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“Therefore when thou doest thine alms,
do not sound a trumpet before thee, as
the hypocrites do in the synagogues and
in the streets, that they may have glory
of men. Verily I say unto you, they have
their reward”.
(Matthew 6:2)
It is, unfortunately, that time in the
world again. A disaster happened and the
rich people of the
UK and America are trying to outdo each
other in being proclaimed heroes and
philanthropists. Only it is all
self-serving, hypocrisy and vain.
Liberty Scott, in his blog (http://libertyscott.blogspot.com/2010/01/pity-haiti-and-vaticans-hypocrisy.html)
wrote: “The earthquake has been
devastating for a country beset for
decades by corruption, kleptocracy,
dictatorship and mysticism. It can only
be hoped, and no doubt I expect private
and government relief to come to this
country with a history of being one of
the most damned places in the
Caribbean. It is ranked 156th by the CIA
in per capita GDP, with the average of
only US $800 per person per annum,
alongside the likes of Cambodia and
Chad, and the lowest in the Americas. If
ever there was a country that long
needed rule of law, a culture of reason
and respect for individual liberty and
property rights, and the end of
kleptocratic violent government, it
would be Haiti”.
So, Simon Cowell is organising Haiti
charity song featuring Leona Lewis,
Cheryl
Cole, Beyonce, Lady Gaga, Robbie Wiliams
and Wyclef Jean, etc. And he is also
receiving the backing of the UK Prime
Minister, Gordon Brown asking him to put
a Band Aid-style single together.
The selfishness, hypocrisy and
un-thoughtfulness of these people are
unbelievable. The millionaire is going
to recruit other millionaires, make a
record which will cost them next to
nothing, and then sell it to the public,
most of whom have already donated their
pennies and cents to the Haitian effort.
In other words, Simon Cowell et al
are not really donating anything to
Haiti (but they will claim they are
donating their popularity, their names,
their time, their talents, etc), but
using other people’s money to become
heroes.
On the long run, it is not you and me
who bought Simon Cowell et al‘s
record that will be recognised. Simon
Cowell will be made into a hero without
actually contributing a single penny of
his multi-millions.
Madonna contributed a quarter of a
million dollars to
Haiti, and is also joining a concert to
raise money. Actor George Clooney is
also said to be organising a Global
Benefit where the rich will be called
upon to attend a dinner at ridiculous
high prices. Every so-called star will
be glad to jump on the bandwagon and
will be competing with each other to be
seen and photo-opportunities abound. Has
Mr Cowell announced that he will be
personally donating any amount of money
to the people of Haiti? If he has, or
has donated quietly, I am yet to be
aware of it. He’s a multi-millionaire
like many others of his ilk. How many of
the millions of millionaires and
billionaires that we have in the UK and
USA alone have donated personally
towards relieving the suffering in
Haiti? True, some of them have donated
or done something quietly, but most of
them like to announce what little good
they are going to do only when the
spotlights and the cameras are present.
Supposing Simon Cowell and all the
millionaires and billionaires in the US
and UK alone contribute similar or even
much lesser amounts, then Haiti will be
well on the way to being a country
again, with much to spare, without
poorer people of the world being made to
pay for such through dubious buying of
records or attending irrelevant and
self-serving concerts and $1000.00 a
plate dinners, where these stars like to
wear their latest designs, see
themselves and hear their own voices.
My point is: Concerts and other
fund-raising activities are OK to raise
awareness for a cause, or disaster, but
when our so-called world stars (music,
film, sports, etc) use the public (who
made them rich in the first place) again
to part with their money to give to
relief efforts, it smacks of arrogance,
insincerity, insensitivity, selfishness,
hypocrisy and is ultimately and
deliberately self-serving. They can
easily donate money instead of making
others donate money on their behalf.
The fact is all this hypocrisy had been
going on ever since the Famine Relief in
Ethiopia in the 80s, when the record “We
Are The World” was made, fronted by
stars like Michael Jackson, Stevie
Wonder, etc., as well the Bob Geldof-inspired
Band Aid in the UK. Please don’t get me
wrong, I did enthusiastically buy the
album, and donated towards the fund.
I have nothing against raising money for
charities and disaster relief, and I do
donate my own pennies to these Cause,
but when these rich, spoilt people
hijack the efforts of the truly
humanitarian, to get the accolades and
recognition which they do not deserve,
it is annoying.
A lot of people often try to transform
the world even with all the various
inherent obstacle and adversity, and
faced with two types of issues:
a) Denial of a world that we do not
like, withdrawing ourselves from action
and trying to find shelter in the golden
castle of our self-centredness, and
ignoring all sufferings that surround
us.
b) Sometimes we have recourse to certain
compensatory action trying occasionally
to help, sometimes providing some
economic aid, or participate in a
charity project, etc.
In any case both actions lack something
elemental: they do not address the core
of the predicament. To cure poverty and
suffering you have to find the reasons
behind their existence.
Then, probably one will discover that
behind the economic and social misery
lay the moral one, and that behind a
terrible trade is dishonesty and
disregard and that, at the end of the
day, behind the human evils are unjust
beings.
Now, to cure this disease we have to
possess the right medicine: goodness,
justice, genuineness and magnificence.
And nobody can provide what he does not
have.
So, we have to carry out a serious
endeavour to change ourselves if we want
to relieve the suffering of our fellow
human beings.
The true revolution is the revolution of
the human being, for the most important
duty that we have is to translate
ourselves into a well-organized tool
able to provide justice and goodness
that will light the surrounding
darkness.
The whole world can really do without
the vanity and hypocrisy of these
self-centred do-gooders. It is all
hypocrisy. Not a penny of their own
money is leaving their bloated bank
accounts. In the aftermath of their
supposedly good deeds, they get more
attention, more publicity for their
careers, acquire more fans, maybe get a
knighthood or two, and it is more money
for their bank accounts.
This article, is of course a personal
opinion.
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