and
predict that the revolt of the guards will occur when guards
recognize that they are expendable. So, law enforcement officers,
beware. Cameras and other surveillance technology are becoming
increasingly inexpensive, and law enforcement labor costs will
increasingly be replaced by inexpensive Orwellian surveillance. You
see, the 1% will eventually come for you too.
To
accelerate the revolt of obedient guards, I recommend two strategies:
(1) create unpleasant dissonance about their role as guards; in other
words, put guards in some pain for their unquestioning obedience that
maintains the system, and (2) offer encouragement for even small acts
of rebellion against their guard role; small acts of rebellion may
well be major financial risks. For example, if you have social
contact with off-duty law enforcement officers, you might ask them
“Wouldn’t it be more satisfying putting the handcuffs on some
billionaire tax dodger than arresting some small-time pot user?”
I’ve asked police officers if they’ve heard of Jonathan Swift’s
quote, “Laws are like cobwebs, which may
catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through.”
On-duty police will respond with “no comment” or a blank stare,
but some off-duty cops will smile and even agree. And should off-duty
police ever tell you an anecdote in which they ignored a law designed
to catch a small fly, give them encouragement. For guards, it is not
easy coming out of denial of their role and their fate. As Upton
Sinclair once observed, “It is difficult to
make a man understand something when his salary depends on his not
understanding it....”
To order a print edition at half price for $14.49, visit https://www.authorrevpauljbern.com. For resellers, libraries and NGO's such as political organizations, please visit my nonprofit at https://www.pcmatl.org/books-and-donations for a tax-deductible purchase.
Visit Smashwords for digital versions for iPad/iPhone/iOS, Kobo, B&N
Nook, Kindle & Fire, Sony and more at
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/587480
Get
it in audio format at
https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daudible&field-keywords=occupying+america%3A+we+shall+overcome
Sunday, January 13, 2019
Will America's Economy Really Collapse Like So Many Are Saying?
The
Coming Economic Reset and the Bible
by
Minister Paul J. Bern
For a
website view, click
here :-)
The
profligate $22 trillion dollar deficit currently being foisted on the
backs of scores of millions of hardworking Americans by their federal
government is, based on observation, one of the greatest rip-offs in
the history of humanity. The Federal Reserve, which everybody knows
by now to be neither, is the primary player in this scam, and certain
elements of the US government are its enablers. The root cause of
this problem is the way our capitalist economic system operates,
which is that it is based on debt as a way
to create money. For hundreds of years our economic system has
worked just fine just as it is, and many have benefited from its
existence, including myself.
But
more recently capitalism has become problematic due to one thing –
population increase. Once the earth's population eclipsed 5
billion in 1987, there were too many people that wanted their
fair share of capitalism's profits, and so all our fair shares have
been dwindling ever since in the form of stagnant wages. Since then,
humanity has passed the 7 billion mark back in 1999, and we will leap
over the 8 billion mark sometime in the early 2020's. The end result,
from capitalism's standpoint, is that too many people are competing
for their chunk of the profits, while too few already have far more
than their fair share. Our modern term for this is 'economic
inequality', and the US in particular has a huge problem with this.
Continental Europe (including Great Britain) is also experiencing
increasing issues with inequality, as the “yellow vest” protests
in France, as well as the civil unrest in Greece, Italy, Spain and
elsewhere attest to.
So
to come full circle, capitalism is a debt-based economic system, but
debt is slavery because those who are repaying their debts are
legally bound and obligated to them until they are repaid. So logic
would then dictate this: Capitalism is a debt-based economic system;
debt is slavery; therefore, capitalism is slavery, or more accurately
has devolved into slavery in the 21st
century. Realities change and paradigms change, and both by the force
of human progress. Now, before any of my prosperity-loving readers
become upset with me, I am certainly no Communist or Socialist – I
will admit to being a bit of a hippie, but I say that with pride and
enthusiasm. Both of those economic systems and/or ideologies have
already been tried, and they have all ultimately failed miserably,
such as Soviet Russia, Castro's Cuba, North Korea and Venezuela, to
name a few.
But
all of those who are capitalism's proponents are overlooking an
important set of facts, and that is what the Bible says about
indebtedness, debt repayment and debt forgiveness. That last one
concerning the forgiveness of debt is what the die-hard capitalists
have the biggest problem with. Yet strangely enough, nearly all of
them self-identify as Christians. They seem to have forgotten the
part of the Lord's prayer that says, “Forgive us our sins as we
forgive those who sin against us”. Don't expect to be forgiven
if you yourself refuse to forgive the wrongs of others, whether real
or imagined. Based on that alone, it would be good if I could
interject some relevant Scriptures over the next page or so, together
with some background and explanation of how these ancient Scriptures
still apply to modern life. All these truths come from the writing of
Moses, so let me start with Leviticus.
“8)
“Count off seven sabbath years – seven times seven years – so
that the seven sabbath years amount to a period of forty-nine years.
9) Then have the trumpet sounded everywhere on the tenth day of the
seventh month; on the Day of Atonement sound the trumpet throughout
your land. 10) Consecrate the fiftieth year and proclaim liberty
throughout the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee for
you; each of you is to return to your family property and to your own
clan. 11) The fiftieth year shall be a jubilee for you; do not sow
and do not reap what grows of itself or harvest the untended vines.
12) For it is a jubilee and is to be holy for you; eat only what is
taken directly from the fields. 13) In this Year of
Jubilee everyone is to return to their own property.”
(Leviticus 25, verses 8-13)
Now, just to set the
record straight, a “sabbath year” is defined earlier in this
passage, in verses 3 through 5: “For
six years sow your fields, and for six years prune your vineyards and
gather their crops. But in the seventh year the land is to have a
year of sabbath rest, a sabbath to the Lord.
Do not sow your fields or prune your vineyards. Do not reap what
grows of itself or harvest the grapes of your untended vines. The
land is to have a year of rest.”
At first glance, this would not seem to apply to modern life. After
all, we no longer live in an agrarian-based society. But this way of
life could still be applicable to the times in which we live.
Overpopulation has been a concern for the last generation or so,
probably more. Yet one fourth of the world's population still does
not have access to clean running water. So what if everybody took a
whole year off and hooked up the entire world with clean water and
sanitation? The world sure would be a lot better place, inhabited by
a lot better caliber of people, than it is now. That could be one
version of a modern Sabbath year.
“Consecrate
the fiftieth year and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its
inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee for you; each of you is to return
to your family property and to your own clan. The fiftieth year shall
be a jubilee for you; do not sow and do not reap what grows of itself
or harvest the untended vines.”
In modern times, instead of crops in the field, we should be tending
to one another since there are so many of us. Imagine having an
entire year of paid family leave! That's just one way that these
commandments of old can be renewed and their relevance refreshed, I'm
sure you can think of some more. “For
it is a jubilee and is to be holy for you; eat only what is taken
directly from the fields. In this Year of Jubilee everyone is to
return to their own property.”
Remember that slavery was still legal back in those days. Anyone who
had sold themselves into slavery to repay a debt, which was common,
was free to return home to their families. The same thing applied to
mortgages, as we see in verse 13. It still does – which is why 30
year mortgages are sinful for both borrower and lender. Let that one
sink in for a minute.
Now
let me quote from a second example before tying this all together.
“1)
At the end of every seven years you must cancel debts. 2) This is how
it is to be done: Every creditor shall cancel any loan they have made
to a fellow Israelite. They shall not require payment from anyone
among their own people, because the Lord’s
time for canceling debts has been proclaimed. 3) You may require
payment from a foreigner, but you must cancel any debt your fellow
Israelite owes you. 4) However, there need be no poor people among
you, for in the land the Lord
your God is giving you to possess as your inheritance, he will richly
bless you, 5) if only you fully obey the Lord
your God and are careful to follow all these commands I am giving you
today.”
(Deuteronomy 15, verses 1-5)
By
now all of you have noticed that our economic system, together with
the mortgage and payday and vehicle title loan businesses, are not
even in the ball park compared to God's instructions to Moses, which
have been handed down to the rest of us. Some of you will be
surprised to learn that any loan lasting longer than seven years runs
contrary to the instructions contained in the Scriptures. Also,
notice in verse 3, where the Lord Almighty says it's OK to lend to
foreigners, which means 'non-Jews' in this context, but extends to
everyone in modern times simply because there are so many of us. If
this is starting to sound like it includes those who are applying to
cross America's southern border, you are absolutely right.
“However,
there need be no poor people among you,...”
If, says the Lord Almighty, we obey these commands, everyone will
have enough, and there will be no one needy among us. But modern
capitalism has devolved into a contest of “whoever takes the most
wins”, which is exactly the opposite of what the above passages of
Scripture tell us to do. Consequently, the western capitalist-based
economies are in real danger of collapse for the first time in living
memory for all but the oldest of Americans, who still remember the
Great Depression. Debt has now reached unprecedented levels, and the
interest on the deficits of the world's governments are accruing
faster than the principals can be repaid. A financial implosion is on
the horizon – not just America's, but the entire world's economies
will soon crash. Once the federal reserve runs out of debt from which
to create money (see fractional
reserve lending), there will be no one left to lend to, and the
world's finances will run dry. This will included the world's banking
systems as well as the economies of entire countries. And all this
will be occurring because some insanely selfish people can never get
enough money, wealth and prestige, all of which are illusions.
So
ultimately, the world's economies are going to have to be rebooted
sooner or later. It will be the only way to stave off disaster. If
anyone has money in the stock market, better get your money out of
there before you lose it, and I'm not kidding. Anywhere is better
than Wall Street's gambling casino. And, when the day finally comes
when all the world's economies have to be reset, instead of gold and
silver, I would invest in ammunition, nonperishable food, tools and
barter items as a way to survive what's coming. A ton of gold will do
you no good if there's no way to sell it. Our money could become
worthless, or close to it. One dollar in 1913 is worth 4 cents today,
which is why I say that hyperinflation isn't on the horizon. It's
already here, and we've got it in spades. Four stinking cents? Just
think about that and let it sink in for a minute, and you'll see how
far we've fallen. And we're going to have to pick ourselves up,
because the government will no longer be able to help us. Let that
one sink in too.
Sunday, December 9, 2018
My 7 Reasons Capitalism is Done and Over With (with free book excerpt)
Seven
Reasons Why Capitalism,
As We
Know It, Has Run Its Course
Free book
excerpt #33 from, “The
Middle and Working Class Manifesto 4th Edition” by Rev. Paul J.
Bern
For a
website view, click
here :-)
As
world trade continues its anemic 1.2% average annual growth rate,
politicians in most industrial countries, and particularly in the US,
have an incentive to make exaggerated claims about the alleged
ongoing economic recovery. The government wants us to think the Great
Recession is over, and that we're on "the road to recovery,"
while the American people and other nations look on skeptically. The
ugly truth is that more and more people have lost confidence in –
and consequently no longer trust – the federal government. To make
matters worse, 2015 turned out to be the year when the American
public lost confidence and trust in law enforcement (think Michael
Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Gardner in New York, and that's just
for starters). The street protests in Ferguson, New York, Chicago,
L.A., Atlanta, Baltimore and elsewhere attest to the authenticity of
that mistrust, which continues to get progressively worse. Below are
seven important social phenomena that point to a more realistic
economic and political outlook for 2019. Let's start where it matters
most by beginning with the economy.
My
Seven Reasons Why Capitalism Can't Recover
1)
The Central Banks are clueless. The usual tricks that U.S. and
European central banks use to keep their debt-based economies going
are long-exhausted. Interest rates cannot get much lower. And because
cheap money wasn't working, the printing press was turned up a notch,
into what the U.S. federal reserve calls quantitative easing --
injecting hundreds of billions of dollars into the world economy,
escalating an emerging trade war. Most recently, the Fed is raising
rates at the insistence of investors and retirees, who have been
seeing zero income from their “investments” for many years. This
is bound to end disastrously one way or the other.
2)
Trump's Trade Wars. For a global economy to grow, global
cooperation is needed. But in a major recession all countries engage
in a bitter struggle to dominate foreign markets so that their own
corporations can export. These markets are won by devaluing
currencies (accomplished in the U.S. by quantitative easing),
installing protectionist measures (so that a nation's corporations
have monopoly dominance over the nation's consumers), or by waging
warfare (a risky but highly effective form of market domination).
3)
The Pentagon's Military Wars.
Foreign war is a good symptom of economic decay. The domination of
markets – every inch of them – becomes an issue of life and death
importance. Wars have been unleashed in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and
Yemen. America is fighting scores of clandestine wars in numerous
other countries as well. "Containing" economies like China
and "opening" economies like Iran and North
Korea become more urgent during a major recession, requiring
brute force and creating further global instability in all realms of
social life.
4)
The U.S. Economy is going nowhere in a hurry.
The most important consumer market in the world, the U.S., is a
nation of totally bankrupt consumers. Nearly 18 million Americans are
unemployed or underemployed, while further job losses are certain due
to nearly every state's budget deficit. States are bracing for more
painful cuts, more layoffs, more tax increases, more battles with
public employee unions, more requests to bail out cities. And in the
long term, as cities and states try to keep up on their debts, the
very nature of government could change as they have less money left
over to pay for the services they have long provided." (date
12-05-10; the problem with state government budget shortfalls has
since gotten far, far worse – PB)
5)
Bailout Capitalism Emerges. First
it was the banks and other corporations that needed bailing out in
2008, and now whole nations want the same. Western nations bailed out
their banks by falling into the massive debt that they are now
drowning in. Greece and Ireland have been bailed out, with eyes
shifting to Portugal, Spain, and Italy. With the emergence of
“Brexit”, the entire European Union is being called into question
as the Euro takes a beating in the bailout spree. If the EU is
dismantled, the shock waves will quickly reach other economies
globally.
6)
Bailout Repercussions. All western nations -- starting with the
U.S., Canada and Great Britain – are grappling with their own
national debts. Rich bond investors are demanding that these
countries drastically reduce their deficits, while also demanding
that the deficits be reduced on the backs of working families instead
of rich investors. This is tearing the social fabric apart, as
working and poor people see their social programs under attack. In
Europe mass movements are erupting in France, Spain, Portugal,
England, Greece, Ireland, Italy, etc. Social stability is a
prerequisite for a recovered economy, but corporate politicians
everywhere are asking much more than working people are willing to
give.
7)
The Far Right Emerges. To deal with working people more
ruthlessly, the radical right is being unleashed. In normal times
these bigots yell furiously but no one listens. But in times of
economic crisis they're given endless airtime on all major media
outlets. The message of the far right promotes all the rottenness not
yet eradicated by education: racism, xenophobia, religious
intolerance, violence, and a backward nationalism that fears all
things "foreign." These core beliefs effectively divide
working people so that a concerted campaign against the corporate
elite is harder to wage. Meanwhile, labor unions, progressives, and
other working class organizations are instead targeted.
America
imports twice the dollar amount of manufactured goods than it does
oil. Since 2000 the US experienced a rapid increase in the imports of
advanced technology products. A country dependent on foreigners for
manufactured and advanced technology products is not a superpower.
When it comes to Americans ages
18-24, 63% could not locate Iraq, Iran or Israel on a Middle East
map. Fifty percent could not locate New York City. Moreover, 30% of
respondents thought US
population exceeded one billion. Forty-seven percent of all urban
school children do not possess basic grade level skills. Is there any
doubt as to why the jury system is a sham? Despotism and
dictatorship reign when ignorance and nonsense rule societies.
Society will divide itself into exploiters and exploited. In the
early 1800's, complex literacy in New England exceeded 93%. A small
farm nation, without newly built schools, sport stadiums, and
"prestigious" universities had a much better track record.
They keenly observed the American ideal of independence while never
watching TV or indulging in Virtual Reality.
A
country that has too many lacking in native knowledge is not a
superpower. Countless industrial plants have been closed as 3.5
million jobs in manufacturing have been outsourced in the last ten
years. In that time 7 million less jobs have been created than what
population growth required. The high tech jobs never appeared as
touted. Information Technology, computer system designs, and
telecommunications in fact lost 17%, 9%, and 25% of its work force
respectively. Even wholesale and retail trade experienced job losses,
mainly at the managerial levels. As
several hundred thousand engineers languished in unemployment lines
for years, salaries for law school graduates continue to skyrocket.
Firms in Philadelphia and New York are offering newly trained ruling
class members over $125,000.00 in annual salaries. A country that
does not fully utilize and reward its productive citizens and instead
caters to the parasitic and marginal sectors is not a superpower. A
country whose populace has
been reduced to chattel by the special interest-driven 'health care
for ransom' system is not a superpower.
Unfortunately,
lawsuits for unproven and astronomical monetary amounts are pursued
as the main recourse. These acts obviously fuel the healthcare
crisis. Senator Hillary Clinton, who received $4.6 million from a
trial lawyer group, helped to block medical lawsuit reform during her
2016 campaign. This mild bill would have saved her constituents
$800.00 a year in premiums. A country that allows legalized bribery
to plutocrats to influence law and policy is not a superpower. A
country in which 4-7% of its people are illegals who now choose to
dictate terms is not a superpower. This is clearly a breakdown of law
and order.....”
In
closing, the various reasons for capitalism's impending failure I
have just elaborated on do not happen in a normal economic cycle of
boom and bust. These symptoms point to a larger disease in the
capitalist economic system, a disease that cannot be cured by
politicians who swear allegiance to this deteriorating system and to
the wealthy elite who benefit from it. To ensure that the economic
system is changed so that working people benefit, the ones who do the
real work every day to keep things moving, large-scale collective
action is necessary based on demands that unite the majority of
working people. The ongoing fight for a $15.00 per hour minimum wage
is one good example of large-scale collective action. What America
needs is a massive job-creation program at the expense of Wall
Street, an expansion of Social Security and Medicare, and a
moratorium on home foreclosures. If the Christian community worked
cooperatively with the unions in promoting these demands, working
people could put up a real fight. After all, the Bible says, “The
workman is worth his/her wages”.
Labels:
America,
american empire,
capitalism,
class warfare,
debt,
democracy,
greed,
hunger,
inequality,
injustice,
materialism,
materialistic,
Progressive blogs,
US government
Sunday, December 2, 2018
I wonder what Jesus would say about all those refugees at Tijuana?
America's
Christian Hypocrisy Regarding
the
Asylum Seekers at Her Southern Border
by
Pastor Paul J. Bern
For
a website view, click
here :-)
The
headline in this past Friday's Huffington post said it all: “Chris
Cuomo Shreds Hypocrite Christians Who Celebrate Christmas But Reject
Migrants”. In a timely article posted by David Barden on November
29, this journalist quotes the CNN host when he said earlier that
same day that it is a, “....moral imperative for America to
assist members of the migrant caravan”. With
growing numbers of asylum seekers gathering just a stone’s throw
away at the U.S.-Mexico border, the CNN host said that,
“It’s not enough to say that we bear no responsibility because we
didn’t create the problem. Our responsibility comes from the
absolute fact that we have the power to provide a solution here,”
he said. “There’s
a moral imperative here, America does what she can.” With the
holiday season in full swing, Cuomo then pointed out the hypocrisy of
American Christians who celebrate Christmas yet shun migrants. 'No
small irony that Christians are getting ready to celebrate the story
of Christmas, which is the exact story that we are trying to block
out here,' he said. 'The poor and unwanted who wound up bringing the
Savior into this world in a stable, rejected. Just as we’re doing
now. This is who we are now and it must be exposed.'”
Thank
you for the suggestion, Mr. Cuomo, and allow me to help expose this
very thing about my country this holiday season. The truth of the
matter is that Chris Cuomo was spot-on with that statement regarding
the current state of the USA. For a man like myself born in the
1950's, the USA of the early 21st century is
unrecognizable compared to the country where I grew up. We weren't
nearly as spoiled as we are now, and yet we were happier for the most
part. I grew up in a time when air conditioning was considered a
luxury, and where women didn't work unless they wanted to. People
made a lot less money than today, but the daily cost of living was
far less than today, so that didn't make any difference. The first
Ford Mustangs in 1965 had a base price of $1,995.00, ditto for the
Volkswagen Beetles of that time period. The world used to run on
commerce, but today it runs on debt. Commerce symbolized free
enterprise back then, but today's debt is really just the new
slavery. America actually never really ended slavery after the US
civil war, she simply out-sourced it.
If
we go back to the Book of Exodus in the Bible to the time when the
ancient Israelite's were wandering in the desert – after leaving
400 years of slavery behind in Egypt – we find that God warned them
about mistreating foreigners among them. “Do not mistreat an
alien or oppress him, for you were aliens in Egypt” (Exodus 22:
21). Foreigners being in the land in which we live goes back at least
3,400 years or more. All our ancestors were foreigners at one time or
another in their lives, dating all the way to humankind's
hunter-gatherer years. Taking that into consideration, that makes the
rest of us either foreigners or the descendants thereof. Now you know
why I have such a problem with those who stand against the asylum
seekers, and particularly those haters who profess to be Christian by
faith. Jesus taught us to “....love our neighbor as we love
ourselves”, meaning (in this case) those who rail against
immigrants and asylum seekers ultimately rail against their own
fathers and grandfathers.
Yesterday's
posting about this matter in Buzzfeed.com had this to say:
One
Reason The US And Mexico Can’t Agree On Having Asylum-Seekers Wait
In Mexico: The Trump Administration Itself Is Divided
The
Justice Department wants asylum applicants turned away without any
vetting of their claims. Homeland Security wants them screened for
fears of staying in Mexico.
WASHINGTON
— “Homeland Security and Justice Department officials are feuding
over a controversial plan that would force asylum-seekers at the
southwestern border to remain in Mexico until their cases are
decided, according to sources close the administration. Department of
Justice officials have been pushing for asylum-seekers at the border
to be immediately returned to Mexico as they arrive at the border,
instead of first undergoing screening for fear of persecution or
torture if they are not allowed in. Department of Homeland Security
officials want asylum-seekers screened for persecution, torture, and
fear before being immediately returned to Mexico, to ensure that
there are no serious concerns for their safety in Mexico. The dispute
highlights the fact that key details regarding the plan are still up
in the air.....”
There
you have it, ladies and gentlemen, right before your eyes. The reason
for the infighting among members of the Trump administration, in one
word, is fear. They're all afraid of a bunch of migrant workers who
simply want to restart their lives, and who want to escape the
rampant violence of the drug gangs in central and south America. They
pose a minimal threat to ourselves, and those who do will be weeded
out, one way or another. Few, if any, of these people will escape
president Trump's dragnet, you can all be sure about that. Rather
than be caught up in an irrational fear of one other, we're charged
by God with the sacred duty to love one another. The apostle John
wrote of this when he said, “This is the message you have heard
from the beginning: that we should love one another.” (1st
John 3: 11) As things stand in 21st century America right
now, there are too many Americans who have forgotten or cast aside
this essential teaching of our Lord and Savior.
And
so as America sings, “Peace on Earth and Goodwill to Men”, along
with the rest of the Christmas carols this year, I wish a lot of
people would do what used to be done up until about the 1970's or so.
People used to go Christmas caroling door-to-door, mainly focusing on
the elderly and disabled, and oftentimes the lonely and forgotten. It
was a tradition that dated back centuries, and it needs to be brought
back. Moreover, it needs to be brought to the border at Tijuana,
Mexico where the asylum seekers are being held. If I somehow had the
means, I would charter a plane to San Diego, California full of
people. We would transfer to buses for the remainder of the journey
to the border fence, get out and walk right up to it. Then, once we
were all in place, we would start with ,”Oh Come, All Ye Faithful”
and sing a medley of Christmas carols to all the refugees until we
are all hoarse.
We
could do an hour-long set of Christmas carols, like a song medley, to
warm the hearts of all the refugees, and to let them know that there
are Americans on the other side of that fence who view them as
brothers and sisters in Christ. Never mind nationality and race, just
forget about all that stuff. There needs to be a lot more “Peace on
Earth and Goodwill to Men”, and a lot less rhetoric, bigotry and
vitriol by certain Americans whose chief stock in trade is contempt
for those who are different from themselves. This is particularly
applicable to the wealthy. We have a “moral imperative” to
replace contempt with compassion, to replace bigotry with
understanding, and to substitute love for hate. Perfect love, the
apostle James wrote, drives out fear. OK, since we know that hatred
is based on fear, it is our moral responsibility as Americans –
Christian or otherwise – to understand the origins of our own
fears. Until then, we will be powerless to change ourselves. But if
we consciously engage in love for one another, we can suffocate the
fear right out of ourselves and kill it. So do that first, and you
take the first step down the road to a happier and more fulfilled
life.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)