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Throw
Out the Money Changers: They Have Killed Hundreds Of
Thousands Of Iraqis And Afghanis, Palestinians And
Pakistanis
02 May 2011 By Chris Hedges
These are remarks Chris Hedges made in Union Square in
New York City last Friday during a protest outside a
branch office of the Bank of
America.
We stand today before the gates of one of our temples
of finance. It is a temple where greed and profit are
the highest good, where self-worth is determined by
the ability to amass wealth and power at the expense
of others, where laws are manipulated, rewritten and
broken, where the endless treadmill of consumption
defines human progress, where fraud and crimes are the
tools of business.
The two most destructive forces of human nature—greed
and envy—drive the financiers, the bankers, the
corporate mandarins and the leaders of our two major
political parties, all of whom profit from this
system. They place themselves at the center of
creation. They disdain or ignore the cries of those
below them. They take from us our rights, our dignity
and thwart our capacity for resistance. They seek to
make us prisoners in our own land. They view human
beings and the natural world as mere commodities to
exploit until exhaustion or collapse. Human suffering,
wars, climate change, poverty,it is all the price of
business. Nothing is sacred. The Lord of Profit is the
Lord of Death.
The pharisees of high finance who can see us this
morning from their cubicles and corner officers mock
virtue. Life for them is solely about self-gain. The
suffering of the poor is not their concern. The 6
million families thrown out of their homes are not
their concern. The tens of millions of pensioners
whose retirement savings were wiped out because of the
fraud and dishonesty of Wall Street are not their
concern. The failure to halt carbon emissions is not
their concern. Justice is not their concern. Truth is
not their concern. A hungry child is not their
concern.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky in "Crime and Punishment"
understood the radical evil behind the human yearning
not to be ordinary but to be extraordinary, the desire
that allows men and women to serve systems of
self-glorification and naked greed.
Raskolnikov in the novel believes—like those in this
temple—that humankind can be divided into two groups.
The first is composed of> ordinary people. These
ordinary people are meek and submissive. They do
little more than reproduce other human beings in their
own likeness, grow old and die. And Raskolnikov is
dismissive of these lesser forms of human life.
The second group, he believes, is extraordinary. These
are, according to Raskolnikov, the Napoleons of the
world, those who flout law and custom, those who shred
conventions and traditions to create a finer, more
glorious future. Raskolnikov argues that, although we
live in the world, we can free ourselves from the
consequences of living with others, consequences that
will not always be in our favor. The Raskolnikovs of
the world place unbridled and total faith in the human
intellect. They disdain the attributes of compassion,
empathy, beauty, justice and truth. And this demented
vision of human existence leads Raskolnikov to murder
a pawnbroker and steal her money.
The priests in these corporate temples, in the name of
profit, kill with even more ruthlessness, finesse and
cunning than Raskolnikov. Corporations let 50,000
people die last year because they could not pay them
for proper medical care.
They have killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and
Afghanis, Palestinians and Pakistanis, and gleefully
watched as the stock price of weapons contractors
quadrupled. They have turned cancer into an epidemic
in the coal fields of West Virginia where families
breathe polluted air, drink poisoned water and watch
the Appalachian Mountains blasted into a desolate
wasteland while coal companies can make billions. And
after looting the U.S. treasury these corporations
demand, in the name of austerity, that we abolish food
programs for children, heating assistance and medical
care for our elderly, and good public education. They
demand that we tolerate a permanent underclass that
will leave one in six workers without jobs, that
condemns tens of millions of Americans to poverty and
tosses our mentally ill onto heating grates. Those
without power, those whom these corporations deem to
be ordinary, are cast aside like human refuse. It is
what the god of the market demands.
When Dante enters the "city of woes" in the Inferno he
hears the cries of "those whose lives earned neither
honor nor bad fame," those rejected by Heaven and
Hell, those who dedicated their lives solely to the
pursuit of happiness. These are all the "good" people,
the ones who never made a fuss, who filled their lives
with vain and empty pursuits, harmless perhaps, to
amuse themselves, who never took a stand for anything,
never risked anything, who went along. They never
looked hard at their lives, never felt the need, never
wanted to look.
Those who chase the glittering rainbows of the
consumer society, who buy into the perverted ideology
of consumer culture, become, as Dante knew, moral
cowards. They are indoctrinated by our corporate
systems of information and remain passive as our
legislative, executive and judicial branches of
government—tools of the corporate state—strip us of
the capacity to resist.
Democrat or Republican. Liberal or conservative. It
makes no difference. Barack Obama serves corporate
interests as assiduously as did George W. Bush. And to
place our faith in any party or established
institution as a mechanism for reform is to be
entranced by the celluloid shadows on the wall of
Plato's cave.
We must defy the cant of consumer culture and recover
the primacy in our lives of mercy and justice. And
this requires courage, not just physical courage but
the harder moral courage of listening to our
conscience. If we are to save our country, and our
planet, we must turn from exalting the self, to
subsuming of the self for our neighbor. Self-sacrifice
defies the sickness of corporate ideology.
Self-sacrifice mocks opportunities for advancement,
money and power.
Self-sacrifice smashes the idols of
greed and envy.
Self-sacrifice demands that we rise up against the
abuse, injury and injustice forced upon us by the
mandarins of corporate power. There is a profound
truth in the biblical admonition "He who loves his
life will lose it."
Life is not only about us. We can never have justice
until our neighbor has justice. And we can never
recover our freedom until we are willing to sacrifice
our comfort for open rebellion. The president has
failed us. The Congress has failed us. The courts have
failed us. The press has failed us. The universities
have failed us. Our process of electoral democracy has
failed us. There are no structures or institutions
left that have not been contaminated or destroyed by
corporations. And this means it is up to us. Civil
disobedience, which will entail hardship and
suffering, which will be long and difficult, which at
its core means self-sacrifice, is the only mechanism
left.
The bankers and hedge fund managers, the corporate and
governmental elites, are the modern version of the
misguided Israelites who prostrated themselves before
the golden calf. The sparkle of wealth glitters before
them, spurring them faster and faster on the treadmill
towards destruction. And they seek to make us worship
at their altar. As long as greed inspires us, greed
keeps us complicit
and silent. But once we defy the religion of
unfettered capitalism, once we demand that a society
serve the needs of citizens and the ecosystem that
sustains life, rather than the needs of the
marketplace, once we learn to speak with a new
humility and live with a new simplicity, once we love
our neighbor as ourself, we break our chains and make
hope visible.
Chris Hedges is a senior fellow at The Nation
Institute and a weekly columnist for Truthdig. His
latest books are "Death of the Liberal Class" and "The
World as It Is: Dispatches on the Myth of Human
Progress."
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