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Quote by Michael Bassey Johnson

“The more death, the more birth. People are entering, others are exiting. The cry of a baby, the mourning of others. When others cry, the other are laughing and making merry. The world is mingled with sadness, joy, happiness, anger, wealth, poverty, etc.”

Quote by Michael Bassey Johnson

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Michael Bassey Johnson

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“At some point americans forgot that it's not enough to talk about equal opportunity, democracy and freedom. These things need to be protected and supported by concrete actions. Something that americans of recent decades have neglected to do. The implications of this are profound. In more cases than not, the guilt and frustration that americans feel about their difficulties in life and their anxieties almost certainly do not arise from any personal failings. The United States today puts the people, even people who are doing well into intensly stressful logistical nightmare that is exhausting. Why do americans have to put themselves through this when there are other ways of life proved and in place already functioning well for the combined 26 million people of the Nordic region?”

“I believe that whether we live in America or in any part of the world, we need to stand against turning ourselves into customers. We are first and foremost humans and citizens, and those attributes allow us to have a dialogue with each other, to fight injustice and violence together, to hold those in power accountable together, to protect the vulnerable and the disempowered members in our society together, and to help each other in times of need collectively. As customers, we are just lonely and isolated individuals measured by our paychecks, the expiration dates on our corporate cards, and the ability to afford or not afford this or that corporate service. It weakens our collective power. Being a customer or a consumer turns everything human, beautiful, and enjoyable into an unpleasant job responsibility. It robs us the pleasure of living.”

“È vero che oggi esiste un nuovo moralismo le cui parole-chiave sono giustizia, pace, conservazione del creato, parole che richiamano dei valori essenziali di cui abbiamo davvero bisogno. Ma questo moralismo rimane vago e scivola così, quasi inevitabilmente, nella sfera politico-partitica.[...]Il moralismo politico, come l'abbiamo vissuto e come lo viviamo ancora, non solo non apre la strada alla rigenerazione, ma la blocca. Lo stesso vale, di conseguenza, anche per un cristianesimo e per una teologia che riducono il nocciolo del messaggio di Gesù, il "Regno di Dio", ai "valori del Regno", identificando questi valori con le grandi parole d'ordine del moralismo politico, e proclamandole, nello stesso tempo, come sintesi delle religioni.”