10/16/2011 8:37:29 P.M. Pacific Daylight  Time, [email protected] 
writes:
 
 

Comrade Billy, 

No, actually we do get it.  And we do see the "injustice." We would like to 
think that the "injustice" is  caused by FAIR results of people with 
different skills in the work place and  different values that the market places 
on 
those skills, and not cronyism.  

Who said anything about cronyism ?  To  be sure, that can be and often is 
part of 
the mix, but my point has little to do with cronyism  and a lot to do with 
the 
structure of the  economic system at  large  --including its basic premises.
 
Are there times when the market  is fair ?  Obviously. Are there times when 
it 
is unfair ?  We all know  that this also is undeniably true. In any case, 
it is  simply
empirically false that it is  always fair. Indeed, someone's thumb is 
always on the  scale
in some sector of the market. Can  be Goldman Sachs, can be Ichann, can be 
Milliken,
can be Enron, and  --as you  would be quick to say--  can be various gvt  
interests.
 
To glorify the market as perfect  ( blessed be the Holy Prophet, Milton 
Friedman ) 
is as false to the facts as  anyone can get    --it doesn't matter how good 
it  sounds
in theory, this is manifestly  not how the world works.
 
 
 
 
Somehow, the cronyism of this administration is  something you credit to 
the "religious right" with as one says that they are  on the side of "greed 
and corruption." 
 
Not sure whose talking points you are citing  but they have nothing at all 
to do with me.
In fact I cannot make sense  of the above. Where on God's green earth in 
anything
I have ever said do  I  credit the cronyism of  the BHO  WH to the 
Religious Right  ?
That is 180 degrees the opposite  of my views   Listening to an excess of 
Rush 
these days  ?
 
To which I respond "WTF???" This administration is  in that shit so deep 
that they need a submarine. We have Solyndra, which a  Republican 
administration turned down and a Democratic administration favored,  and now I 
am to 
believe that their giving to the Democratic party to get these  taxpayer 
guaranteed loans and their bankruptcy is the fault religious right  supporting 
"greed and corruption." We have GE, whose campaign contributions to  Obama in 
2008 are legendary and which did not pay 1 CENT in corporate taxes in  2009 
(or was it 2010?). 

So I repeat, "WTF????????????????????" Who is  on the side of greed and 
corruption?? President Goldman Sachs. And he and  other Democrats "recognize" 
and "sympathize" with the complaints by being  major causes of same. And they 
get a pass. 


 
Preaching to  the choir as if the choir believes something  else.
 


Welcome to the O'Really?? Factor, the ALL spin zone. >:o 

What we are looking  for on the religious right is something that does NOT 
look down that shop-worn  and just about always failed Marxist road. That's 
where most of the  protesters seem to want to go. 
 
Most ?  That is the view of  Will and Boortz, etc,  but the point to make 
is that no-one  
can really say. Young kids + 20 somethings have any number of  off-the-wall 
ideas, 
but how does anyone actually know  what most of the movement wants except
to criticize the money establishment  ?  From what I can tell so far, to 
the extent
there is a critique to be inferred,  it has a lot more to do with Kevin 
Phillips' 
economic views far more than it does with classical Marxism or  neo-Marxism.
 
 
 
We are looking for something that works better, not for something that  has 
failed all of Eastern Europe, the USSR, and even China, Viet Nam,  
Cambodia, Nicaragua and more. Why did China implement "market reforms?"  
Because old 
"tried and true" Marxism was failing at every turn. I don't see  the USSR 
as progress, unlike my progressive brethren. 




Boilerplate . 
 
Look, I am 100 % certain that a certain  number of the protestors are 
Leftists and 
that another number are  Anarchists. Not in dispute. But to paint the whole 
 movement
with a wide brush strikes me as  about as fair as Lefty criticisms of the 
Tea Party
as all being the same as the  farthest off-the-edge people in that movement.
 
This said,  could be that the fringe captures the movement, always a  
danger.
I remain skeptical. But I sure hope this turns out for the  best.
 

Capitalism, for all of its faults, still works better than the rest,  

Sure it does, but as things are,  only in the sense that Churchill 
described  democracy.
Democracy he said, to paraphrase  closely, is often  inefficient , it is 
prone to  errors
of many kinds, it often is unfair,  it can be wasteful,  it includes 
criminal elements,  etc,
but it happens to be better than all  other political systems on Earth.
 
Capitalism is anything but God's  revelation to humanity. It is filled with 
imperfections of many kinds, and to worship it as if it is  perfect is, to 
put it 
in such terms,   a  form of idolatry.  It simply isn't and has  always had 
major problems with distribution of wealth.  

I have no interest at all in  furthering the interests of either party 
beyond 
what makes sense  in any given election. To  me the GOP is simply, this 
time 
around, a better alternative.  But do I like  its orthodoxies ?  Actually I 
think 
most of its orthodoxies are false.  Yet in 2011 the  orthodoxies of the 
Democratic 
Party are worse. That's the  only real difference  as I see it.
 
As far as "positives go, since  neither party is 100 % wrong, I'm about as 
likely
to take a Left position as one on  the Right, but always only as an Indy
with no love at all for either party  and wishing both parties would 
self-destruct.


The criticisms  of the hard Right about Independents not quite  always
completely miss the point of being an Independent. So do the  criticisms of 
the hard Left. But only rarely can anyone win elections unless  they get 
Indy votes 
and Indies are anti-partisan , which is why they are  Independent. Because 
an
Indy doesn't agree with all or even most of one party, say the  GOP, 
does not at all mean that he is a Democrat, or has imbibed  Leftist views
through and through. Its always issue by issue and it is always  
with the  attitude that both major parties are full of  #%&@.  
Not sure why  this is a difficult concept.




but don't worry, these folks will be happy to screw that up for us and  
call it "progressive." Progress back to 1917, but progress!!!  

David


 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 10/16/2011 1:00 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
Worthwhile article that points out a  number of shortcomings
in the OWS movement. Personally, like  Mark Tooley, cited in
the essay, some of the "names" who have  climbed on board the
movement "train" make me unhappy  ;   and the O-so--relevant
wing of the Religious Left basically  strikes me as more of
a hopeless anachronism  than  anything else.
 
Regardless, to not see the injustice of  the current economic system,
something demanding serious change,  is worse than short sighted.
Prayer may be a good thing for the  soul, but the injustices of the
economic system are not going to be  "prayed away" Nor will
they disappear due to criticisms of  redistribution of wealth.
As if, in an economy where there are 4  or 5 applicants
for each job there is some sort of  alternative. The Right
comes off as uncaring, tone deaf, and  on the side
of greed and corruption.
 
To say the least, in politics this is  not where you want to be.
 
Billy
 
========================================================
 
 
 
 
 
 



 

 
_Conservative Leader Tries to Distance Christianity  From Occupy Wall 
Street Protests_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/conservative-leader-tries-to-distance-christianity-from-occupy-wall-street-protests-58196/)
 
Fri, Oct. 14, 2011 Posted:  04:31 PM EDT  
 
Religious leaders who align themselves  with the Occupy Wall Street crowd 
should not make claims that the nationwide  uprisings have anything to do 
with Christianity, says the president of the  Institute on Religion & 
Democracy. 
Mark Tooley, whose advocacy group works  toward reaffirming the church’s 
biblical and historical teachings, said in a  statement from IRD that the “
Religious Left” has heaped too much praise on  those whose “demands range from 
cancellation of all debt, open borders,  government control of health care 
and free college education, among other  expansions of Big Government.” 
Tooley aims his argument at leaders such  as Sojourners’ Jim Wallis, who 
Tooley said “has lavished praise during a  visit to the occupiers.” 
He is also weary of pacifist activist  Shane Claiborne, who “has compared 
them to St. Francis of Assisi,” and  Massachusetts clergy who have “joined 
them wearing saintly white robes.” He  also stated that he has a problem with 
officials of United Methodist Women  who “flocked to the occupiers with 
their own similar placards urging class  warfare.” 
Tooley is only sympathetic toward some of  the occupiers to a small degree. 
"The many college-age Wall Street  occupiers concerned about college debt 
and real world responsibilities can  be possibly excused for youthful naiveté,
” Tooley stated in the IRD release.  “But middle-aged church activists, 
some of whom may be trying to relive  their street activism of 40 years ago, 
should show more discernment and  wisdom.” 
Crowds of varying sizes occupying cities  and town squares around the 
country seem to be part of a leaderless movement  with many complaints, say 
observers. Many on the sidelines are having a hard  time deciphering what 
message 
OWS is trying to send. 
However, emerging from protesters is the  proclamation that "corporate 
greed and corrupt politics" must be  stopped. 
At an interfaith gathering at Zuccotti  Park in New York Sunday, the Rev. 
Michael Ellick of Judson Memorial Church  promised that he and others in the 
faith community would support the  occupiers for the long haul. 
"We will not tire. We will not falter. We  will stand with you in every 
city, every state, every country," Ellick said.  "And whatever [the protesters] 
need, the faith community of New York will be  there to give it to them." 
Tooley disagrees with Ellick and others  who share his sentiment. 
"Covetous battle cries for class  resentment and even greater coercive 
wealth redistribution through an  ever-expanding Big Government do not resemble 
traditional Christianity,”  Tooley stated. "Unlike the Religious Left, 
voices who have hailed and even  romanticized the Wall Street Occupation, wise 
religious leaders should call  their flocks to the common good. They would 
know that in a fallen world, no  government or system of laws can seize 
property or massively redistribute  income without creating even greater 
injustice. 
"The Scriptures call for believers to put  away childish things. Religious 
activists who have aligned with the Wall  Street Occupation should model 
mature Christian discernment, not echo angry  resentments that dream of a 
secular utopia," he added. 
In addition to working to reaffirm the  church's biblical and historical 
teachings, the IRD strives to strengthen  and reform the church’s role in 
public life, protect religious freedom and  renew democracy at home and abroad, 
according to its mission  statement. 
Contact: [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) 

Alex Murashko
Christian  Post Reporter   
____________________________________
  
 
Copyright © Christianpost.com. All rights  reserved. 













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