Curiously, a
just system is possible and plausible as well as a thriving global
economy. It is not even particularly
hard to bring about. What prevents it is
human ignorance combined with no meaningful economic theory to manage it all
by. Pope Francis is right to scream out
in pain for the people while the kings of this world hide away in their private
material heavens.
Work is dignity
which we owe every man women and child and until we deliver that core right, heaven
on earth remains a myth. Note that this
is inclusive and no one needs to be outside.
A growing child can join in the economic life of his family and
community as can the elderly. All earn
dignity and personal pride.
There is
actually much that he can do if he is shown and perhaps that will be his
mission. He has tools unused and not
even understood to work with.
Pope Francis
speaks without a script
by Brian Preston for viewzone (© Sept. 2013)
(Reuters) -- September 22, 2013: Pope Francis made
one of his strongest attacks on the global economic system on Sunday, saying it
could no longer be based on a "god called money" and urged the
unemployed to fight for work.
Francis, at the start of a day-long trip to the
Sardinian capital, Cagliari, put aside his prepared text at a meeting with
unemployed workers, including miners in hard hats who told him of their
situation, and improvised for nearly 20 minutes.
"I find suffering here ... It weakens you and
robs you of hope," he said.
"Excuse me if I use strong words, but where there is no work there is
no dignity."
He discarded his prepared speech after listening to
Francesco Mattana, a 45-year-old married father of three who lost his job with
an alternative energy company four years ago.
Mattana, his voice trembling, told the pope that
unemployment "oppresses you and wears you out to the depths of your
soul".
The crowd of about 20,000 people in a square near
the city port chanted what Francis called a prayer for "work, work,
work". They cheered each time he spoke of the rights of workers and the
personal devastation caused by joblessness.
The pope, who later celebrated Mass for some 300,000
people outside the city's cathedral, told them:
"We don't want this globalised economic system
which does us so much harm. Men and women have to be at the centre (of an
economic system) as God wants, not money.
The world has become an idolator of this god called
money."
Sardinia's coast is famous for its idyllic beaches,
exclusive resorts and seaside palatial residences of some of the world's
richest people, including former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and a
host of Hollywood actors.
But much of the island, particularly its large
cities and the vast agricultural and industrial interior, has been blighted by
the economic crisis, with factories closed and mines operating at low capacity.
Cagliari has a youth unemployment rate of about 51
percent. The Sulcis area in the southwest of the island is threatened with more
unemployment from the looming closures of the Carbosulcis coal mine and an
aluminum smelter.
The pope made clear that his assessment was not
limited to the local situation.
"It is not a problem of Italy and Europe ... It
is the consequence of a world choice, of an economic system that brings about
this tragedy, an economic system that has at its centre an idol which is called
money."
As he spoke, the crowd cheered; some cried.
While Francis's predecessor Benedict also called for
changes to economic systems, he was more likely to use dense intellectual
language.
Francis, who as bishop of Buenos Aires sided with
unemployed workers in their conflict with government austerity plans, ended his
improvised speech with a prayer asking God to "give us work and teach
us to fight for work".
Francis said he did not want the crowd to see him
as a smiling "cordial manager of the Church who comes here and says to you
'have courage'".
"I don't want this. I want this courage to come
from inside me and push me to do everything I can as a pastor and a man."
Francis brought tears to the eyes of some in the
crowd when he told his own family's story of emigration from Italy to Argentina
and how they lost everything in the Great Depression.
"I was not born yet, but as a child I remember
hearing talk of this suffering."
Francis said globalization had brought with it a
culture where the weakest in society suffered the most and often, those on the
fringes "fall away", including the elderly, who he said were victims
of a "hidden euthanasia" caused by neglect of those no longer
considered productive.
"To defend this economic culture, a throwaway
culture has been installed. We throw away grandparents, and we throw away
young people. We have to say no to his throwaway culture. We want a just
system that helps everyone."
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