The Spoils of Corruption
By Charles Sullivan
11/01/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Like many Americans, since early
childhood I was taught that good always triumphs over evil. But
as I grew older and acquainted myself with the history of my
country, my perspective became less naïve and better informed.
My perceptions of reality were altered forever, and I am forced
to live, like so many of my readers, with the burden of
knowledge that often makes reality painful to bear.
America could have been very different, but it has become a land
of unfathomable corruption. It is a place where money rules and
lords power over everyone and every process. Corruption has
lodged itself in every tissue and every organ of our societal
institutions, and riddled them with crippling disease. Perhaps
more than any organ it has blinded our ability to see what is
before us.
The root of corruption stems from America's love affair with
private wealth and conquest. We are a culturally shallow and
spiritually deprived people who seem incapable of discerning
truth from fairy tales. This may be a matter of convenience for
some and a survival mechanism to others.
There are three primary cultural pillars that are the
underpinning of our society: government, media, and religion. It
is widely assumed that these institutions exist to serve the
people. Whatever their intent when they were birthed in the
minds and hearts of their creators, these institutions were
subverted and used to subdue and control the masses; to make
them subservient to power. Virtually everything we believe about
America is contradicted by the evidence, but too many of us are
unwilling to come to grips with reality, which thus assures the
continuation of a brutal and tortuous history of murder and
conquest.
In a wonderful essay titled The Problem is Civil Obedience,
historian Howard Zinn wrote, "I start from the supposition that
the world is topsy-turvey, that the wrong people are in jail and
the wrong people are out of jail, that the wrong people are in
power and the wrong people are out of power..." Zinn, as usual,
sums up the situation perfectly. But the great majority refuses
to see things as they really are. They prefer fairy tales to
truth that is too painful for them to acknowledge and to bear;
and so the charade continues.
Those on the far right of the political spectrum are fond of
saying that America is a Christian nation, when, in fact,
nothing could be farther from the truth. The framers of the
Constitution, especially Thomas Jefferson, took great pains to
keep America from evolving into a Theocracy. Even so, religion
should provide a moral compass that steers its participants away
from corruption and moral morass. Yet with only a comparatively
few exceptions, religion is used against its followers. It
serves wealth and power, and keeps the masses ignorant, and
subservient to the hierarchy of the church, which is in
collusion with the money changers in government.
Organized religion, like the mainstream media and the
government, is controlled by the wealthy and powerful. It serves
the high priests of capitalism and is little more than an
enabler of corruption and conquest. Let us not forget that
Manifest Destiny was driven by a puritanical zealotry that
resulted in the ethnic cleansing of a continent. The collusion
of religion with material wealth lends a false aura of moral
authority to disingenuous and misguided human behaviors that
follow immoral government into war after war. Thus the rich
continue to exploit the working people for the benefit of the
ruling class.
At some point in our history Jesus of Nazareth was supplanted by
Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. The Jesus who despised the
wealthy and believed in service to the poor, who in anger
overturned the tables of the money changers, no longer exists
within the American psyche. Unlike Jesus, Robertson and Falwell
believe in accruing wealth to themselves and in assassinating
their enemies. They work hand in hand with the morally bankrupt
leadership that has invaded and occupies 135 of the world's 192
nations. The genuine article has somehow given way to the
counterfeit, and too many of us are unable to tell the
difference.
In a purer form organized religion-in this case Christianity,
would be revolutionary and radical; and it would serve as a
bulwark against the accumulation of private affluence in favor
of public service, and a massive redistribution of wealth and
power. It would find itself, like any conscientious individual,
in formal opposition to the conventions of government and
society, rather than an enabler of them. But that clearly is not
the case these days.
The church, like all things American, more closely resembles a
for profit corporation than a place where human souls are
instructed in righteous behavior and healed.
Similarly, the naïve among us broadly assume that the mainstream
media exists to inform the people, and thus serves as a
countervailing force against corruption and malfeasance. In
truth the corporate media serves those in power rather than
holding them accountable to the people. While it was not always
so, the mainstream media, like organized religion, is used to
program public perceptions-to steer us away from truth and to
perpetuate fairy tales that extol the virtues of bribery,
violence, and greed. It makes useful idiots of those who cannot
think for themselves and persuades them to act like fools in the
eyes of the world.
From the days of Tom Paine we have regressed to an era in which
news anchors are rewarded for their loyalty to political regimes
by being awarded positions in government. Tom Paine and the
spirit of public service have given way to Tony Snow and Katie
Couric, and the creation of media celebrities. The boundary
between government and media, between church and state and
corporate power, no longer exists. They are all interchangeable
parts in a machine that makes a mockery of social justice and
human freedoms.
Gone are the days of radical, revolutionary religion in America.
Gone are the days of Thomas Jefferson and Samuel Adams, when a
just and Democratic Republic seemed possible. Gone are the days
of Tom Paine and the militant press that challenged corrupt
power. The hands of time are no longer moving forward; we have
reversed them. Once again the dark ages loom large on the
horizon before us like an unseen iceberg in the chill dark of an
Atlantic night.
Charles Sullivan is a photographer, social activist and free
lance writer residing in the hinterland of West Virgina.
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