Is
the realization of self about oneself?
Is the great motivation only about collecting
things and changing money? Or
does the essence of satisfaction seem to lay elsewhere? ...
We don’t have a lot of detail on the
day to day life of Jesus, unfortunately. But in one
familiar story he overturns the tables of the money changers who had infiltrated
the halls of the temple, casting them out with a rare display of anger. It seems that economics had gained an
undesirable preference over morality.
And so it goes with the American system. A human being, to whom we sometimes refer as labor, is a commodity to be used up and exploited. We have witnessed exploitation in the form of unsafe working conditions,
excessive hours, of a wage below the poverty line. The idea of a “living wage” simply “does not
compute” on Wall Street. When wage
“costs” become excessive, jobs and even entire industries are outsourced to a
distant shore. The displaced worker is
not consulted. When he cannot find a
comparable paying job, he is ridiculed for being lazy, lacking initiative. Moreover, little consideration is given either
to the needs or desires of the locals in the new “work force.” What ever happened to altruistic notions of
paying a fair share, giving back and paying forward for the next generation?
Typically, the exploitation of a human being is accompanied by the exploitation of the environment and natural resources, without any thought given to sustainability. Although global warming is now an in-progress
fact of life, the powerful status quo continues to muddle the picture for the
ordinary citizen, stubbornly refuting its proven scientific validity. And as progress stalls, the privileged few
who comprise the base of the status quo quietly add to their material conquest. Conservation as a “National Duty” and
policy as expressed by T.R. more than
100 years ago, based on “efficient use of finite resources and
scientific management of renewable ones,”
remains a utopian liberal plot. It’s either
economic prosperity, or the environment, but not both.
The violence of unregulated capitalism, which is portrayed in too many places in the nation’s heartland, produces sacrifice zones, areas that have been destroyed for quarterly profit. Think coal mining ventures in West Virginia, offshore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, fracking for natural gas in a multitude of geographical locations. Rich natural resources are extracted, yet the money is not funneled back into the communities that are sitting on top of, or next to those resources. Destruction is not limited to the environment. It includes communities, human beings, families. There appears to be no way to control corporate power. The system has broken down, whether it's Democrat or Republican. We’ve all become commodities.
The violence of unregulated capitalism, which is portrayed in too many places in the nation’s heartland, produces sacrifice zones, areas that have been destroyed for quarterly profit. Think coal mining ventures in West Virginia, offshore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, fracking for natural gas in a multitude of geographical locations. Rich natural resources are extracted, yet the money is not funneled back into the communities that are sitting on top of, or next to those resources. Destruction is not limited to the environment. It includes communities, human beings, families. There appears to be no way to control corporate power. The system has broken down, whether it's Democrat or Republican. We’ve all become commodities.
Why
is the value of labor in the human condition to be diminished? Why does labor only seem to be an expense on
the economic balance sheet – but not also an asset? How is human welfare to be fairly measured, and
acknowledged? T.R. had felt that those who gave earnest thought to the matter saw
that the problem of labor was not only an economic, but also a moral, a human
problem. A generation later, F.D.R.
signaled the primary role of government was help for the dispossessed,
especially in time of need.
But the crisis of a Great Depression occurs. Then, it passes. The calamity of a Great Recession of 2008
takes place and passes, too. A sense of
normalcy returns. But no matter how hard
we strive to create a more perfect union, collecting things and changing
money remain the great motivation which obscures life’s true purpose.
Consider the story of the man who does yard work. Taking a
break, he drops the rake in a pile of leaves.
When the break ends, since it is partially hidden or perhaps forgetting
that the rake is there, he carelessly steps on it. But when the shaft
springs up and strikes him square in the forehead, he is immediately reminded. Startled, he makes a mental note never to do that again.
But inexplicably, we keep stepping on the same rake. In this way, the business of providing a fair shot for the many, of achieving equality of opportunity for all citizens, remains our great unfinished business. The president said as much in his recent remarks on the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s march on Washington.
Yes, the challenge can seem daunting. But can it be any more
daunting than that facing the New Dealers who descended upon the grimness of Washington in the midst
of 25% unemployment and the corresponding national fear and despair of 1933? For the best of them, the satisfaction lay
in some deep sense of giving and sharing, … rooted in
the relief of escaping the loneliness and boredom of oneself, and the unreality
of personal ambition. The satisfaction
derived from sinking individual effort into the community itself, the common
goal and the common end. This is no
escape from self; it is the realization of self.
Yet despite the New Deal’s accomplishment, 35 years later, what had really changed, if anything? “For the many,” said Robert Kennedy, “roots of despair all feed at a common source. … Our gross national product … measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worth while."
-Michael D’Angelo
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