Sunday, August 07, 2011

London Riots


Riots have broken out in London again. Last night and tonight organized gangs are rampaging through parts of the city burning and looting. Who's to blame?

Everybody's to blame. That's who. In the present economic climate many people are suffering with the loss of jobs, the loss of savings and the loss of their homes and security. Why is that? Because of greed at every level of society--greed amongst the middle classes, but also greed amongst the lower classes the upper classes.

Greed amongst a lazy, dependent underclass of people who won't work and feel entitled to more and more and more free handouts. Greed amongst the 'nice' middle class people who invest their money is shady get rich quick schemes. Greed amongst 'nice' rich people who devise the schemes, take usury to vile and obscene extremes and rake in the cash as fast as they can. Greed amongst money lenders and property speculators and stock market 'geniuses'. Greed amongst those who will use the financial crises that come along every ten years to use their already huge wealth to buy up everything they can at a cheap price--robbing everyone they can of the true value.

A society worm eaten with greed. Greed where every store tries to offer their goods at the cheapest possible prices and every housewife and shopper covets a 'bargain' so much and cheerfully degrades their lives for yet another cheap trinket purchased not because he needs it, but because it's cheap. Greed where manufacturers cut corners and offer nasty, poor quality goods with a veneer of 'quality'. Greed where consumers buy such junk. Greed woven into our children's worldview. Greed where everybody is grabbing whatever they can however they can.

The problem with a society fueled by greed is that lurking beneath the sin of greed is always violence. Violence because I can only have all the goodies I want at the expense of someone else. If I have it you can't have it. I will have my cheap consumer goods, but just don't tell me about the child labor, the sweatshops, the slave labor level of wages and the rape of the environment in order to get me all my cheap goodies. All of this is a form of violence, and the riots in London are simply an outward expression of the reality of our Western society--a society that is thoroughly materialistic and therefore atheistic.

Pope John Paul II said there were two materialistic atheistic world systems and that both would eventually collapse in on themselves. The first was communism. The second was unrestrained capitalism. The first is built on power. The second is built on greed.

Do you see the burning shops and police cars in the streets of London? Do you see the gangs wearing hoods and masks rampaging through the streets bashing into banks, burning stores and looting shopping malls? It is a prophetic image. It shows us who we are, and we had better take a good, long, hard look.

The news shows rioting gangs of lawless youths burning and pillaging and taking whatever they want and no one can stop them. But I see behind their ugly faces, their frightening masks and their hoods and weapons a whole society of people who do the very same thing they do, but with business suits instead of hoodies, masks of polite smiles and good manners instead of balaclavas, and the weapons of lawsuits and legislation and corporate lawyers and contracts to force their way on the world.

What's wrong with the world? G.K.Chesterton answered the question: "I am." For I too am greedy. Greedy with my time. Greedy with my talents. Greedy with my money. Greedy with my life, and if this is true of me it is true of every other person and the only answer to this desperate human condition is....

...true conversion of life.

23 comments:

  1. I think people spend too much time worrying about how to fix these big problems of the world. The answer is to refuse to be a part of the problem, and insist on becoming a Saint. Answering the univeersal call to personal holiness is the best thing anyone can do for the world at large. It's enough to keep you busy anyway. Thank God I'm not a politician or an economist.

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  2. "it is a prophetic image."

    Yes, it is. Unless there is a miraculous turn of events, the events in London are a harbinger of things to come in the U.S. in the near future. The economic problem, I suspect, is past fixing. Through abortion alone 53 million potential taxpayers ( not to mention children of God) have been slaughtered to date. The only real fixes boil down to having higher taxes, or fewer citizens weighing down the economy. Abortion, contraception, and eventually euthanasia, all pushed in the name of individual rights will be powerful tools to reduce the size of the U.S. population to sustainable levels within the current tax structure - albeit, with higher taxes on the wealthy and middle classes. I'm afraid we are approaching a time that more death of the "unproductive" (the unborn, the handicapped, the elderly) will be perceived by our rulers as an economic necessity. Greed, expediency, and death are natural bedfellows.

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  3. "Everybody's to blame."
    Speak for yourself.
    And if everybody's to blame, then nobody is.

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  4. LBS - Have you never been guilty of greed?

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  5. Anonymous6:46 PM

    Father, this has got to be one of the more unhelpful things I've read in a while. It feels like a complete slap in the face to those of us who struggle to manage the household finances with something resembling responsibility and thrift. Who watched a good chunk of our retirement savings evaporate, even as retirement age gets uncomfortably close. Who are trying to do the right thing.

    So it's all nothing but greed, greed, greed. Fine. Why bother.

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  6. Great article Fr. Longnecker; it is as you say all about conversion. Who isn't struggling but if you put it into perspective most of the "stuff" we have we really don't need. I am a firm believer that God will give me what I need and that he knows better what I need better than I do myself. But admittedly, I can say I've been one of those shoppers trying to get a bargain...does it make me happier? No, sometimes it's left me wondering, why did I buy that, we really didn't need it. Greed isn't a good thing (except) when you realize or admit you've been imprudent with the resources God has entrusted to you and change those habits. It's good to read your blog to help me get on the right path when I stray...

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  7. Granted, most of us in the West do not live the life of Carthusians and we do have lots of creature comforts. But is it wrong to have nice things at all, or to work hard and build up a home (it's not the point of life, but ...)?

    Also, how can any of us avoid buying stuff that's made in sweatshops? And if we did, what then? Am I greedy if I buy a pair of jogging shoes? If I have a computer?

    What if I own CDs, DVDs, games, art, etc. - surely I don't need those things in the way I need food and water - am I thereby a sinful, greedy bastard?

    And I have been trying to do more with my money for those I know who are in need, and also for people I don't know, but is wealth and possession of things in itself sinful? (I'm pretty sure it's not)

    Mostly I feel bad because I earn a good deal of money and my work is relatively easy. That helps me see that I owe something to others.

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  8. Karen, please don't read into my post what I never said. Good stewardship, thrift and savings are to be admired.

    I'm talking about the sort of greed that will do anything for a bargain or buy stuff just because it's cheap--not even because you need it.

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  9. Like buying semi-decent DVDs in the bargain bin that you wouldn't have bought otherwise :)

    But on the other hand, waiting for "True Grit" to be marked down in price is a good idea, or would it be more virtuous to spend $20 on such a great film? :)

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  10. London is burning and this is the most extensive rioting Londoners have seen in a generation These are not race riots or explicitly political riots, but clearly an event with far deeper causes than simple random hooliganism. Almost all the London rioters are disenfranchised under 20 born in the 1990s. Britain has a lost generation of young high-school dropouts far larger than most other Western countries. 17% of Britain’s youth are high-school dropouts with no prospects of employment – the fourth-highest percentage in the EU. More than 600,000 people under 25 in Britain who have never had a day of work. Why these disenfranchised youth so explosively made their presence known in such a devastatingly violent way, and how this will all end, is not yet understood.

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  11. So at the height of "disenfranchisement" during the Blitz, at the height of poverty during the postwar years, why didn't this happen then? There is NEVER an excuse for rioting and looting. Perhaps protest has it's place, but this? It's like the likewise inexcusable LA riots.

    This is a society that has lost its moral bearings, that's why. There's no expectation for good behavior, nor is there punishment for bad behavior. There's been years of race-baiting - people truly feel justified in their criminal behavior because the victim mentality taught in the school and on the news has helped this.

    What you have is a bunch of thugs, a bunch of criminals, who in earlier times simply would have been shot (I'm not saying that was good either). The motivation is not political, it's not economic - they're simply destructive thieves. And their "anger" is being taken out on other poor/lower middle class minorities who live in those neighborhoods.

    So how does destroying the shop of some black immigrant and stealing everything, thus destroying his livelihood, show solidarity with the lower classes? How does it show angst against whitey?

    The politicizing is all BS this is violent out and out thuggery, just like we had here in New Orleans following Katrina (or did you think the looters just wanted food and water? And I knew some folks who took food and water from places, but there was no reason homes, jewelry stores, and electronics shops were getting busted open).

    Underlying social causes? Come on, it's random (and organized) criminal opportunism.

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  12. "Almost all the London rioters are disenfranchised..."
    "Disenfranchised" is a loaded term; it implies that somebody else is guilty of disenfranchising them - and they are in any case entitled to vote.
    As for attributing blame, I am guilty of many things, but not of the riots in London; nor shall I apologize for the slave traffic (or equally take credit for its abolition) or for the holocaust, etc, etc. Mass guilt is useless sentimentality.

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  13. When I first heard of the Tottenham riots, I first thought it was the Muzzies throwing a mass temper tantrums. Then I saw by looking at pictures of the rioters that they were blacks. Yet the newspapers don't even mention this in their reports! You have to look at the pictures of the rioters to figure it out. Talk about political correctness! All this is, IMHO, is a bunch of criminal hoodlums screaming "I'm opressed" to justify bad behaviour.

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  14. Dear Father:

    You make some very thoughtful points, many if not most of which I can agree with. There are from time to time other issues that also come into play. Let us take Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA, the city I live in, last Thursday night.

    Thursday was the opening day of the Wisconsin State Fair. To their everlasting shame, the Fair organizers, in order to attract as many negro patrons to the Fair as possible (greed again), brought in some sickening black "musicians" for a stage show. This indeed brought in the negro patrons. But after the show, these negroes poured out of the "concert" and started beating white women, white children and white men. Their savagery was pitiless and profoundly shocking - and this is NOT the first time these gangs of black thugs, pumped up on their horrifying "music" and with supreme hatred in their hearts for white people went on a rampage. It was motivated by sheer, unabashed hatred for whites. That is the reality.

    Here I don't think the word "greed" quite fits. The things these cretins did to defenseless people was so terrible that it is possible that some of the hospitalized victims will die. And unless I am very much mistaken (and I hope I am) there is no solution, humanly speaking, to this negro violence. If somebody has a solution I would hope they would tell us.

    This is said not to denigrate your fine article; it is only meant to give you a "front line" perspective from a city that is suffering, like London, with what seems to be a barbarian invasion.

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  15. Actually it was mentioned on the BBC news that Tottenham was a "black" area, and it was mentioned that the rioters were ethnic youths. Government policy for the last 50 years or so has been to let loads of immigrants into a small already overcrowded island, without any plan of what to do with them. No wonder they've got problems. One shop assistant said the thieves had more than she did: Blackberries and designer jeans. Anyway until we're all perfect the rule of law must apply (no excuses) or civilization goes down the drain.

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  16. Oh, go to this link and see who else was "oppressed" and getting in on the fun. failedmessiah.typepad.com/failed_messiahcom/haridim-joined-rioters-and-looters-in-london-123.hmtl#more

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  17. Liz, in many parts of the US, the papers will not tell you the ethnic group that a criminal or a gang belongs to. Unless you know the neighborhood where the crime(s) took place, or the paper(s) is forced to print a description or photo of the crimininals, or the criminals have a name that stands out, you will never know who the preps are.

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  19. And by "posts" I meant the comment sections. Pardon my typos.

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  20. M.Jordan--quite. The posts themselves had not a hint of racism in them.

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  21. Agreed, Father, and I do apologize for that typo. I'm not able to edit my comment but I really didn't want to imply that you were making any kind of racist claims. That would have been unfair and inaccurate.

    In fact, I've been recommending your article to a lot of friends because you painfully and accurately lay the blame on everyone. Seeing these riots can only make me think of the closing lines of the Prince, "All are punish'd!" It's too easy to blame it merely on class or race. I thank you for your writing!

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  22. Oh, and Mercury, there was actually a lot of looting and other kinds of violence during the Blitz. Human nature has always been the same.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1307547/Loose-women-looting-murder--darker-Blitz-Spirit.html

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  23. M Jordan Lichens - interesting article, you're right. There's always been people like that. Still, what we're seeing now is something different - namely the absence of Nazi bombs and desperation, and is involving large masses of people. And the "desperation" suffered by these youths living off of welfare in one of the richest nations on earth is not "extreme conditions", despite political rhetoric. I think a lit had to do with a Simone total lack of conscience, which is actively supported by the school system there an here on the US, and an out of control multiculti agenda that does more to hurt minorities than help them.

    Besides, unless someone is destitute and lacks basic necessities, there is NO excuse for looting an robbing (a case can be made for people trying to get food and water in a disaster situation). None, whatsoever, in any age or place.

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