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Wednesday, March 22, 2006

A Time for Heresy

Bill Moyers recently spoke at Wake Forest Divinity School for the inauguration of a scholarship in religious freedom. His speech, entitled A Time for Heresy, is simply amazing, and it outlines how the wealthiest few have hijacked this country. In his words:
For a quarter of a century now a ferocious campaign has been conducted to dismantle the political institutions, the legal and statutory canons, and the intellectual, cultural, and religious frameworks that sustained America’s social contract. The corporate, political, and religious right converged in a movement that for a long time only they understood because they are its advocates, its architects, and its beneficiaries. Their economic strategy was to cut workforces and wages, scour the globe for even cheaper labor, and relieve investors of any responsibility for the cost of society. On the weekend before President Bush’s second inauguration, The New York Times described how his first round of tax cuts had already brought our tax code closer to a system under which income on wealth would not be taxed at all and public expenditures would be raised exclusively from salaries and wages. Their political strategy was to neutralize the independent media, create their own propaganda machine with a partisan press, and flood their coffers with rivers of money from those who stand to benefit from the transfer of public resources to elite control. Along the way they would burden the nation with structural deficits that will last until our children’s children are ready to retire, systematically stripping government of its capacity, over time, to do little more than wage war and reward privilege. Their religious strategy was to fuse ideology and theology into a worldview freed of the impurities of compromise, claim for America the status of God’s favored among nations (and therefore beyond political critique or challenge), and demonize their opponents as ungodly and immoral.

Then Moyers describes how they exploited our political system so that it now requires millions to get elected to congress and these people who "mastered the money game" have sold "democracy to the highest bidder." Moyers ends the speech with: "This is the heresy of our time – to wrestle with the gods who guard the boundaries of this great nation’s promise, and to confront the medicine men in the woods, twirling their bullroarers to keep us in fear and trembling. For the greatest heretic of all is Jesus of Nazareth, who drove the money changers from the temple in Jerusalem as we must now drive the money changers from the temples of democracy." Amen.

So thanks Bill Moyers for chronicling so eloquently the past 25 years of political history in this country, and thanks to my friend Mark Luvzus, or whatever he calls himself these days, for recommending the article.

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