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 poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poverty. Show all posts
Monday, April 1, 2019
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, November 4, 2018
A Study of the Counterintuitive: It's an Honor to be Poor
Those Who
Are Living Paycheck to Paycheck
Are More
Blessed Than They Realize
by Pastor
Paul J. Bern
To view
this on my website, click
here :-)
I
don't have to explain what's been happening to the US Middle Class
over the last 35 years or so. Many people who used to be Middle Class
in America are now poor. I should know, since I used to make a whole
lot more money than I do now. But that was before the bottom fell out
of everything. I've been there, done that and bought the T-shirt.
Everyone is lamenting because they're living paycheck to paycheck and
they don't know what to do about it. Going to the ballot box, so far,
has produced an exacerbation of America's political problems –
exactly the opposite of what is intended. Now we have people talking
about civil war, and America's citizens are emigrating at record
levels. The ones who are staying are buying guns and ammo at record
levels. No wonder everyone is so tense and on edge!
That's
why the purpose of this week's message is to console those who are
angry and hurt, to counsel those who have been pushed aside or shown
the door without just cause, and to reassure the frightened and
confused. It's not hard to get pretty befuddled about current events.
We live in a world of mass shootings in schools, work places, grocery
stores and even churches – or synagogues, as was the case recently.
Things have gotten so bad that we can't even attend church or go out
for a movie without having to be alert for anyone carrying a weapon.
There is a good side to being poor, and a positive thing about being
oppressed, according to the Word of God (or the Bible, if you
prefer). Allow me to cite a few examples from Scripture.
My
first example is that of the apostle James, who was a very astute
individual, and so his writings are something to take very seriously
regardless of one's religious beliefs – or even a lack thereof.
These words can still be beneficial regardless of faith. “5)
Listen, my dear brothers and sisters: Has not God chosen those who
are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit
the kingdom he promised those who love him? 6) But you have
dishonored the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are
they not the ones who are dragging you into court? 7) Are they not
the ones who are blaspheming the noble name of Him to whom you
belong? 8) If you
really keep the royal law found in Scripture, 'Love your neighbor as
yourself,' you are doing right.”
(James 2, verses 5-8)
Take heart if you
are poor or otherwise financially hard pressed! Contrary to what many
think and say, there is no shame in being poor. I was pretty well off
at one time myself, mainly back in the 1990's through most of that
decade, wrapping around to the early 2000's. I know what it's like to
earn a six figure income, and to have to meet a payroll every week.
But those days are gone for good, and there's little I can do about
it except to keep on writing. I live on my small pension check, plus
a little extra each month when I sell a book or two, and I've come to
terms with that. But, what James wrote is even more true today than
back then: “Is
it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who are
dragging you into court?”
The student loan crisis is one modern example of this, foreclosures
are another, and the so-called Drug War is yet another. Over half the
people in state and federal prison are there for nonviolent drug
offenses. America spends entirely too much money locking up all the
wrong people.
“Has
not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich
in faith and to inherit the kingdom he promised those who love him?”
If you're poor, mentally depressed and running low on hope, then heed
these words of the apostle James, the half-brother of Christ. To say
this another way, it's better to be rich in faith than rich with
worldly goods, and it's better to be poor in worldly goods than it is
to be poor in faith. “If
you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, “Love your
neighbor as yourself,” you are doing right.”
The much-beloved phrase, “Love your neighbor as yourself” is
found first in Leviticus 19: 18, and it was an admonishment from the
Lord Almighty to us all, that there be no hate among us – none at
all! Judging by the racial tensions that simmer all across America,
I'd say we have our work cut out for us as far as loving our
neighbors – regardless of color.
Jesus
himself was more blunt and direct than James in Luke's gospel when he
said: “20)
Looking at his disciples, he said: 'Blessed
are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God. 21) Blessed
are you who hunger now, for you will be satisfied. Blessed are you
who weep now, for you will laugh. 22) Blessed are you when people
hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name
as evil, because of the Son of Man. 23) Rejoice in that day and leap
for joy, because great is your reward in heaven. For that is how
their ancestors treated the prophets. 24) But woe to you who are
rich, for you have already received your comfort. 25) Woe to you who
are well fed now, for you will go hungry. Woe to you who laugh now,
for you will mourn and weep. 26) Woe to you when everyone speaks well
of you, for that is how their ancestors treated the false prophets.'”
(Luke 6, verses 20-26)
The world's poor,
sick and disabled, Jesus was saying, will be the first through the
gates of heaven. If you hunger, you will be filled by Christ, not by
McDonald's – Jesus guarantees it. Weep all you want for now, Jesus
was saying, because in the end He will give us life and laughter
everlasting. The more people hate you because of me, Jesus was
teaching them, the greater your reward will be. So, let others hate
you just because you will not hesitate to make a stand for Christ.
Never mind Republican or Democrat, conservative, liberal or
progressive – they all pale in comparison to the Spirit of our Lord
and Savior. But in verses 24 and 25, Jesus taught that anyone who
enriches themselves in this life does so at the expense of another,
and those wealthy individuals risk paying an eternal price for being
selfish beyond reason while others went hungry. Verses 24 through 26
could also be interpreted as a prophecy against America, but that
would be another message for another time.
So, I want everyone
reading this who is going through a hard time financially – and
that would be the majority of you – to take heart in their
situation. Granted, you are suffering and miserable, I know how you
feel. But take it from a guy who's been there, you can and will
survive the ordeal you are currently undergoing. If you can't raise
your income, then find ways to cut your expenses. The main thing is
knowing that Jesus is walking beside you in every conceivable way,
every step of the way.
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Sunday, September 9, 2018
Inequality Keeps Getting Worse, and God is Watching
A
Few Comments on Inequality and Its Consequences
by
Pastor Paul J. Bern
For
a website view, click
here :-)
If
you want to solve a problem, start from the top down. We have been
stuck in what are now antiquated concepts of representative democracy
for 230 years. These days, we can go to Washington, DC via computer –
the need to send other parties has become obsolete. Same goes for
shareholder ownership of businesses as opposed to worker-owned or
co-operative enterprises. Many people seem to believe that progress
is getting other people to do more things for them, when quite the
reverse is true. And I think that we’ve reached the point now where
we’re stuck with a whole lot of unworkable concepts, so that when
Michael Moore speaks about the number of people who make all this
money and other people who don’t, it sounds as if we’re
struggling for equality with them. Who wants to be equal to these
guys? I think we have to be thinking much more profoundly, such as
being on a higher plane of existence.
And
I think that, talking about recovery, talking about democracy, we too
easily get sucked into old notions of what we want. So we’re
expecting protest. I don’t mind protests, and I encourage them at
times. But what happened in 2001 in Porto Alegre, Brazil, or in
Fergusom, Mo. In 2012 – when people gathered to say another world
is necessary, another world is possible, and another world is
happening, I think that that’s what’s happening. I was there in
October 2011 for the commencement of “Occupy DC” in Freedom Plaza
in Washington, DC, and I felt honored and humbled to have been
privileged to be a part of that historical event. It inspired me to
write my second self-published book, “Occupy
America: We Shall Overcome”
that winter and spring. It is imperative that we take matters into
our own hands. Don't trust your government, they have already been
lying to all of us for decades. Take the initiative! Take a look over
your shoulder and you will notice that there is no one standing
behind you to do anything or to take care of any business for you.
It's all on you, and it's all on all of us.
People
are beginning to say the only way to survive the early 21st
century is to batten down the hatches. So they are building
underground bunkers and stocking them with non-perishable foods,
water, firearms and ammunition. In so doing they have voluntarily
devolved as human beings. Don't forget what Christ said about that,
“He who lives by the sword will die by the sword”.
Otherwise all our time will be wasted by a mad scramble of those who
compete with others instead of co-operating with them. All our
efforts must instead be devoted to taking care of one another by
recreating our relationships to one another. Let me point out a few
examples.
In
the first place, the US is still the only developed country in the
world that has no comprehensive national health insurance (forget
Obama-care, it's actually a new tax in disguise) and no family leave
for workers. That's right, nobody but us. The very people who call
these two basic human rights “socialism” are the ones who are
profiting off the existing system the most. Thomas Jefferson once
said, “The first and foremost duty of any government is to see
to the needs of its people.” I think that sums it up perfectly.
The
second example are wages, which are downright pathetic. Having been
an IT professional for over 20 years, I clearly remember how wages
began falling around 2000-2001 around the time of the dot-com crash.
By the time I had left the business in 2012, the bottom had fallen
out as far as wages were concerned. Jobs that paid $20-25.00 an hour
were going for $12.00, and older workers like myself found ourselves
shut out of the tech job market for good. Today as I write this, the
minimum wage remains at a paltry $7.25 cents per hour here in Atlanta
where I live. And what are these pitifully poor people supposed to do
with $7.25 an hour? Buy lollipops? The minimum wage works out to a
take-home pay of about $845.00 per month after taxes and Social
Security, not counting state taxes. Go try to live on that for a
month or even a week!
Many
thousands of American families are being forced into into the streets
due to circumstances beyond their control. In short, we are exactly
where the government wants us: powerless! Take away every available
resource we have and we're helpless. The solution is a realistic
minimum wage that will also serve to jump-start America's economy
again. Based on the cost of living for a family of four, which would
include housing, utilities, internet access, transportation, clothing
and medical care, that would work out to about $14.00 an hour for
bare essentials. This should be something people are out protesting
in the streets about. We want a living wage, now!!
As
you can see, our problems can be fixed without having to re-invent
the wheel. You don't have to be an economic genius – if indeed
there is really such a thing – to figure out some basic, common
sense solutions to get America's middle class back to work. Otherwise
I fear that too many more formerly middle class Americans like so
many of us will fall into the cracks in the sidewalk and disappear.
Sunday, March 18, 2018
Ending the WV teacher's strike, and what it has to do with justice, fairness and mercy
Progressive
Christianity, Worker's Rights and Social Justice
by
pastor Paul J. Bern
For
better viewing on phones, tablets and other small screens,
click here :-)
The
recent settlement of the West Virginia teacher's strike, which
resulted in a 5% pay raise after lasting for nearly two weeks, will
soon echo across the landscape of American labor, and hopefully for
the entire world as well. People everywhere – and I mean globally –
are literally starving for a pay raise. Today's labor market – not
just in America but globally – already has within it the seeds of
revolution, and the people are most definitely ready to rise up, if
only I could get you all to turn off your damned televisions and
gaming consoles!! This isn't about religion, this is about justice
and equality, and the Bible has plenty to say about both. So, for
those of you who may think the Bible is some antiquated rule book
that has lost its relevance, allow me to set the record straight.
In
Psalm 106 verse 3, it says, “Blessed are they who maintain
justice, who constantly do what is right.” In Proverbs 29 verse
4, it says, “By justice a king gives a country stability, but
one who is greedy for bribes tears it down.” Come to think of
it, I'm going to send that Bible verse to every member of Congress in
Washington, D.C.! The prophet Isaiah lamented the lack of justice in
his own time – so this problem is not new – when he wrote, “So
justice is driven back, and righteousness stands at a distance; truth
has stumbled in the streets, and honesty cannot enter. Truth is
nowhere to be found, and whoever shuns evil becomes prey. The Lord
looked and was displeased that there was no justice.” Here's
one more sample of the mind of Almighty God: “And the word of
the Lord came again to Zechariah: 'This is what the Lord Almighty
says: Administer true justice; show mercy and compassion to one
another. Do not oppress the widow or the fatherless, the alien or the
poor. In your hearts, do not think evil of each other'.” All of
the above truths were brought sharply into focus most recently by the
West Virginia teacher's strike. The ugly truth we all must face is
this – if our net take-home pay won't even cover the most basic of
living expenses, we are economic slaves! Rather than elaborate here,
allow me to post an excerpt of my first book from 2011, now in its
third updated edition. Enjoy!
The
Ongoing Battle for Worker's Rights Across America
America
has become a ticking time bomb of inequality and lack of opportunity.
The rights of US workers have been trampled underfoot by the rich
multinational corporations and the top 1% elite, who have outsourced
all our jobs overseas as they leave us high and dry on the island of
minimum wage jobs with no futures. There
are also a growing number of employed people who, despite having a
job, are still living in poverty. There are at least 19 million US
workers who now fall into this rapidly growing category. The median
US income of $35,000.00 a year is not going to get you far in today's
economy, and half of the country is making less than that. The reason
we struggle with these things is because the Economic Elite have
robbed us all through the systematic confiscation of middle class
wealth, security and prosperity. This has caused tremendous suffering
among workers throughout the world, it is no less than a criminal
act, and it is the result of the largest single transfer of wealth in
all of human history from the world's middle classes to the rich.
The
first thing on any list of worker's rights is that of a fair and
realistic minimum wage, and more fundamentally, the basic human right
to a decent livelihood. Unemployment as we have previously known it
must now come to an end forever. This does not mean unemployment will
be eliminated, but periods of unemployment can and should be
converted to times of retraining to acquire new skills or to even
completely change careers. What gives any wealthy corporate 1%'er CEO
or their subordinates the right to tell anybody, “Sorry, you are
not needed around here anymore. Your skills, experience, and your
work ethic no longer matter here. Our company's bottom line and the
interests of our shareholders are far more important than that of our
workers.” This is the essence of what it means to be fired. In my
view, this is demeaning to the point of being abusive, and it is
therefore an abuse of authority.
This
brings me to the point that I wish to make. In today's world, if the
net take-home pay of any given individual does not meet, or just
barely meets, that same individual's daily cost of living, then that
is tantamount to economic slavery. Let me say that again because this
point simply cannot be overemphasized. If your take-home pay won't
even take you home, you are a slave. Oh, you are free to move around
and to come and go as you choose and take care of business, that is
true. But if after you go to the grocery store, pay the light bill
(assuming you are fortunate enough to be able to do that), put gas in
your tank (assuming you are lucky enough to still own a car) and set
some money aside for this month's rent or mortgage (if you're not
already on the street or living with relatives) – and then, after
all that you peek into your wallet and realize that you have $7.00
left to live on for the whole stinking' week, that's when you know
you are a slave! What happens to the people whose incomes are at or
below minimum wage? They go hungry and are often homeless. Many of
these newly homeless, formerly middle class people also have kids who
have fallen into poverty along with their parents. As I write this,
it is profoundly sad to report that 1 in every 5 American kids will
be homeless at some point in their childhoods. And this is happening
in the United States of America, supposedly the richest country in
the world? This is a moral outrage, a social injustice, and it is
economic discrimination of the worst kind!
Since
it is an issue of economic discrimination (regardless of race or
religion), it also becomes a 21st
century civil rights issue creating a demand for fundamental change
in the way our economy works and the way our government works. This
too, then, is cause for protests, demonstrations, boycotts,
occupations, general strikes and other forms of peaceful civil
disobedience. On this point alone, there are enough issues on the
collective dinner plate of the American people to foster open revolt
throughout the land. Never mind everything else that I have written
about. Think about it for a minute. How does it feel to be a slave?
Makes you feel kind of angry, doesn't it? Maybe even violated on a
certain level, like we've been raped? The time to rise up and say,
“No more!” has arrived. It's time for all of us to get out from
in front of out TV's and our gaming consoles and computers and to get
our backsides out in the streets and start protesting – a lot! And
that's just for this issue alone. Now allow me to point out a couple
of subcategories.
The
first sub-category under worker's rights is the right to better and
more comprehensive unemployment insurance, and to also allow some
independent contractors to draw unemployment provided certain
conditions are met (subject to future legislation or referendum). Any
worker who has lost his or her job through no fault of their own will
be entitled to up to 52 weeks of unemployment compensation instead of
the current maximum of 26 weeks due to a continued turnover in the
job markets of most developed countries, starting with the US.
Besides their job search, at any time during the worker's period of
unemployment he or she should have two other options available to
them to assist in the development of their careers. The first should
be the ability to sign up for public works projects to obtain
immediate employment if it is needed. (The worker's second option
will be reeducation, and I will touch on that one next so please bear
with me). Workers will be required to choose one of the above to
qualify for benefits. We have been needing massive public works
projects to repair America's crumbling infrastructure for decades. I
would conservatively estimate that anywhere from 1-3 million people
could be employed this way as contract laborers, salaried employees,
or subcontractors, depending on the need. The fact of the matter is
that we need jobs, we need lots of them, and we need them right now!
Seven twenty five an hour won't work either. Let's strike and protest
for action while we engage in other methods of passive resistance on
this matter. We might as well, because things are going to continue
to get worse until we do.
The
next sub-category of worker's rights is the right to free vocational
retraining for life. Period, end of story. Anybody can go back to
school and get retrained at will, up to and including a 2 year degree
(with a 4-year available for some additional cost) at little or no
cost. Large, wealthy corporations with robust cash flows, as well as
millionaires and the super-rich, will supply the necessary funding
through what I call in my book “the excess wealth tax” (you can
buy
the book
on Amazon
from right
here).
Since corporate America made the decision to send their factories and
all the jobs those factories provided overseas to lower their labor
costs, and since this action has caused the obliteration of millions
of American careers, it will be corporate America who will shoulder
the expense of retraining these people whose careers evaporated
through no fault of their own. If they take your job away, or if they
export or downsize your career out of existence like I experienced
myself, then it is those same corporate henchmen who must pay for
your reeducation. Higher public education is a basic, fundamental
human right. It is not a privilege! As of today, higher education,
and the fundamental right to improve and enrich ourselves, is an
essential human right that must be had by all without qualification!
Now I
know what at least some of you are thinking right now – “who's
gonna pay for all this?” That is a perfectly valid question. Let me
put all this into perspective for you. If your US government took all
the money that was spent in a single day on the twin occupations of
Iraq and Afghanistan, plus the clandestine and illegal wars and
“black ops” in Pakistan, Libya, Yemen, Syria and elsewhere and
set it aside in an enormous savings account, there would be enough
money to send every American school age kid from the first grade
through high school and upwards to any public college, state
university, or vocational or technical school to earn their degree of
choice with the tuition fully paid for, plus the cost of all their
books and supplies, their meals during school hours, Internet access,
new computers, and with access to public transportation covered for
those who need it.
So, for
those who say we can't afford to send everyone to public or community
colleges with most if not all of their expenses fully paid, or that
the money to accomplish this just isn't there, either doesn't know
what they're talking about, or they are elitists and bigots who can't
stand to see middle and working class and minority students getting
ahead. Access to higher education – and looking after the children
of those who are retraining – is an American civil right that
should be equally available to all without qualification, not just to
those who can afford the 'tuition'. Would you like to see test scores
improve in our nation's schools? Tell all those kids that they are
all going to public college at taxpayer expense, and watch their
grades shoot up like rockets at Cape Canaveral. Give them an
incentive to do better and our kids will rise to the challenge every
time!
The
right to family and sick leave, which must include maternity leave
for women, is the final right I have listed for all workers and
independent contractors. Every other country in the developed world
from Europe to Canada to Japan has paid family and sick leave for its
workers – all except for the US. It's way past time for Congress
and President Trump to bring our country up to speed with the rest of
the world. Moreover, medical, family and maternity leave should be
allowed for up to 3 months per calendar year, and it must be made
illegal to fire someone from his or her job because that employee
needed to take family or sick leave. The right of all individuals to
have medical, family or maternity leave must be had by all, without
interference or fear of retribution, for the strengthening of our
families and the nurturing of our children. The
fundamental rights of workers must be honored and acknowledged by
rule of law, and by a culture change that puts people before profits,
which goes hand in hand with Progressive
Christianity. As the old ways of greed-based capitalism continue
to die of old age, this is the new reality we must all embrace if we
are to thrive in the 21st
century.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
Who we say we are, as opposed to who many of us actually are
Some Very
Hard Questions for 'Christian America'
By pastor
Paul J. Bern
To view
this in any browser, click
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The
United States has always had a time-honored tradition of being a
Christian nation founded by Christians for Christians. This tradition
was only recently brought into question by none other than former
president Obama, who said back in 2010 that “America is no longer a
Christian nation”. Contrary to what our President thought, our
great country was in actuality founded on religious freedom by the
early Pilgrims, who were Protestants escaping religious persecution
by the church of England, not to mention the Vatican. Ever since
then, the tradition of Christianity (regardless of whether you belong
to a church denomination or not) has been passed down through the
generations until modern times. Within the last generation or so,
particularly within the last 10 or 20 years, there has been a
noticeable drop in church attendance throughout North America and
much of Europe. People have been turning away from their faith in
droves. Protestant churches are losing members at about the same rate
in which they are gaining new ones, the Catholic church is doing even
worse, with the end result being what amounts to a revolving door of
membership and participation. I have been aware of this for some time
and, speaking as a minister, this has really been bothering me
lately. So, I have been contemplating the reasons for this
diminishing of faith and commitment, within the church and without,
in order to try to change them.
A
journalist once asked Mahatma Gandhi what he thought of Western
civilization and Christianity. He answered: "It's a good idea.
They ought to try it". Similarly, we might urge followers of
world religions: "Those are some nice moral principles. You
ought to live by them." Reliable polls tell us that America is
the most religious nation in the industrialized world. More that 90
percent of our population say they believe in God, and that they pray
regularly. In his New Testament Epistle, James expressed the
Christian view that "faith without works is dead."
Similarly, Judaism calls for "mitzvah's" -- good deeds. And
Islam also requires acts of charity. How do these sentiments
translate into action? Let's look at our national religious behavior
report card for a reality check.
- America is the world's richest nation. Yet the U.S. Census Bureau reports that 54 million Americans live in poverty. That includes one in four children. If another country was doing this to ourselves and our children, we'd be at war. Why aren't we doing more to help out the weak, the vulnerable, the disenfranchised, and the weary? Why do so many prosperous people keep it all to themselves?
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The U.S. poverty rate is the absolute worst among developed nations according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Demographers say that the poverty rate will rise this year from 21 percent to 27 percent, which will be the highest percentage since the government began calculating poverty figures in 1959. Fifty four million Americans are on food stamps (the highest ever) and the number is expected to rise above fifty six million by the end of 2019.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: According to the Census Bureau, 19 million people lived in working-poor families in 2008. The 2010 census showed a much higher figure approaching 24%. As of 2016, the last year demographics are available, that number is approaching one third. Things are close to becoming exponentially worse! The Feeding America Network reports that only 36 percent of their client households have one or more adults working. These are people who want to work but can't find jobs, or who can't feed their kids or themselves because they only make minimum wage. For this to happen in the richest country in the world is inexcusable!!
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty estimates that 700,000 to 2 million people are homeless on any given night in America. Here in Atlanta where I reside, estimates of the homeless population on any given night range from 3,000-10,000 people. Also, a new class has emerged in America: the working homeless. The current minimum wage of $7.25 hourly here in Georgia and elsewhere (primarily “right to work” states like Georgia) is pitifully insufficient income for a single person to rent an apartment, let alone a family.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The elderly, the poor and others on fixed incomes are often forced to choose between food and medicine. Speaking as a retired technology professional and an Internet pastor who worked for 35 years in the professional world, this is a social outrage and an economic injustice that I have personally experienced. Speak up for the less fortunate, because you have a better than even chance you may wind up that way yourself some day!
- We are a religious nation, and yet: 56 million Americans, including 26 million children, experienced hunger or the risk of hunger in 2016. That's more than a fourth of all households. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, hunger in American households has nearly doubled in the last five years. As I write this in early 2018, this number has swelled to at least 54 million, and the number of underfed American kids is approaching 28%. In the richest country in the world, this is simply inexcusable! We have to do something, and by writing this I'm trying to help accomplish exactly that.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: American restaurants throw away more than 6,000 tons of food every day and grocery stores discard an estimated thirty million pounds of food daily. The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Loss Project estimates that Americans throw out 25.9 million tons of food each year. More disturbing: a University of Arizona study reports that 40 to 50 percent of all food ready for harvest never gets eaten. America's wastefulness is downright sinful in the sight of the Lord; there is no better way to describe it.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The United States is the only industrialized nation that doesn't provide very low cost health care for all its citizens. So-called “Obamacare” promised to correct much of that, but it is nowhere near enough. All the president and Congress had to do was to put the whole country on Medicare. Doing so would eliminate the need for Medicaid, saving over half a billion dollars annually, and if Obamacare were to be merged together with Medicare, the extra expenditures for Obamacare would be eliminated as well. And, we would have one health care system for the entire country.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: We have the best medical technology and treatment capability in the world. Yet the United States ranks 37th for health care system performance by the World Health Organization. Why is this so?
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The latest report on life expectancy shows a slight drop in the United States that will place us even lower than the current ranking of 49th among nations of the world – a lower life expectancy than many less developed countries. A Columbia University study attributes our decline from 11th place in 1950 to the much lower present ranking to our inadequate profit-driven health care system.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The current US minimum wage of $7.25 hourly for roughly two thirds of the country, which was raised from $5.15 four years prior to that, still keeps families stuck at or below the poverty line. France, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, England, the Isle of Man, and many other nations – particularly Australia – have a much higher minimum wage than we do.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The latest census figures show the gap between rich and poor widening to the largest margin ever. The top 20 percent of workers earning more than $100,000 a year received 49.4.percent of all income compared with the 3.4 percent earned by the bottom 20 percent. The richest 1 percent pockets more than 30 percent of total income which is greater than the total amount earned by the bottom 50 percent combined. Economic inequality – not just in the US but globally – is a ticking time bomb waiting to go off, and when it does, the greed-based capitalist economic system we are currently stuck with will have to submit to a complete make-over or face extinction.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: The wealthiest segment of the population is fighting tooth and nail for lower tax rates and other tax breaks while joblessness, poverty, crime, homelessness and hunger are rampant in America.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: In 1994 a million innocents were slaughtered in Rwanda. We watched and did nothing. Similarly, we did little to stop the genocide in Darfur. Further slaughter is now ongoing in Syria, Somalia, Iraq and Yemen while the world watches and does nothing. Will U.S. “leadership” intervene on humanitarian grounds? History does not suggest a positive answer. Nor do the Scriptures, where regarding such people it is written, “Let the blood of our sins be on ourselves and our children!” (Matthew 27: 25) And so it is, unless God starts seeing some major changes of heart among us all.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: There are at least 59 Holocaust museums in the United States dedicated to raising awareness of the Nazi genocide and to help prevent similar horrors from ever happening again. Add to that the numerous holocaust museums and memorials around the world. Yet genocides, mass murders, school shootings and other atrocities such as child sex slave trafficking persist. Who are the customers for these pimps? Who is supplying the weapons to these mass shooters? Who is taking decisive action, who is pretending, and who is doing nothing except complaining? Some of us need to put our Christian money where our mouths are.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: Americans make up 5 percent of the world's population, and yet our country produces 25 percent of worldwide carbon dioxide emissions, which are raising the earth's temperature ("greenhouse effect") to dangerous levels. How is it that we are trashing the planet God created for each of us, while continuing to profess our love for its Maker?
- We are a religious nation, and yet: Fossil fuel consumption is destroying the planet, but we refuse to develop a "Manhattan Project" for alternative energy, nor do we have one for battery technology so we can park the majority of our gas and diesel burning cars and trucks, something that is sorely needed.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: Scientists warn that the environmental doomsday clock is ticking. The icebergs are breaking away and melting before our eyes, revealing islands we never saw before. We watch and debate but do too little to preserve the environment for ourselves and future generations. In our hubris we forget that we are guests on a tiny rock floating – in an infinite universe of rocks – that uniquely supports life in a delicate balance of natural and mysterious forces.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: Smoking continues to compromise the health of more than 20 percent of our population. The Surgeon General tells us that cigarette, pipe and cigar smoking, in addition to contributing to a number of cancers, increases the risk of almost every known disease. The American Lung Association reports that each day nearly 6,000 teens under 18 years of age start smoking. But we refuse to put an end to tobacco use. At the same time, medical and recreational marijuana is still illegal at the federal level while having been proved to be not only harmless, but with significant medical uses and benefits. In so doing, we have criminalized a creation of Almighty God's (see Genesis 1: 11) that does no harm, while allowing the use of one that does!
- We are a religious nation, and yet: Leaders of some of our biggest corporations and privately held firms, as well as prominent investment advisers (men and women of "faith"), have cheated, deceived and destroyed their companies and clients, ruining the lives and futures of untold numbers of individuals and families for their own profit.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: We have the largest prison population in the world. Currently more than 3 million people are incarcerated, 1 in every 18 adults is in prison, on parole or probation adding up to a total of over 10 million. One out of every eight Americans you see on the street or in traffic has a criminal conviction in their background. The U.S has a greater prison population (in percentage of population) than many countries that we consider to be in violation of human rights.
- We are a religious nation, and yet: According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, world military spending for 2012 reached $1.531 trillion, a six percent increase over 2008 and a forty-nine percent increase over the year 2000. The United States accounted for forty-six percent of the total world military expenditure ($661 billion). China was a distant second accounting for 6.6. percent followed by France's 4.2 percent, the UK's 3.8 percent and Russia's 3.5 percent. The proposed U.S. military budget for 2018 is $886 billion. Nice job, Washington!
What is
religion? Organized religion is a multi-billion-dollar business
disguised as a honeycomb of non-profits (actually, more like a
hornet's nest). On the other hand, followers of Jesus – who Himself
was crucified mainly because he preached against organized government
and organized religion – exercise the very essence of true
Spirituality by showing love, caring, serving, giving, sharing,
oneness, brotherhood and sisterhood, compassion, empathy and
selflessness. Summed up: "Love thy neighbor as thyself."
I'm so glad that we are a religious nation. If only we were all
Christian too....
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Sunday, February 11, 2018
The Immigration Issue Deserves an Intelligent Resolution Free From Racism
Immigration Reform, the Dream Act,
and Progressive Christianity
by pastor Paul J. Bern
To view this in any browser, click
here :-)
This week's message revolves around the current
topic of immigration reform, a.k.a. the “dreamers”, as opposed to
what the Bible says. Not any particular government, faith or
denomination, mind you, but none other than the Word of God! We have
all heard more than enough from the American media 'presstitutes'
regarding both sides of this issue as dictated by their Republican
and Democrat masters. From conservative to progressive to liberal, as
well as independent voters like myself who do not follow the crowd,
the issue of 'illegal immigration' festers like an open wound across
America without any first aid being applied. Like any other kind of
serious wound, illegal immigration is an American political issue
that needs immediate attention.
First let me say that I was formerly on the
conservative side of this issue due to the fact that had once lost a
good job in the computer/IT profession due to my being replaced by
workers who had just arrived on H1B work visas. So, I was
understandably bitter because I had lost my job to an imported worker
despite the fact that I was more qualified. Actually it wasn't just
myself either. The company I was working for at that time had laid
off everyone in the branch office where I worked and replaced us all
with a batch of workers from the Philippines with green cards. At the
time I felt like my career had been stolen right out from under me,
and all attempts to replace this job of mine had yielded only
temporary jobs that lasted from several months duration to as little
as one day.
Then one day in the early summer of 2008, I took
yet another temporary job out in west Texas, and so I put most of my
things in storage and left Atlanta for parts previously unknown to
me. I had never been to Texas before, and I found a completely
different culture than what I was accustomed to back in Atlanta.
There were three things I noticed immediately soon after my arrival.
The first was the oppressive heat and humidity, which made Atlanta
seem mild by comparison. The second was that people ate burritos in
place of burgers. There were burrito joints on nearly every corner
and a few McDonald's, and that was just about it. The third thing I
noticed was that approximately one third of the population was
Hispanic (or Latino/Latina, take your pick). One of the first things
I remember thinking when I realized that one third of the population
spoke only Spanish was that this must be ground zero for so-called
illegal immigration, or so I thought at the time.
But I spent four months out there in Texas, and as
my days turned into weeks I began to notice little things that seemed
insignificant in and of themselves. For example, I saw Latino men –
and a few women as well – hanging around temp agencies,
construction sites, and even at a U-haul truck rental company in the
hopes of getting a job at least for that day. I remember being struck
by the parallels between what those immigrants were having to endure
as they searched for work and a piece of the so-called American dream
compared to my own job search experiences. Some of these workers
lived at homeless shelters, others in campers or vans, and the more
prosperous ones lived in rented mobile homes or apartments. I saw the
same thing day after day, with hundreds of workers gathered around in
groups of as few as eight or ten, and as many as several dozen men
and women. And so I found myself beginning to question my own intense
dislike of these immigrant workers.
Before I go any further with this message, I think
I should point out that my basis for resenting many of these
immigrant workers was economic rather than racial, and more social
than cultural. Nevertheless, my beliefs and opinions were heavily
slanted towards an American rather than a more realistic world view,
and so I found myself beginning to question my motives for feeling
the way I did. One day soon after I did some research on-line and at
the local library regarding this issue, and here is what I found out.
The average worker in Mexico earns the equivalent of about $50.00 per
month USD, and this is so because of reasons that I was previously
only generally aware of – namely, the differences in currency
valuation between the two countries, and the fact that Mexico is by
and large a third world country that happens to border the United
States. When you live in a third world country,m the workers earn
third world level 'wages'.
When these same workers come to the US they make
minimum wage, more or less, which is currently still stuck at only
$7.25 per hour in Texas as well as Georgia. Some are paid
substantially less while those who enforce the rules look the other
way. Since a sizable chunk of these workers make less than minimum
wage while being paid in cash under the table, I'm going to use a
rounded out number of $7.00 hourly. A 40-hour work week at seven
dollars an hour yields gross pretax earnings of $280.00 per week
before taxes and Social Security. But since many of these workers
don't work full time their take home pay is even less. At any rate,
this works out to gross earnings of $1,120.00 per month for a 40 hour
week. If each worker pays a regular tax rate as we Americans do, and
many don't because their employers are cheating the tax man by paying
in cash, they wind up with an average net take-home pay of
approximately $740.00 per month.
I challenge anybody out there to try and live even
for only a month on such substandard pay as this! Seven hundred
stinking dollars – go ahead and try that! I challenge anybody who
thinks they can live on such an absurdly small amount of money for an
entire month, especially if you're a homeowner. In order to better
understand this, instead of Mexico and the US being the two countries
involved, let's use the US and Canada instead. If any given American
working professional were offered a job in Canada, what would that be
in relation to the US and Mexico? When we do the math, for any
Mexican/Latino who emigrates to America, the jump from fifty bucks a
month to 740 dollars equals a pay increase that is 11.4 times the
going rate in Mexico or, for that matter, any central American
country.
Now, let's contrast that to an American jumping
ship and leaving the US to go and work and live in Canada. With an
average net earnings of roughly $35,000.00 annually (before taxes)
for American workers, if any of us were to be offered a job in Canada
– or for that matter any other developed or emerging country
worldwide – at 11.4 times the going rate here in the US, that would
amount to an increase in take-home pay to $399,000.00 annually before
taxes. OK, so let's ask ourselves a simple question: Would you or I
be interested in a pay increase of 11.4 times the amount we have been
earning previously? Without a doubt!! So, now you know why the
Latino/Latina folks are migrating – legally or not – to the US in
search of work. It's not because they are foreign invaders on an
economic and social offensive to overrun America. It's because they
are economic refugees from the third world who are searching for a
better life for themselves and their families! So, instead of
resenting or even hating this influx of foreign workers, the
Christian thing to do would be to reach out to the Hispanic
communities in all fifty states and minister to them. Like so many
long-term unemployed here in America, they don't want a handout, they
simply want to go to work. But I felt convicted in the Holy Spirit
for harboring such negative and bitter thoughts, and I repented
immediately and have never looked back. Sometimes it's best to simply
admit we're wrong and move on. So let this be a cautionary lesson for
everyone.
Showing compassion to foreigners and strangers is
central to biblical teaching and morality, and there are quite a few
people of faith who have started joining the fight to pass
immigration reform, including myself. Congress needs to pass this
into law because it is the morally right thing to do. Those who base
their position on immigration reform on unacknowledged or hidden
racial prejudice, irrational fear, or worries about losing elections
to far-right ideologues are too often the same people who loudly
proclaim their religious convictions as guiding their political
decisions in violation of the First Amendment's separation of church
and state. Politicians who are professing Christians need to consider
what their faith has to say about immigration if they want to be
considered authentic. If they oppose reform and refuse to offer
compassion to our immigrant brothers and sisters, they should justify
their positions on moral grounds (if they can). We join with other
faith communities in asking for a moral and religious conversation
about immigration reform – not just a political one. God's
passionate, abiding concern for immigrants and foreigners, strangers
and travelers – and for our neighbors – is obvious to anyone
reading through Scripture.
It is the biblical call to "welcome the
stranger" and Jesus' concern for "the least of these"
that inspires and motivates us. "When a foreigner resides
among you in your land, do not mistreat them. The foreigner residing
among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself
… " (Leviticus 19:33-34). The biblical word "ger"
for the foreigners in our midst occurs an astounding 92 times in the
Hebrew scriptures, with the consistent instruction to protect them.
In the New Testament, the stranger, and all who are vulnerable, are
at the very heart of the Gospel (Jesus' parable of the good Samaritan
(see Luke 10, verses 25-37) is just one example of many). In the book
of Matthew, Jesus offers a vision in which caring for foreigners is
the defining mark of God's kingdom: "For I was hungry and you
gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to
drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and
you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison
and you came to visit me" (Matthew 25:35-36). Now let me ask
you all – when's the last time you did that for somebody? When's
the last time you did any of the above for a stranger?
That evangelical as well as mainstream Christians
would finally act to reform the immigration system should surprise no
one who has a conscience, not just for theological reasons, but also
for moral reasons. Undocumented immigrants have joined our
congregations; we understand the problem firsthand. They are our
brothers and sisters in the body of Christ. And we know that by
reforming our immigration laws, we can create a system that also
reflects the best values of our nation and the highest ideals of our
faith. We act because, as the book of James reminds us, "faith
without works is dead."
For me, I think the biggest change hasn't been in
the pulpit, it's been in the pews and out in the streets. It's one
thing when 11 million people are a statistic. But it's an entirely
different matter when one of those 11 million is your friend, a human
being who you now know as a neighbor, or as a co-worker or a
worshiper. Our faith has always been about compassion and it compels
us to do something. If we take the principle of compassion out of the
Bible, it wouldn't be the Bible any more. Compassion is indeed all
over the Bible. I pray it will also be found in the House of
Representatives and the Senate, and in the workplace and our
neighborhoods and subdivisions. It's time for Christians in and out
of Congress to stand up in support of immigration reform, and for
the Dreamers, or to explain why they won't — as Christians. If they
follow their faith, we will see the miracle we need. And let's
remember that there is no such thing as an illegal human being.
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Sunday, November 6, 2016
What the Bible says about the US government's malfeasance in office
Seven
Grievous Sins America's Leaders Commit Against Their Own People, and
What the Bible Says About That
by
Rev. Paul J. Bern
As
the 2016 presidential race mercifully winds down, they are some
things that need to be said about those in charge, and why every
incumbent candidate or political party deserves to be voted out of
office. The US is in such a state of disarray as I write this that
we, the voters, need to start all over again on a clean sheet of
paper. I can think of lots of things I'd like to see happen. Get the
corporate and lobbyist money out of politics and outlaw the greed by
overturning Citizens United and imposing Congressional term limits.
Call off all the endless wars, close the bases and bring our troops
home. The American people will soon need them to protect us from the
government anyway. Cut the need for welfare and food assistance
programs by doubling the minimum wage to a realistic level and
offering free higher education without qualification. Offer low cost
single payer health care by putting the whole country on Medicare,
including those on Medicaid and Obama-care, and then abolish the
latter two. It's really not difficult to figure out what's needed,
all that's required is some implementation on the part of Congress
and our incoming president. If, that is, these crooks would get out
of the office of their 'lobbyist dujour' long enough to go to
the House or Senate floor and vote on something once in a while!
I
have assembled a list of every gut-wrenching, visceral injustice
currently being committed by the very people that have been entrusted
with the responsible and prudent leadership of what used to be the
greatest country in the world, the USA., with a few interjections
along the way from the Word of God regarding these matters. It has
been my observation for some time now that the underpaid US workers
that do have jobs, combined with the unemployed and sometimes even
homeless American population, none of whom are able to find any work
at all, are a ticking time bomb hidden in plain sight across America.
The following is a listing of the abuses being heaped upon us, when
in fact we deserve no such thing! The list doesn't include our most
grievous offenses, those of military and economic warfare against the
rest of the world. Sinful enough is our own behavior at home because
too many people aren't holding their legislators – and the
president – accountable enough. Let's go over a few examples:
1.
Sins against children
“Jesus
said to his disciples, 'Things that cause people to sin are bound to
come, but woe to that person through whom they come. It would be
better for him to be thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around
his neck than for them to cause one of these little ones to sin. So
watch yourselves'.” (Luke 17: 1-3) Perhaps "sanctity of
life" ends at birth. According to Census Bureau figures, one out
of every five American children lives in poverty. For blacks and
Hispanics, it's one out of every three. UNICEF has reported that the
U.S. has a higher child poverty rate than every industrialized
country except Romania. We are near the bottom in all measures of
inequality that affect our children, including material well-being,
health, and education. One more fact before I move on: 1 out of every
4 American school children will rely on food stamps at some point
while they're growing up for their sustenance and nutrition. In
communities of color, this figure jumps to a truly shocking – and
outrageous – 1 out of 2.
2.
Sins against the poor
“Now
listen, all you rich people, weep and wail because of the misery that
is coming upon you. Your wealth has rotted, and moths have eaten your
clothes. Your gold and silver are corroded. Their corrosion will
testify against you and eat your flesh like fire. You have hoarded
wealth in the last days! Look! The wages you failed to pay the
workmen who mowed your fields are crying out against you. The cries
of the harvesters have reached the Lord Almighty. You have lived on
earth in luxury and self-indulgence. You have flattened yourselves in
the day of slaughter. You have condemned and murdered innocent men
who were not opposing you.” (James 5: 1-6) The U.S. poverty
rate grew from 11.3% to 15.0%, a 30% jump, in just the last 11 years.
The impact was felt primarily by minorities and women. The median
wealth for single black and Hispanic women is shockingly low, at just
over $1000.00 (compared to $41,500 for single white women). Even more
shocking – For every dollar of non-home wealth owned by white
families, people of color have only one cent. Despite the continued
economic assault on already-poor Americans, the number of TANF
(Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) cases has dropped by 60
percent over the last 16 years.
3.
Sins against students
“Fathers,
do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the
training and instruction of the Lord” (Ephesians 6: 4) Students
at all levels have been losing their nation's support. States reduced
their education budgets by $12.7 billion in 2012, and here in 2016
the majority of states will be cutting spending even more. At higher
educational levels, Americans are paying much more than students in
other countries. Only 38% of college expenses come from public
funding, compared to 70% in other wealthier “first world”
countries. While other nations continue to offer free tuition, with
the recognition that education leads to long-term prosperity, the
U.S. system has become more incorporated, to the point that expensive
programs like nursing, engineering, and computer science have been
eliminated to cut costs. The profit motive has blocked the path to
academic excellence. But the worst part of America's treatment of
its students has been the greed-driven debacle of over $1 trillion in
predatory student loan debts, much of which can never be repaid. The
same graduates who are obligated to repay those debts are the ones
who can't find jobs, or who wind up working at jobs for which they
are grossly overqualified. When you enrage a nation's youth, the
seeds of insurrection have already been sown. All it will take is one
good storm to make those seeds sprout, and the 2nd
American Revolution will be underway. And yes, it is coming, you can
be sure of that.
4.
Sins against the middle class
“Do
not mistreat an alien or oppress him, for you were aliens in the land
of Egypt. Do not take advantage of a widow or an orphan. If you do
and they cry out to me, I will certainly hear their cry. My anger
will be aroused, and I will kill you with the sword; your wives will
become widows and your children fatherless. If you lend money to one
of my people who is needy, do not be like a moneylender; charge him
no interest. If you take your neighbor's cloak as a pledge, return it
to him by sunset, for the cloak is the only covering he has for his
body. What else will he sleep in? When he cries out to me, I will
hear him, for I am compassionate.” (Exodus 20: 21-27) The
middle class, to say the least, is shrinking. In fact, America's
middle class is slowly being liquidated. In 2011, according to a Pew
Research analysis, 51% of the nation's households earned from
two-thirds to double the national median income. In the 1970s it was
61%. One-quarter of America's workers are now making less than
$22,000 a year, the poverty line for a family of four as of 2012.
Thirty million Americans are making between $7.25 (minimum wage) and
$10.00 per hour. With the transition of middle-class workers to
low-income status, entrepreneurship is disappearing. Innovation
doesn't come from the upper class. A recent study found that less
than 1 percent of all entrepreneurs came from very rich or very poor
backgrounds. Small business creators come from the hard-working,
risk-taking, nothing-to-lose middle of America, but their
entrepreneurial numbers are down – over 50% since 1977.
5.
Sins against the common good
“But
you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people
belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called
you out of the darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a
people, but now you are a people of God; once you had not received
mercy, but now you have received mercy.” (1st
Peter 2: 9-10) A recent Tax Justice Network report placed total
hidden offshore assets at somewhere between $21 trillion and $32
trillion. With about 40% of the world's most mega-rich individuals in
the U.S., up to $12.8 trillion of untaxed revenue sits overseas.
Based on a historical 6% rate of return, this is a tax loss of up to
$300 billion per year, money that should be paying for the public
needs of education and infrastructure. Tax avoidance is so appealing
that 1,700 Americans renounced their citizenship last year. The
American Thinker Blog argued that "the U.S. tax code is so
oppressive that smart and successful people are compelled to renounce
their citizenship in order to keep more of their own hard-earned
wages." Hard-earned, in truth, by the thousands of contributors
to their financial success.
6.
Sins against nature
“Do
not pollute the land where you are. Bloodshed pollutes the land, and
atonement cannot be made for the land on which blood has been shed,
except by the blood of the one who shed it. Do not defile the land
where you live and where I dwell, for I, the Lord, dwell among the
Israelites.” (Numbers 35: 33-34) Has it ever occurred to anyone
that God lives on the land he creates? What we're doing to the land,
the water and the air, we do to God. A number of studies show that
investment in renewable energy will create many more jobs than the
fossil fuel industry. And the investment will certainly pay off over
the coming decades. A National Renewable Energy Laboratory analysis
determined that "renewable electricity generation from
technologies that are commercially available today... are more than
adequate to supply 80% of total U.S. electricity generation in 2050."
But now the prospect of cheap natural gas is leading us back to a
dirty form of energy independence, with a continuing reliance on
fossil fuels, and on the “fracking” technology that despoils our
land and pollutes our water and air. The national commitment and
political will needed for the long-term health of our nation is more
elusive than ever.
7.
Sins against common sense
“Does
not wisdom call out? Does not understanding raise her voice? On the
heights along the way, where the paths meet she takes her stand;
beside the gates leading into the city, at the entrances, she cries
aloud: To you, oh men, I cry out. I raise my voice to all mankind;
you who are simple, gain prudence, you who are foolish, gain
understanding. Listen, for I have worthy things to say; I open my
lips to speak what is right. My mouth speaks what is true, for my
lips detest wickedness. All the words of my mouth are just; none of
them is crooked or perverse. To the discerning, all of them are
right; they are faultless to those who have knowledge. Choose my
instruction instead of silver, knowledge more than choice gold, for
wisdom is more precious than rubies, and nothing you desire can
compare with her.” (Proverbs 8: 1-11) The economic deception
began, at least in the modern age, with Milton Friedman, who said
“The free market system distributes the fruits of economic progress
among all people... He moves fastest who moves alone." This
unflagging adherence to egocentric free enterprise individualism is
consistent with Social Darwinism, the belief that survival of the
fittest (richest) will somehow benefit society, and that the millions
of people suffering from financial malfeasance are simply lacking the
motivation to help themselves. Social Darwinism is a feel-good
delusion for those at the top. Or, as described by John Kenneth
Galbraith, a continuing "search for a superior moral
justification for selfishness." A mainstay of the Progressive
Movement is that a strong society will create opportunities for a
greater number of people, thereby leading to more instances of
individual success. This is the common sense attitude that has been
suppressed by conservatives for over 30 years. I'm hoping this
election year will change that paradigm. But if not, open revolt will
be the American people's only remaining option.
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