“Until
you change the way money works you change nothing”
---Michael
C Ruppert
Pope
condemns idolatry of cash in capitalism
Head
of Catholic church condemns economic system and calls for society
with people, not money, at its heart
22
September, 2013
Pope
Francis has called for a global economic system that puts people and
not "an idol called money" at its heart, drawing on the
hardship of his immigrant family as he sympathised with unemployed
workers in a part of Italy that has suffered greatly from the
recession.
Addressing
about 20,000 people in the Sardinian capital of Cagliari, the
Argentinian pontiff said that his parents had "lost everything"
after they emigrated from Italy and that he understood the suffering
that came from joblessness.
"Where
there is no work, there is no dignity," he said, in ad-libbed
remarks after listening to three locals, including an unemployed
worker who spoke of how joblessness "weakens the spirit".
But the problem went far beyond the Italian island, said Francis, who
has called for wholesale reform of the financial system.
"This
is not just a problem of Sardinia; it is not just a problem of Italy
or of some countries in Europe," he said. "It is the
consequence of a global choice, an economic system which leads to
this tragedy; an economic system which has at its centre an idol
called money."
The
76-year-old said that God had wanted men and women to be at the heart
of the world. "But now, in this ethics-less system, there is an
idol at the centre and the world has become the idolater of this
'money-god'," he added.
Sardinia,
one of Italy's autonomous regions with a population of 1.6 million,
has suffered particularly badly during the economic crisis, with an
unemployment rate of 20%, eight points higher than the national
average, and youth unemployment of 51%.
Last
summer the island's hardship became national news when Stefano
Meletti, a 49-year-old miner, slashed his wrists on television during
a protest aimed at keeping the Carbosulcis coal mine open.
Urging
people not to give up hope even in the harsh economic climate,
Francis also called on them to fight back against the "throwaway
culture" he said was a by-product of a global economic system
that cared only about profit. It was, he said, a culture that saw the
most vulnerable society become marginalised.
"Grandparents
are thrown away and young people are thrown away," he said. "And
we must say no to this throwaway culture. We must say: 'We want a
fair system; a system that allows everyone to move forward.' We must
say: 'We do not want this globalised economic system that does so
much harm.' At the centre has to be man and woman, as God wants –
not money."
His
own father, he recalled, had suffered great hardship after moving
from northern Italy to Argentina in the 1920s. He went "a young
man … full of illusions" of making it in the new world, but
soon found there was no work to be had. "I didn't see it; I had
not yet been born. But I heard of this hardship at home … I know it
well," said Francis.
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