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Money Talks
Tom Sunic
May 13, 2009
Repost From
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net
Never has money been so important in human
relations. Never has it so much affected the destiny of so many
Americans and Europeans. Today money has become a civil religion
that makes it the centerpiece of discourse in all cultures and
subcultures. At European and American cafes, on the Champs Élysées,
or on Sunset Boulevard, at concert halls, and even in parliaments,
one hears and smells its verbal derivatives such as “moulah,”
“dough,” “fric,” “Kohle,” “pognon.” It is a language understood by
all. In all segments of their lives Western citizens invariably talk
about money and what money can buy. The great respite may come with
the current financial crisis, which is finally undoing the liberal
system with all its conventional wisdoms and lies. The ongoing
economic depression may be the sign that the reign of money and the
dictatorship of well-being are coming to an end.
Sounds familiar? No, it does not. In ancient
European traditions money and commerce were looked down upon and at
times these two activities were in principle forbidden to Europeans.
Merchants were often foreigners and considered second class
citizens.
The famous English poet and novelist
D. H. Lawrence
— a "revolutionary nationalist" — talks about “money madness” in his
collection of poems Pansies. His poem “Kill money”
summarizes best this facet of 20th-century mores:
Kill money/put money out of existence/It is a
perverted instinct/A hidden thought /which rots the brain, the
blood, the bones, the stones, the soul.
Similar views were held by the long forgotten
American
Southern agrarians
in the 30’s, who viciously attacked American money madness and the
belief in progress. They had dark premonitions about the future of
America. As noted by
John Crowe Ransom,
“Along with the gospel of progress goes the gospel of service.
Americans are still dreaming the materialistic dreams of their
youth.” And further he writes: “The concept of Progress is the
concept of man’s increasing command, and eventually a perfect
command over the forces of nature: a concept which enhances too
readily our conceit and brutalizes our life.”
Thousands of book titles and thousands of poems
from antiquity all the way to early modernity bear witness to a
tradition of deep revulsion Europeans had for money and merchants.
Charles Dickens’
description of the character Fagin the Jew in his novel Oliver
Twist may be soon cut out from the mandatory school curriculum.
Fagin’s physical repulsiveness, his strange name, and most of all
his Jewish identity do not square with modern ukases on
ethnic and diversity training in American schools. The crook Fagin
illustrates boundless human greed when he sings to himself and his
young captive boys: “In
this life, one thing counts / In the bank, large amounts / I'm
afraid these don't grow on trees, / You've got to pick-a-pocket or
two / You've got to pick-a-pocket or two, boys, / You've got to
pick-a-pocket or two.”
Already
Ezra Pound,
a connoisseur of the English language and a
visionary on the methods of usury, and his contemporary, Norwegian
Nobel prize winner
Knut Hamsun,
have disappeared from library shelves. Their fault? They critically
examined the crisis of financial capitalism, or what we call more
euphemistically today “global recession” and the main movers and
shakers behind it.
In medieval times, money and the merchant class
were social outcasts solely needed to run the economy of a country.
Yet today they have morphed into role models of the West represented
by a slick and successful banker dressed in an Armani suit and
sporting a broad smile on his face. What a change from traditional
Europe in which an intelligent man was destined for priesthood,
sainthood, or a military career!
It is with the rising tide of modernity that
the value system began to change. Even nowadays the word ‘merchant’
in the French and the German languages (marchand, Händler)
has a slightly pejorative meaning, associated with a foreigner,
prototypically a Jew. The early Catholic Church had an ambiguous
attitude toward money — and toward Jews. Well known are
St. Luke’s parables (16:19–31)
that it “is easier for a camel to go thru the eye of a needle than
for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.”
But the Church chose a less pious way to power.
In 1179, the Third Lateran Council forbade Jews from living in
Christian communities and exiled them to ghettos — with full rights
to practice usury and tax collecting. To a large extent the Church,
while providing the best shelter for Jews against frequent bouts of
popular anti-Jewish anger, also greatly amassed wealth — courtesy of
Jewish tax collectors.
The father of the Enlightenment, the
18th-century French philosopher
Voltaire,
is often quoted as a first spokesman of tolerance and human rights
in Western civilization. But it is often forgotten that Voltaire was
also an
unabashed anti-Semite.
Voltaire’s critical remarks about Jews and their love for money were
recently expunged from his books, or simply not translated. But some
still thrive such as “always superstitious and greedy for the good
of others, always barbarous, crawling when in misfortune and
insolent in prosperity, that is what the Jews were in the eyes of
the Greeks and Romans..”
(Essais
sur les mœurs)
The
ancient European ruling class certainly
had its share of corruption and greed. But in principle, until the
Enlightenment, the social roles of money and merchants were
subjugated to the role of the prince and power politics. Until then,
the entire value system had been based on spiritual transcendence
and not on economic growth — at least in its appearance. In ancient
Greece,
King Midas
who was a kind man, could not resist the temptation of turning
everything into gold with his magic fingers, until he ruined his
family, turned water into undrinkable metal, and his face assumed
the shape of a donkey.
King Croesus
went berserk after amassing so much wealth that he could not devote
his time and his thoughts to the impending war with the Persians.
In the ancient European tradition, revulsion
against money pervades the sagas and the old popular legends,
teaching everybody that piety prospers over prosperity. Material
wealth brings disaster.
Today, by contrast, official advocacy of
frugality and modesty is perceived as a sign of the early stage of
lunacy. If a well-educated and well-cultivated man comes along and
starts preaching modesty or rejects honoraria for his work, he is
considered a failure, a person who does not respect his own worth.
How on earth can some well-read and well-bread person offer his
services for free? How on earth can a well-educated man refuse
using his mental resources to generate the almighty dollar? The
answer is not difficult to discover. In capitalism everything has
its price, but nothing has value.
The modern liberal capitalist system is a
deeply inhuman system, based on fraudulent teaching that everybody
is equal in economic competition. In reality though, it rewards only
those whose skills and talents happen to be marketable. Those rare
Whites who decide to retain some vestiges of old European traditions
are squarely pronounced incompetent. Liberal capitalism both in
America and in Europe has turned all humans into perishable
commodities.
Nobody summarized this better than the Italian
philosopher
Julius
Evola,
another revolutionary nationalist who wrote: “Facing the classical
dilemma 'your money or your life,' the bourgeois will answer: 'Take
my life but leave me my money.'”
Greed, passionate greed eclipses all elements
of human decency. Until relatively recently avarice was laughed at
and its chief protagonists were considered immoral people, so well
represented in
Molière’s
comedy L’Avare. Today the greedier the better: The
money maker is the ultimate role model.
Both East and West
participate in this ethic of greed. The richest people in
post-communist Eastern Europe are former communist hacks who
converted themselves in a twinkle of an eye from disciples of Marx
into acolytes of
Milton Friedman
and
Friedrich Hayek.
Finance capitalism provides the
perception of limitless possibility of how to get rich out of the
blue. This is a typical
Bernie Madoff
syndrome, namely that affluence
can be created by sheer speculation. The entire banking system in
Eastern Europe has been sold to foreigners over the last 10 years.
Modern capitalism and a penchant for finance
owe much to Judaism.
Werner Sombart,
a German disciple
of Max Weber, who can in no way be called an anti-Semite wrote in
The Jews and
Modern Capitalism
that “money was their sole companion
when they were thrust naked into the street, and their sole
protector when the hand of the oppressor was heavy upon them. So
they learned to love it, seeing that by its aid alone they could
subdue the mighty ones of the earth. Money became the means whereby
they — and through them all mankind — might wield power without
themselves being strong.”
Money
changes social mores too. Young White couples put off having
children until they achieve their economic dreams, while Mexicans
and Blacks begin having children as impoverished teenagers, and
Muslims place a high value on fertility. This is one of the main
causes of our malaise, as White societies with declining fertility
are inundated by highly fertile non-White populations with value
systems that prize fertility over the accumulation of the
accouterments of economic success.
And in this
economic recession these Whites are not interested in a pay raise
but rather in how to keep their job — security at all cost, even if
it means working for lower wages. Neither are young job market
entrants interested in saving money. Instead they live on credit in
their petty little niche with their petty little pleasures and
without incurring any risks.
What a difference from
early American pioneers described by
Jack London, who braved the
vagaries of weather and who totally ignored the meaning of “hedge
funds”! The attractions of money and the necessity of making money
mean that everybody in our postmodern world becomes prey to the
system.
It is a
fundamental mistake among many so called right wingers and
racialists to assume that capitalism is the only answer to
communism. Both systems are in fact similar because they preach the
same religion of progress and the unfolding of earthly paradise —
albeit in different gears. But this time liberal capitalism has
nobody to hide behind in order to conceal its vulgar depravity. The
likely hypothesis is that the crumbling capitalist system will fall
apart as a result of its own victory. One dies always from those who
give him birth.
Tom Sunic (http://www.tomsunic.info/;
http://doctorsunic.netfirms.com/)
is an author, former political science professor in the USA,
translator and former Croat diplomat. He is the author of
Homo americanus: Child of the Postmodern Age
( 2007).
Permanent link:
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/authors/Sunic-Money.html
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