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Thursday, September 18, 2008
Cal  Thomas :: Townhall.com Columnist
Lessons From the Puritans
by Cal Thomas
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"Greed is good." (1987 film "Wall Street")

"Whoever loves money, never has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his income. This too is meaningless." (Ecclesiastes 5:10)

The financial "crisis" on Wall Street has provided another teachable moment. It turns out that greed is not good after all.

While the media and politicians blame the usual suspects, greed, like illicit sex, is not held in copyright by either party or political persuasion.

Barack Obama partially and predictably blamed the Bush administration, but it was the policies of the Clinton administration (as detailed in the Sept. 15 issue of Investors Business Daily) that sowed the seeds for the subprime mortgage collapse.

John McCain wants more regulations. What McCain should be demanding is an investigation, especially of those members of Congress who failed to provide oversight. It also wouldn't hurt to recommend more self-control and an embrace of the Puritan ethic of living within one's means.

Modern Western culture has been built on the success ethic, which says the acquisition of material wealth produces happiness and contentment and that the value of a life is to be measured not by one's character, but the size of his bank account, the square footage of his home, the cost of his clothes and the cars in his garage. The Puritan Thomas Watson addressed this notion when he said, "Blessedness ... does not lie in the acquisition of worldly things. Happiness cannot by any art of chemistry be extracted here."

Christianity Today magazine noted in a 1988 article, "The Puritan Critique of Modern Attitudes Toward Money": "American culture has been strangely enamored of the image of Œthe self-made person' - the person who becomes rich and famous through his or her own efforts. The idea of having status handed over as a gift does not appeal to such an outlook. Yet the Puritans denied that there can even be such a thing as a self-made person. Based on an ethic of grace, Puritanism viewed prosperity solely as God's gift."

The writer might have added that prosperity should not be seen as an end, but a means. Throughout Scripture, people are warned that money is a false god that leads to destruction. Wealth is best used when it becomes a river, not a reservoir; when it blesses and encourages others and does not solely feed one's personal empire.

The modern business ethic seems to be to make as much money as possible, but with little purpose for making that money other than to enhance the wealth and status of those who make it. No wonder Paul the Apostle wrote that "the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil" (1 Timothy 6:10). It isn't money itself that is evil. Money, like fire or firearms, can be used for good or ill, depending on the character of the person who possesses it. But money can be worshipped with as much fervency as that golden calf in Moses' time. In Dow we trust!

Part of our problem is a failure to distinguish between needs and wants. Until the last century, most people were familiar with the Puritan ethic of living within one's means. The Gilded Age in the late 19th century demonstrated the folly of rapacious living, yet the Roaring Twenties generation had to learn the lesson anew from the Great Depression.

When the Forbidden Fruit was handed to Adam and Eve, they were allowed the moral choice to accept or decline. I know people who have refused to feast on the money tree. They live simply, within their means, and seem far more content than those who are trying to horde their wealth while clinging to the ladder of "success," terrified to let go. That isn't real living. The Puritans rightly saw that as covetousness.

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About The Author
Cal Thomas is co-author (with Bob Beckel) of the book, "Common Ground: How to Stop the Partisan War That is Destroying America".
 
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Puritinism
as I've always defined it was " the deep down dreaded feeling that somewhere, someone was having fun."

Have All the Fun You Want, But...
...not on my dime.

robinsky...
I'm inclined to agree. However, the tenet of Puritanism which Cal references is not unique to Puritanism. The idea of the rightness of living within one's means has always been upheld in my religious environments. I was raised Southern Baptist and currently am a member of an Inter-denominational church. Living within one's means can also be stated as simply being responsible, or being a good steward. Very simply put, the idea could be restated as, "If you can't afford it, don't buy it." This idea makes perfect sense, and should make sense to anyone who understands basic math. So, I don't know if approaching this idea from the Puritan angle is the best way, but I do believe in the principle itself.

Baloney
What part of capitalism and the profit motive does this guy not understand? It's what has made the US the greatest country in the world.

God save the ...


AHH ! The pursuit of greed. Since the garden of Eden to present day America, we say "show us the money". The phrase "God save the Queen" should be " God save the Dow". Purtians took the truth from God's word to live by and we take everything (wealth) we can get our hands on.

Man & corruption…

‘It also wouldn't hurt to recommend more self-control and an embrace of the Puritan ethic of living within one's means.’ –Cal Thomas

The thing we have forgotten which the Puritans knew well is the nature of man. The law is no safeguard against human depravity. It will always find a way to corrupt the system. The practice of independent accountability must be enforced to keep corruption in bounds. This is critical with the advent of professional politicians to take the place of statesmen.

The real Puritans had more fun than their caricatures. It is true that they rejected all forms of sexual sin, but they embraced the Biblical view of married love between husband and wife. They knew the real thing was much to be preferred over all the counterfeits because of their view of a sovereign and good God who most kindly had brought redemption to a world dead in sin.


Baloney is wrong!
Thomas is not talking about the "profit motive" and why capitalism is the worst system (except for everything else). Capitalism is, simply put, the exchange of goods and services based on individual choice. He's talking about greed, which is a vice (unless you're Gordon Gecko) and is not dependent on an economic philosophy or system. You can be equally greedy in a Communist society as in a Capitalist one.

Heed the Words of George Washington
I think there are some important truths the American people need to be reminded of, which George Washington expressed in his Farewell of Address of 1796: "Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of Patriotism who should labour to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the duties of Men and citizens."

Greed IS good!!!
Substitute prosperity or growth for the word "greed" because that exactly how the Left sees both of those. Prosperity to them is a government handout program. REAL growth is a threat because then they can't pander to the less fortunate.

They think they are voting for a leader while they really are voting for Santa Claus.

-Ray
NRA Life Member

Clinton, Bush, GOP, Dems, all share.
Who can argue with the virtue of living within one's means?

That should be a "given".

I think both Republicans and Democrats, both Congress as well as Clinton and G.W. Bush administrations, are partially culpable for this destructive narcissism that we live beyond our means.

McCain for years relied upon the advice of Phil Gramm on economic and financial matters. Gramm, while chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, terminated the Glass-Steagley Act written during the Great Depression to wall off (unregulated)investment banking from(heavily regulated)commerical banking. Gramm generally oversaw deregulation of financial services industry while he was a U.S. Senator, including easing regulations on "energy-commodity trading", and not long thereafter the energy commodity trading company(Enron)collapsed.

So I think it a fair question to examine those decisions in light of the recent financial tsunamis afflicting our financial industry sector.

Democrats(including Clinton)favored relaxation of lending standards to prospective homeowners, believing the lower economic classes should not be deprived of homeownership.

And the GOP also favored relaxation of lending standards, thinking more homeownership would instill a sense of responsibility in more people.

There is blame enough to go around.

And the American who thinks he can always live beyond his means, and that the "bills" will never come due, and even if they do, just goes out and borrows more to cover them, has to become more realistic.

Jerabaub FL
Well said ! Narcisistic indeed!
It used to be called "The Rat Race" ...greed, corruption, "something for nothing" etc.
Perhaps the most greedy, narcisistic and corrupt segment of the population can be identified as Lawyers. They have mostly been in charge of our government for decades and the results are abysmal.
That's just one of the reasons I am voting McCain/Palin, neither is a lawyer.

Jerabaub: yes, but
top of the mornin; got some Irish or Roman coffee going yet?

Agreed: a pox on both their [mansions.] But if I have to choose between Phil Gramm and Saul Alinsky/Tony Resko..........

Peccatur, Sarah is correct, you worship at the altar of Adam Smith, which is the inverted form of marxism, homo economicus simplex.

Robinsky/comment one: that Puritan quote is from Mencken, right? too lazy to look up.

Would anyone buy stox today?
I would, except i'm too lazy, prefer monthly incremental plan. Do not follow my advice, i do not have financial planner certificate, but i did stay at a holiday inn last night.

Should we have a Bonfire of the credit cards, along with the Vanities?

Typical beltway rubbish....
Greed is the problem - government greed. Bush and the Republicans, in cooperation with Democrats, have burdened this economy with their excesses - wars, welfare state increases, regulation, not to mention dramatically increased earmarks, which follows from this whole business of lobbying, which has actually doubled in size since Bush took office. Naturally the economy has to unravel under these burdens. Cal, like all these government worshipers, repudiates freedom for more of the same that brought us here.

Being from MA, i know the puritans
and the problem was/is that they always morph into the congregationalists, then the unitarians, then Emersonian agnostics, then marxist/leninists, then stalinists. [of course, no offense meant to anyone of those above named denominations.]

Root Cause
The basic problem is that the great doctrines of Christianity on which this nation was established and about which Thomas Watson wrote are no longer being preached from the pulpits of American churches. They have been replaced with an every one is all right, name it and claim it, feel good theology completely removed from the teachings of the Bible. Scriptural doctrine has been replaced with selfish dogma.

Speaking of Puritans and stocks,
I think we should bring back the public humiliations and whippings on the town common.

RickV: don't take Will so seriously; 90% of what he writes is tongue in cheek, like his superior, Krauthammer.

Wow!!
Great article. Cal says that we should return to the days of good Christian providence and the values of the Puritans.

But that doesn't mean that we should raise taxes to pay for the debt we generated. No, we should ask God to cover our debts and return this country to it's glorious days. Maybe God can give us a better interest rate than the Chinese.

Just as a note. While Cal is extolling the virtues of not being immersed in material wealth and giving back to society, his associate columnist Jeffery Towery, is voicing his disgust in another column (A Very "Un-American" Answer to Solving Our Financial Woes) with Gates and Buffet for advocating fair taxes on the wealthy and donating their wealth to charities.

Seems the conservatives can't make up their mind whether greed is good or God is good.

I went to Investment News Daily
And I read the article that Mr. Thomas references. It says that Clinton was responsible for this mess. It makes no reference to any particular legislation that was passed. It says that some of Clinton's boys got jobs at Fannie Mac but it doesn't have any specifics about what Clinton did 10 years ago to screw-up the US economy today . There's an accompanying article that does the same.

Okay, Clinton did it. Now show me where I can document that allegation. Or was Mr. Thomas just being lazy today and used another column for his allegations?
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=3063707892 79709

I hate the term "giving back"
It pre-supposes that you took something that wasn't yours to begin with.
It is not greedy to enjoy the fruits of ones labor in the only life your ever going to have..

If someone chooses to do good works with his/her extra money, so much the better, the trouble with liberals is they think THEY should be able to distribute largesse from your bank account to causes THEY believe are worthy.

I read somewhere years ago that it costs $8 in overhead for the gov't to deliver $1 in welfare. That's because they hire people to do that thereby creating a welfare industry....All in all, I think we're better off doing it ourselves since we earned it in first place.


Pablo St. Cruz, aka Paul of Holy Cross,
Of course, the problems of the last few daze are not solely those of the clintonistas. before that, it was the reagan policies, who was of course correcting the carter debacle, who was only trying to heal nixonomics, which was a reaction to lbj's great society, ad infinitum, etc., which brings us back to adam and eve.

Cal
Solomon spent a great deal of time searching for happiness wherever his heart took him. Of course he could afford it. He found it all vanity and futility. A striving after the wind.
There are many more things to consume us besides money. Science, books, football, power, gardening, golfing, sex etc.,etc.,etc. There are many wholesome and unwholesome activities that can become gods. Yet Solomon had the God given freedom to find out for himself. We also should respect the freedom of those around us to make mistakes and learn the hard lessons of life. If they don't want to just read Ecclesiastes and learn the easy way from Solomon.
Puritans took their focus off of Jesus and what HE had done for them. So love and forgiveness was minimized.
Now the government on the other hand does not and should never have the freedom of an individual, to experiment or to change. Our forefathers gave us, after much prayer and deliberation, a near perfect constitution and it is our duty to sustain it to pass on to our children and grandchildren. We must fight even our fellow citizens for its preservation. There is no neutral ground.

Cwolf: re libs: do as they say, not
as they do. Read the other day that Boring Biden maxed out at 2/10ths of 1% in charitable giving last year. being a catholic myself, his number is legion. I think zer-obama was almost as bad; how did rev. wright let him stay in his congregation? 4 years ago, same with Yawn Kerry, my junior senator, junior to the aged ted kennedy, less than 1%, even while married to the veddy comfortable Thereza Heinz.

Joseph
I hear you brother...they are such hypocrites.
I keep harping on bambi's plan to re-institute the death tax at 45% "so that families cannot amass fortunes to leave to their children".

I guess they don't teach the communist manifesto in school anymore, unless it's to advocate it.

Greed
It is not enough to simply say that greed is the problem. More important is to say who has been greedy and then be able to say with some evidence of wisdom and logic why a person should believe the assertion. For instance, is it greed to say that our congress has been guilty of relaxing Fannie Mae loan guidelines to be able to energize a grateful voting bloc? Is is fair to say that congress compensated their Fannie Mae campaign donors with a criminally small amount of oversight? Is it fair to say that greed may somehow be involved in a political appointment which results in $90 million in salary and bonuses for Franklin Raines? Clinton's guy by the way.

SEawolf, when would schools have
time to teach Com.Manifest, between sex ed, poitical correctness classes, 'professional daze'off etc.?

Its like the poster who keeps on advocating Thomas Paine (in the a se;) do we really want to make a hero out of the French revolution's biggest pal, btw along with Tom Jefferson, founder of demoncrat party?

I also agreed with your comment on Will's thread.

They don't teach about Puritans
anymore, either, because they were "religious." It doesn't matter what their place in our history was or other early settlers. And ask someone under the age of 40 who fought in the Revolutionary War and why. See how many can answer.

I imagine they banned Thomas Paine in school, too, since reason and common sense are no longer respected in adults.


AmericanW
My daughter just did an assignment specifically about the Puritans. The Puritans, themselves hounded from Europe, were not very tolerant of other religions.

Taft
It is the mark of a person of principle to be seen as being intolerant of conflicting beliefs.

Otherwise, why have principles at all if you are not going to stand on them to the exclusion of others to which you do not agree?


Seawolf: Welfare Costs
The last I heard, over 90% of all money authorized to Welfare was spent by the government on themselves.

Several economists proposed turning the entire Welfare thing over to the IRS. After all, they are set up to write millions of checks per year. Everyone, regardless of income level, should turn in a tax return. Anyone making less than the poverty level would get a check to bring them above the poverty level. That would cut the Welfare spending in half - and we'd have NO people living under the poverty level.

Of course, it would eliminate one of the largest departments in Washington too.

This is also...
...known as the "simple living" lifestyle. Making do with less, and using up what you already have as a form of spirtual pleasure. This has been embraced by too many retro hippies, but if viewed as "neo-Puritanism" has much to recommend it.

BTW, is anyone else finding TH even more sluggish than usual today?

Find out what makes you happy
and spend your money on that.

Daddy used to tell us often about the people in Germany and Austria who went to the ovens because when they had the chance to escape they would not take it unless they could take all their "things" with them. They tried to convince themselves that it would all blow over soon -- like the people who perish in hurricanes because they refuse to leave their things.

Consequently, I have spent my lifetime buying memories with my money and finding myself a job that will never be eliminated. I have no things to cling to and I can always get work -- what else do I need?

All the crying and wailing is being done by Generation Whine who believed that what goes up will never come down. If they'd talk to their parents and grandparents, they'd discover that it is possible to live with home-brewed coffee, tap water, 12 pairs of shoes and 75 cable channels ... and a telephone that only makes calls.

An interesting Chassidic story
Rabbi Hershelle Tschortkower needed help and hired Anschel Moses Rothschild, who was then a poor young man, who was happy to accept this job. They became friends.

Anschel Moses married and moved to Sniatyn. A few days later Rabbi Hershelle went to add a coin to his charity savings purse and the purse was gone.

Thoughts of accusation came to him about Anschel Moses and so he traveled to speak to his friend. Perhaps he had borrowed the money and planned to return it.

He spoke to him Anschel Moses grew pale and appeared frightened. The Rabbi took this as a sign of guilt. Anschel gave the Rabbi one-half of the missing sum and promised to pay back the rest.

When the Rabbi returned home the police were at his door. The Rabbi explained that he knew his talmid had taken the money but was paying it back. The police said, that's impossible and pulled out the purse from his vest.

The Rabbi was astonished. He went back to Anshel Moses and tearfully asked, "Why did you confess?"

Anshel Moses said "because I could see you were in trouble and would never ask for help"

For this the Rabbi Blessed him with riches beyond beyond.

One other Rothchild story.
Anshel Moses became very rich in the banking business. One day he joked to his good friend, "At least I will never die of hunger." That night he was late leaving the bank on Erev Passover and the bank would be closed until after Yom Kippur.

He went into the vault to admire some gold he had just acquired when the bank vault closed behind him.

His wife wondered what happened to him. They looked and looked, nothing. No one had thought of the bank vault.

After Yom Kippur they finally opened the vault and there he was, he had died of starvation and dehydration. Words....

Look,
the problem is values consistent with the Bible are being exchanged for values consistent with marketing or political expediency.

The culture of greed is the culture.

But as always the Biblical principle of 'reaping what you sow' will have the last word in who's values stand in the end.

Prosperity Preaching
The primary audience for this article ought to be the people Thomas does not name directly. The prosperity preachers have made a killing by convincing conservative Americans that being wealthy is a sign of God's favor. They added religious approval to the quest for more riches, as if the admonition about rich men and heaven really didn't apply anymore.




I'm with you, Jack
The telepreachers are half-baked in their learning.

For every very rich, Yehuda HaNossi, there were thousands of Chanina be Dosa's.

The system is set up so that the people who actually merit and accumulate the most (real stuff, spiritual wealth) are the poor who learn to glean happiness out of their lives. It is a turn around system.

These televangelists have it all wrong. You are not suppose to learn about God, with a "negiah" which is a poisoned agenda. It is very similar to the Democrats and my preferred political group, the Republicans.

Every decision and thought pattern we have, has some level of this poisoned passion, this misdirection born from loyalty. Not much for me because I see the Democrats as God wannabees with disgusting policies.


So the televangelists, these half-baked teachers, if they could give up the limos and the bling, and the huge houses, they would see that worldly junk is not what makes a person happy.

Everything I've learned in Torah is absolutely opposite of the money message. The whole goal is not to be a hotshot to world. There is promise for success, but it won't be proffered until a person has a lucid understanding of the corruption of me, me me me, self.

If these people, these televangelists weren't so consumed by their numbers, perhaps they themselves would learn truth.

I find them disgusting.

Will
blather blather blather blather, no brain all gas blather.

Valiant for Truth & Sarah
Right on!

Boy I hope my voice isn't too passionate
Saying that, thanks younger, I just read one of Valiant's posts. It was the one about accountability.

What is faith? It is KNOWING that you are accountable for your actions.

It is not squeezing to believe or having the faith of Abraham. Abraham knew his uncle very well. His uncle was Noach. Don't tell me that God didn't know Noach.

What it meant that he was Ivri, was that he was on the other side of the world's belief system. It wasn't long after the flood that people started going their own way again. Shem stayesd on point and on message because he ended up teaching Yaakov in the Academy of Shem v Ever.

So it wasn't squeeze to believe. It was about action and accountability. It took Avraham 40 years after he spoke to God to have Yitzchak. Why? He had to work on his character as well, and he worked harder than anyone ever, ever..perhaps until Moses.

It is all about Awe of God. Yiras Hashem, the fear of Heaven is the degree to which you legitimately realize just who is your audience.

Faith, emunah, is large, hugely difficult.


How do I know?
My only daughter is the bravest person I have ever met in my life.

She had leukemia, the kids taunted her terribly and parents would pull their children away from her at the Public Library. A nice lady at McDonalds once told her to put on her hat, because it was ugly, when she bald and hot.

When she was 20 she had a terrible car accident and a subdural hematoma. She was married in early 2000. I never told her that her oncologist said that pregnancy probably was not going to happen.

In the first year of her marriage she had a menigioma, a brain tumor that had entered the trench. This is over three years ago. She was on dilantin for years and the same old story, no child. I prayed and I prayed every day.

She is about to give birth to the grandchild I prayed night and day for. Just a few weeks away, and the tremors began again.

Please pray to Abraham's, David's, Moses', God. Just pray to God for us. Mention no others.

Faith is hugely difficult, but I know this is not the "big game." Because this grandchild is full term next week, he will be with us for eternity. As will be my precious daughter.

I never said I had it easy.

Mary Hogan 2
God bless you and your family.

Thank you Robin
I tell you something, through all of this I wake up every single morning in love with God. I know that my situation is just a string in a beautiful tapestry. And that my daughter is my daughter for eternity.

I've learned so much.

What I've learned about the world to come is amazing. Any mother who has ever lost a child and worried that that child would be alone, needs to know about time.

Time is encapsulated, recorded. When you lose a child the child still has his or her mommy encapsulated in time. They are never alone.

One thing beautiful about the unborn is that God has a special (non pencilled) indelible time every day that He teaches these children. He teaches the unborn.

It is beautiful learning.

MaryHogan2
I can't tell whether you're an oddball, brilliant, or the next Isaac Singer... but you are an interesting read.

RW I'm very real
Isaac Singer borrowed his material from the Baal Shem Tov. Get yourself a book on Chassidic stories. It is all there. Truth is the finest medicine for the soul. I don't know how people live without it.

As for me, it is all documented. My daughters hemotologist was Dr. Susan Shurin, who herself lost a healthy child in a kyak accident. University hospital in 1998. She never ever complained. She is the bravest human being I have ever known. All this never bothered her. Even the patch of missing hair on the back of her head. She is amazing to me.

The meningioma was Dr. Lee, Cleveland Clinic.

What you see in me is Talmud/Torah. Isaac Singer saw this but didn't know the Talmud about citing the reference and what this does to exalt the dead and great Rabbis.

It is like R' Alshich, which if I don't crack the book, I realize I'm somewhat robbing R' Alshich.

People think there are the dead and there are the alive. If you have a relative who's gone. Give him credit sometimes. Thank him or her for something you have learned.

I learned this from the Talmud and citing the great Rabbis that have given me growth in learning.

I am not smart. If I say something that touches another person, I'm am just a string in the tapestry. It is their neshamah, which is jumping for joy because I bothered to learn something that they needed to hear.





My daughter hematoma was corrected at Metro General Hospital in

I messed up by not proofing.
Doctor Susan Shurin, University hospital was my daughters hemotologist in 1981 (leukemia).

1998 Subdural Hematoma from a car crash, Metro General hospital.

2004 Dr Lee, Cleveland Clinic Boy this is hard, meningioma, operation I maybe wrong, it's in my Shemoneh Esreh, but.... March 2005.

My mom's stroke November 2000.

What a challenge, but if in the end Dvakus, what more could a person want?

post # 11
I don't think shelly is such a funny name.

Read it in Robert Burns


The poet I love the most is Robert Burns.

Though I'm brought up in the Catholic Church, and Burns hated churches, was a womanizer; and was certainly no Puritan; his verses trump anything I've read here.

One poem is in the form of a letter to a young friend. Part of it is about acquiring wealth:


To catch Dame Fortune's smile,
Assiduous wait upon her;

And gather gear by ev'ry wile
That's justified by honor;

Not for to hide it in a hedge,
Nor for a train-attendant;

But for the glorious privilege

Of being independent.


............................

"Epistle To a Young Friend"

By Robert Burns, May, 1786

..............................




Dear Mary Hogan


Pardon me --I didn't mean to belittle your lovely postings, saying the poem trumped all that was in the thread. I wrote before seeing you here. Just wanted you should know.

I loved Beverly Sills. Remember?

.

sub prime
The sub prime mortgage debacle started with Bill Clinton and his congress lowering the mortgage acceptance requirements of borrowers by passing changes to the Community Reinvestment Act in 1995 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Reinvestment_Act). This lowered the income and verifications needed for credit worthiness for mortgage loans by creating a new class of loans, sub prime mortgages. This law was passed to remove regulations because of a mortgage loan approval disparity between whites and minorities. Loan approval rates of 72% for minorities and 89% for whites was being called evidence of racial discrimination by lenders. A Democratic social engineering of business practices was needed right away!

In 2005, Senior Senator Joe Biden authors the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act. Notice the misleading name Consumer Protection Act, I love how congress always names laws that will harm someone as a law that will protect them. This law prevents saving a primary house by renegotiating the mortgage loan when you file for bankruptcy if you own the house less than 730 days(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptcy_Abuse_Prevention_and_Consumer_Protection_Act). Now people who bought houses they couldn't afford in the first place and now can't pay their bills, will lose their house and any money they put into it.


Hey Dread
One thing about me is that nothing is about me.

This is not a story or an ego on a sleeve. I love when life goes on, its beautiful.

Beverly Sills was amazing. I remember when she knew her career was over. She didn't let that stop her.

Hey everybody, I am nothing special. Take my word for it. I was given the desire to study Torah and I certainly didn't deserve it. As a matter of fact, this being Elul, I've been looking at who I was and I'm ashamed of a lot of things I've done in my life.

Don't ever view me as like a smart person. I'm not. I did good in college in my forties, but as for high school. My poor algebra teacher finally got rid of me with a D-.

I love ya all. I'm just you with a whole lot more Torah.

But Dread, your kindness is beautifu.

Dread: nice poem, but
the last line, "the glorious privelige of being independent" betrays the date of the poem. 1786, AM, soon French Revolution, just post Enlightenment, Adam Smith, the self made (as opposed to God-dependent, community-interdependent)ideology (I'm a Catholic too)

loved the word 'assiduous' in a poem

Dear Joseph

Forgive me, I don't follow you. Can you deal a bit slower? What is this to do with the poet? (He died quite poor, actually.)

BTW; your earlier posts here are just super! I enjoyed reading such fine writing.

No, Ma'am. I disagree


Mary; you are special.

It means something to me when a person joyfully says he/she is in love with God. What is that, except special? You and I, then have something in common which is uncommon.

Many good souls want God as a protector. As the King. Or they fear Him for what He might do. For being Almighty.

To love Him because your soul thirsts and hungers for Him alone;

Or because you are His lamb. That is uncommon.

I am on the same page as you. I'm not a Jew. But Adorable One who sits at the right hand of God --is a Jew. His holy mother also a Jew. That is my faith.

I was in Rome last October; and there are the mortal remains in the ancient tomb, Saint Peter's basilica. Of a Galilean fisherman, Peter. Born Simon Bar Jonah. He was crucified in that city.

Outside the walls is the basilica of Saint Paul. He was a disciple of the Pharisee Gamaliel (I think.)

He also was executed by the Empire; but beheaded. Because he was born a Roman citizen. His remains are there. I love the Jews. They brought us our salvation, don't you see?

And Beverly brought us joy. May God in heaven hear her in recital tonight. What could be sweeter than that? She is also special.

Dread
I just got back from taking the dogs down to the river. I am so blessed to have this land and to walk out, look at the sky and blow kisses back to the One who gave me breath.

In the last few years, I have smelled smells that were always there but my mind was filled with worry and this and that funky stuff. Now, stupidly, I put my nose right up to goldenrod. It is delightful smelling.

The hummingbird is always about and Blue Heron which look and sound like a Pterodactyl amazes me. I have seen the most amazing bugs this year, from sea foam green to dayglo orange. I used to be so cramped up with empty worries and garbage, and now even though trouble wants to butt in, I battle for simcha, joy.

Life is so amazing. I've been on this path actually since 1999 and that person was in an abyss, constantly thinking about suicide and death. What a waste. I would have missed all this!!!!

One day I was at the bottom, really low. I think it was the first time I prayed without agenda. I wrote a letter to God and burned it and watched the smoke rise. Something change. I got the hunger for Torah.

Believe me, I had many low moments after than and burned many letters and realized really quickly that this was not a Japhez ticket to the mainline. It is really hard to battle what in Torah is referred to as the Yetzer Hara. That inclination for ease, and easy, and want this and want that, need this and need that.

There is another concept called the Yetzer Tov, which says "Better pick up that dog toy." Whereas the Yetzer Hara keeps prodding and prodding,"You can do it later, you can do it later." the Yetzer tova just says it once, and if you don't listen you fall on your face.

The sun is shining on my cheek right now. I finally realize what the Torah gave me. It gave me back my childhood where smashing two sandstone rocks together to create sand could keep me happy for hours.



Greed vs. Self Interest
People are confusing greed and self interest. Greed is a desire for something which outweighs all consequences. Self interest is trying to get the best possible deal for yourself and expecting the other guy to do the same.

Greed is buying a house with payments you can't possibly afford or being stupid enough to lend someone the money to do so. Self interest is someone else buying that same house with affordable payments at a foreclosure sale. Capitalism works best when everyone acts out of self interest, but not greed.

No offense, Karl
I would call that a vulture.

I think this country is best served if the person buying the house is getting a good deal, and the person selling the house is getting a good deal.

I think greed is when a person can justify happiness in the desperation of his neighbor.

In my opinion, your thinking is really twisted.

I have often been lax myself
Mary; you reminded me of something a few years ago; saying ". . . Yetzer Hara keeps prodding and prodding,"You can do it later, you can do it later." the Yetzer tova just says it once, and if you don't listen you fall on your face."

In fact it was my elderly neighbor downstairs, a Jewish one about 88 years of age, SAM-- who called me on the phone. We lived in a condo then in San Diego.

He says, "----; I seen a guy in the parking lot. He don't look too kosher. Better check around out there." I thanked him, went out on my terrace. I couldn't make out a lot; it was getting dark.

My wife said; "Go out and take a look around." I just went back to what I'd been doing. Nothing. Next morning I start out for work and Oh!

A side window of the van was smashed. My portable phone, a coat, had been stolen, and some CD's. Glass all over & on the seats. And it was my employer's van!

I had to report it to the insurance. VERY embarrassing for me, explaining to my bosses. I now know I got poked in the Yetzer keister for not worrying. Lol!








ha ha ha ha!!!
Very funny, Dread.

I've got to get my mother up now and feed her her snack and then STUDY!!!!! Can't wait.

Talk to ya later.

I don't actually feed my mother
My mother eats on her own. I serve her her snack.

Now I feel better.

Good night all.

MH

Macro vs. Micro...
I whole-heartedly agree with this article about "greed" on a personal level, and have absolutely no intention to let it drive my own life.

However, on the macro level, "greed" -- actually not only "greed", but also a system that allows the greedy to be rewarded by tailor to people's desires -- has worked wonders. There has never been such prosperity as we have today in America in all human history. The "poor" in American often live in better conditions than the middle-classes in other countries, and perhaps, in certain regards, even the rich in previous generations.

This "greed" has actually helped advancing the noble goal of lifting the poor in many societies, so much so that nations with other seemly more noble ideologies such as communism have turned to it.

The problem, as many great thinkers assert, is recognizing there is a gulf between the personal and the macro level. Things that are reasonable in the personal level do not necessarily apply to the macro level, and vice versa.

Greed and what you need to find out
Here's a piece on the Community Redevelopment Act that Clinton boosted, http://www.epa.gov/swerosps/bf/html-doc/cra.htm.

To those who have tried to link the current president to this meltdown of Fannie/Freddie let me say, you haven't done your research. In fact, the Democrats have been leading those organizations and have lined their pockets with more than $100Million (Johnson, Reigns, etal.)
Mr. Obama has received the most campaign money for time in public service from Fannie/Freddie.

Here's a fact to check out: Bush administration initiated a request to look at the increasing size of Fannie/Freddie in 2003.
John McCain put forth the Federal Housing Regulatory Act in 2005. The McCain co sponsored effort was defeated by the very Democrats in Senate who sit on the Housing and Securities commissions and the Banking Commission. The chairmen (Barney Frank and Chris Dodd) both received large amounts of campaign funding from Fannie/Freddie. Check it out and then realize that these folks are not concerned about you and your family. No, they are concerned with themselves and their families and they are ruining this great country.

The biggest problem this country has is that some voters are all too willing to believe untruths to make themselves feel ok about their choices. The Global Poverty Act, should it go into law, will probably disabuse you of those foolish beliefs because you'll be lucky if you can feed your family. Giving 85 Billion dollars to other countries while we cannot afford fuel or food is insane.

I caution good Americans out there to learn the facts. Don't just take what you hear on CNN or from the sold out news media for fact. It's easy to look it up for yourselves. That's what America is all about, freedom of information, free speech and the right to enjoy your personal privacy.

First Prize for Best Article
His feet are firmly on the ground, Cal's are; and his eyes are on the Prize.

Why aren't there more essays like this?

Hmmmmmmmmm.

I never recommend websites
However, this one is worth it.

http://www.voteyesforlife.com

If you care about the issue of abortion, please, please go here. There is a potentially groundbreaking referrendum in South Dakota that could turn the tide against abortion. Take a few minutes, please.
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