Monday, January 03, 2005

Community and Compassion

This year for Christmas I gave Cynthia a desk calendar with sayings of the Dalai Lama for each day. I confess to an ulterior motive in that selection! I knew that I would be raiding her desk for good quotes --- and that's what I did today. I found two that are really pertinent to the issue that has captured my attention this morning.

"Life's purpose of happiness can be gained only if people cultivate the basic human values of compassion, caring, and forgiveness."

And this one:
"Our survival depends on community, like bees or ants."

Why did I select these two wisdom observations? Well, I came across a short article this morning in The Progressive that disturbed me very much because of the absence of compassion reported upon. I reprint it here for your reflection. Read it and then come back and ponder the sayings of the Dalai Lama again. Then I recommend doing Tonglen (compassion practice) for all concerned: for the tsunami victims and also for the members of the Ayn Rand Institute and for all who do not understand the value and importance of altruism.


Taking market ideology to its cruelest end
By Matthew Rothschild, The Progressive

Here's a story I thought was a hoax.

It came in by e-mail on Dec. 30 from the Ayn Rand Institute, and it had an Onion-type headline that read: "U.S. Should Not Help Tsunami Victims."

So unsure of its kosherness was I that I called up the author, one David Holcberg at the Ayn Rand Institute.

He vouched for it, though.

The piece began by focusing on the "private organizations and individuals" that are helping the victims. "Such help may be entirely proper, especially considering that most of the affected by this tragedy are suffering through no fault of their own," the piece said.

"May" be entirely proper? Is there a doubt?

And of the more than 133,000 who have died, did any die through fault of their own?

The thrust of the rightwing libertarian group's piece was that the U.S. government "should not give any money to help the tsunami victims" because "every dollar the government hands out as foreign aid has to be extorted from an American taxpayer first."

The folks at Ayn Rand don't believe in taxation.

And beyond that, they don't even believe in altruism. All they believe in is the market.

Check this out: "It is America's acceptance of altruism that renders them morally impotent to protest against the confiscation and distribution of their wealth," the piece said.

It calls this altruism "a vicious morality."

What's vicious is letting millions of people go hungry and homeless and without clean water or medical care.

This self-parody would be easy to laugh off if it did not represent the apotheosis of free market idolatry, idolatry that is worshipped at the highest levels of our government.

Reprinted from The Progressive:http://www.progressive.org/webex04/wx123104.html

1 comment:

  1. These libertarians are puzzling. They say unashamedly that selfishness is a virtue. They are super-individualistic and dislike the idea of community. Yet I know one lady very active in the Libertarian movement who is a kind, loving, and compassionate person in her behavior. She says one thing with her words but her behavior exhibits a most loving disposition. So I focus upon her actions and ignore her words.

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