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What Would Jesus Buy?Posted on Nov 20, 2007By Amy Goodman “Black Friday” is the name retailers have given to the day after Thanksgiving in their attempt to make Christmas synonymous with shopping. On Black Friday, Americans are expected to flock to the malls and shopping centers, eager for discounts, armed with plastic. Business analysts fill the airwaves with predictions on how the fickle consumer will perform, how fuel prices and the subprime mortgage crisis will impact holiday shopping. Black Friday is followed by “Cyber Monday,” a name coined by the retail industry to hype online shopping. Listening to the business news, one would conclude that the future not only of the U.S. economy but of humanity itself depends on mass, frenzied shopping for the holidays. Rev. Billy is the street preacher played by Bill Talen, a New York City-based anti-consumerism activist who is the subject of a new feature-length documentary hitting theaters this week, “What Would Jesus Buy?” The film is produced by Morgan Spurlock, who gained fame with his documentary “Super Size Me,” in which he showed his physical and emotional decline while eating only McDonald’s food for breakfast, lunch and dinner for a month. In the movie, Talen and his amazing Stop Shopping Gospel Choir cross the country in two biodiesel buses, holding public faux-Gospel revivals denouncing the “Shopocalypse,” our crass, corporate, credit-driven consumerist culture and its reliance on sweatshops abroad and low-wage retail jobs at home, while celebrating small-town, Main Street economies, the strength and value of fair-trade shopping, and making do with less. “We are here today, 28 days before Christmas,” Rev. Billy intones at the outset of his tour, to his home congregation in Greenwich Village, “behind so many layers of billboards, with supermodels looking down on us in their Christmas lingerie, billboards covered with fake Dickensian gingerbread lattes—we’re going to go out across this shopping-addicted country.” He added later, “We will sit down and defeat the bulbous yellow feet of the most famous corporate logo in the world, and the one that has chosen to steal our children’s imaginations for 80 years, the devil, Mickey Mouse.” En route to Disneyland from New York City, the reverend and his flock stop by the Mall of America in Minnesota, Wal-Mart’s world headquarters in Bentonville, Ark., and numerous Starbucks shops and big-box stores like Target and Staples—educating and engaging, confronting and confounding, with creative street theater and direct action. In Traer, Iowa, we meet Michael Reuman, whose clothing store has been open for more than 100 years: “Wal-Mart is killing small-town America. We’ve got two sons, and I have not encouraged either one of them to come back to the store. There’s no future here.” This week, Charles Kernaghan of the National Labor Committee, standing in front of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York, released a stunning report on the sweatshop conditions in which crucifixes are manufactured in China. St. Patrick’s, Trinity Church in New York and the Association for Christian Retail all sell crucifixes traced to the Junxingye factory in Dongguan, China. There, women as young as 15 work seven days a week, 14 hours a day, and earn only 9 cents per hour, after room and board are deducted from their pay. What would Jesus buy, indeed. Black Friday is also “Buy Nothing Day”—a global boycott of shopping and consumerism. Started by Kalle Lasn and his colleagues at Vancouver-based Adbusters magazine, Buy Nothing Day seeks to place the ad-fueled and news-media-supported shopping frenzy in a global context. He says, “Driving hybrid cars and limiting industrial emissions is great, but they are Band-Aid solutions if we don’t address the core problem: We have to consume less.” The fair-trade movement is growing—focusing on safe, organic products made locally, by people earning not just the legal minimum wage but a living wage. Networks of sustainable businesses and nonprofit organizations are forming, linking producers with consumers, cutting out the corporations and the middlemen, allowing the people who make the items to get a larger share of the sale price. From clothing to chocolate to food to flowers to fuel, it is becoming increasingly easy to shop ethically. Heifer International features a selection of farm animals that you can sponsor, which the organization will deliver to a poor family in need elsewhere in the world. This holiday season, spend time with family and friends—it’s worth more than money. Shop locally, or find a fair-trade store or Web site. Before walking into that big-box store, ask yourself, “What would Jesus buy?” Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 500 stations in North America. © 2007 Amy Goodman Distributed by King Features Syndicate Previous item: The Gloves Come Off Next item: Cheering for Ron Paul Elsewhere: . Comments: 35 Published. Add Yours?Are you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. |
By 1drees, December 1, 2007 at 8:36 am #
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#114942 by TDoff on 11/21 at 7:46 am
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I know for damned sure Jesus wouldn’t buy Bush’s line of crap.
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A lot is said here but basically this is the best said here
Reply to this | Report thisBy Shenonymous, November 27, 2007 at 5:53 pm #
(877 comments total)
Just discovered—CommonDreams is running the exact same article and has a thread going there too with some of the comments here showing up there but not all of them. So it could get confusing. But if KEM PATRICK shows up here, I have already replied over at CD and here is my reply here: Duh!
Howdy KEM PATRICK, I’m not worried. Well we all know from bible stories that jesus was supposed to be a carpenter. But funny, no one ever talks about what he made or built. You can bet whatever your wad if jesus was a house framer or a carpenter of any sort, his works would be better than excellent, they would be divine. Now do you see any of those divine things? Has anyone? Hmmmm. I’m not looking forward to rising from the dead, I think the whole idea is kind of silly. According to your post, all the stories we’ve had for hundreds of years are incorrect? Jesus wasn’t born December 25? OMG. You had better tell WalMart! If Christmas is an abortion, then can we assume you are not against abortion and we should get rid of the holiday? That’s great! And just exactly what evidence do you have that the scriptures the alleged wisemen read was correct or even existent? Is that the Hebrew bible you are talking about? How much research have you done to verify the Old Testament. What do you think of the Pentateuch? Or maybe you accept the Hexateuch? If you accept the Old Testament, or Torah, why do you not accept all the other Hebrew documents, such as the Talmud, sometimes called the Gemara? How well do you really know your religion? Perhaps you are not interested in the truth?
Tomorrow is another day…
Reply to this | Report thisBy Shenonymous, November 27, 2007 at 4:11 pm #
(877 comments total)
Just some off the wall questions, but if jesus is an incarnation of god, then why would he (is god really a he?) celebrate his own supposed birthday? I mean, why attribute any sex to god? Also, if jesus is god, why would he be buying anything, uh, for himself? For who? His mom? Naw, she don’t count. His dad, uh, why would the big guy want a Christmas present? Oh, maybe the Holy Ghost, not sure what the relationship is to jesus, wants a new iPhone, naw, it don’t need anything. And why would jesus god need money? And would the money be US currency (right now it has been devalued, he maybe ought to use Euros?) Oh,gawd this is confusing. Okay, how about… oh, forget about it.
Oh yeah, if jesus was a carpenter, where are all the things he made? Wouldn’t his dad and mom keep them like we do for our kids? And if any of them could be found, wouldn’t they be holy relics? They might be even better than a shroud. Oh, what about his tools, wouldn’t they be holy artifacts? Anybody ever found holy tools? Sorry, again, it’s confusing.
Reply to this | Report thisBy USMC_Mike, November 27, 2007 at 1:55 pm #
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You liberal nut jobs.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Larry B, November 27, 2007 at 9:38 am #
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There is a simple act to follow. Mathew Chapter 25 - read it, live it. Even for those of us who are not Christian, this Chapter really says it all.
Reply to this | Report thisBy John Kavanagh, November 25, 2007 at 3:30 pm #
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Amy,
Nice commentary, but is it accurate to say that the Fair Trade certification of meeting environmental standards and producing organic includes paying their labor force a living wage?
From reviewing Fair Trade web sites in search of information about “living wages” for El Salvadoran coffee pickers working at Fair Trade participating farms, those pickers appear to recieve no guarantees about “living wages.”
The current government estabilished minimum wage for agricultural laborers in El Salvador is $81.47/month, about $3.50 a day. The Salvadoran daily Diario Co Latino has recently reported that agricultural workers would have to make more than seven times that minimum wage in order to have the purchasing power to enjoy a “living wage.”
I wish your assertions about Free Trade consumerism were accurate, but the Free Trade hype needs to be separated from the substance: farmers are different from farmworkers.
Reply to this | Report thisBy raugust, November 24, 2007 at 8:41 pm #
(1 comments total)
Remember, Amy Goodman is also a granddaughter of an Orthodox Rabbi. Being Jewish is not the issue. Being a proud citizen of the USA IS the issue, especially when the mainland Chinese not only send us cheap, poisonous crap, but also poison our waterways with an oil slick that dwarfs that of the Exxon Valdez. Let’s see. The mainland Chinese take our jobs away with foreign labor, then poison our children with lead paint in toys, then poison our landscape with the worst ecological damage by petroleum goods since the Valdez. Face it, “Made in China” is the worst disaster to affect the USA outside the combined Santa Ana fires AND Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. On the other hand, “MADE IN USA” means the products are generally safer to use, made better, and made by AMERICANS OF ANY RACE.
This is not to take anything away from the Asian Oriental peoples. If I had my choice between working with a Black, a Korean, a Japanese, a Viet Namese, and a Chinese American person, the Black would be gone, and the other four would be a coin-flip, with my deep regrets for losing three of them. Asian Indians would also be a very strong consideration here.
No, being Jewish or Chinese-descended is NOT the issue. Buying things MADE IN THE USA for non-consumerist usage, and ensuring that OUR friends and OUR neighbors are still WORKING and ALIVE, IS THE ISSUE.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Danielle V., November 24, 2007 at 10:15 am #
(1 comments total)
Someone mention the Edna St. Vincent Millay poem, To Jesus on his Birthday:
For this your mother sweated in the cold,
For this you bled upon the bitter tree:
A yard of tinsel ribbon bought and sold;
A paper wreath; a day at home for me.
The merry bells ring out, the people kneel;
Up goes the man of God before the crowd;
With voice of honey and with eyes of steel
He drones your humble gospel to the proud.
Nobody listens. Less than the wind that blows
Are all your words to us you died to save.
O Prince of Peace! O Sharon’s dewy Rose!
How mute you lie within your vaulted grave.
The stone the angel rolled away with tears
Is back upon your mouth these thousand years.
Religious holidays have been hijacked over time to what we see today. Each one of us can release that hold by not participating in the hype, by speaking out about it to our friends, by not expecting trivial things manufactured by slave labor so we can get a bargain.
Jesus showed his anger once when he overturned the money changers tables. But we should not create such slogans at the same time What would Jesus do? What would Jesus buy? If we are to believe the story he died and sacrificed himself for US. Therefore the questions need to be personalized What would YOU do? What would YOU buy? How long are YOU going to play along?
Reply to this | Report thisBy Outraged, November 23, 2007 at 6:08 pm #
(869 comments total)
I stumbled upon this video as I was “cruising” around the internet.
Reply to this | Report thishttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmsOIjzQ1V8
By 1drees, November 23, 2007 at 4:49 pm #
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HOWARD, you are just another one of those typical not so bright, not so genuine, not so truthful AIPAC supporters, ones who say that ISRAEL & JEWS stand and account for everything good on the planet and ones who profess that being jewish is the most important thing and who believe that if it wasnt for the jews the world would be a dark place BUT MY BELIEF IS IF THERE WAS NO JEWS WORLD WOULD BE A MUCH MORE PEACEFUL PLACE.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Howard, November 23, 2007 at 12:14 pm #
(461 comments total)
RE: #115097 by mythbreaker on 11/22 at 3:20 am
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He wouldn’t buy into the incredible lies of the Media, a very phony Hollywood and a Congressional membership that sold out to a dividend and a dark manipulator of extortion known as the Israeli lobby.
What goes around comes around
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Let us evaluate the topic. And that there are 24 messages on target. But this one that brings up the Isreli Lobby when its not called for and certainly shows us something.
Mainly that no matter what the topic some dingbat will bring the THW lobby.
If Jesus reads his post, he probably would buy a membership into the lobby. We know he was Jewish !
Reply to this | Report thisBy raphael, November 23, 2007 at 9:54 am #
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Jesus was born on June 30th, six months from Dec. 25th. It goes to show that whatever the majority of people believe to be true, couldn’t be more wrong.
Reply to this | Report thisBy mary, November 22, 2007 at 2:48 pm #
(197 comments total)
Jesus would not be anywhere near Walmart Friday, that’s for sure. You won’t ever see me shopping on black friday anyway. I’m still hoping people will not buy Christmas this year. We have so much power if we would just use some of it. How hard would it be to curtail shopping and do family things instead…
Reply to this | Report thisBy mythbreaker, November 22, 2007 at 3:20 am #
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He wouldn’t buy into the incredible lies of the Media, a very phony Hollywood and a Congressional membership that sold out to a dividend and a dark manipulator of extortion known as the Israeli lobby.
What goes around comes around.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Paracelsus, November 22, 2007 at 2:39 am #
(476 comments total)
What would Jesus buy?
A big bottle of hydrogen peroxide, a large box of Johnson and Johnson pads of dressing, surgical tape, a tube of Neosporin, and a big bottle of Anacin Extra Strength.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Ernest Canning, November 21, 2007 at 4:03 pm #
(1622 comments total)
TDoff--kudos for a short but brilliant post that says it all.
Reply to this | Report thisBy DennisD, November 21, 2007 at 3:34 pm #
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Amy - everyone knows that Jesus being Jesus, will wait for the even bigger after Christmas markdown sale.
If China is depending on me to keep their economy humming, they’ve got a huge problem. The only lead I buy is at the end of a bullet.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Paracelsus, November 21, 2007 at 3:22 pm #
(476 comments total)
For me almost everyday is buy nothing day. But it is somewhat involuntary on my part.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Ted Talbott, CPA, November 21, 2007 at 2:25 pm #
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We claime to be a Judeo-Christian nation but our true God is the God of “More!”
Reply to this | Report thisBy very, November 21, 2007 at 1:36 pm #
(1 comments total)
See Edna St Vincent Millay´s poem: “To Jesus on His Birthday.” Jim
Reply to this | Report thisBy sharon ash, November 21, 2007 at 11:03 am #
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Well, let’s see, if you can take seven loaves and a couple of fish (or maybe it was seven fish and a couple of loaves) and turn it into enough to feed thousands with enough scraps left over to fill a few baskets, I would say you would not have to shop for too much. The better plan would be to stop dragging the good name of Jesus into our wars, our shopping malls, and most certainly using his name to try and get elected so you can do very un-Christ-like things.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Ed, November 21, 2007 at 9:23 am #
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I’ll do most of my holiday shopping at the local liquor store. I’m buying French and Russian made products wherever possible.
Reply to this | Report thisBy TDoff, November 21, 2007 at 7:46 am #
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I know for damned sure Jesus wouldn’t buy Bush’s line of crap.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Douglas Chalmers, November 21, 2007 at 6:51 am #
(2900 comments total)
#114893 by 1drees on 11/21 at 4:29 am: “...weird that they wasted him not believing to be “messenger” and ironically still waiting for theirs, who somehow has failed to show up, late by a couple of thousand years...”
This is the essential reality about the oldest of the three Abrahamic religions, 1drees. No “messiah” worth his/her salt would ever be bothered with them again, uhh.
You only get one chance in this “casting pearls before swine” free benefit or whatever one might call this “messenger from God” thing. They muffed it!
But, “buy(ing) a gun” is exactly what the “devil” wants you to do. Then you are on a downward path....... for sure!
Reply to this | Report thisBy Marianne, November 21, 2007 at 6:41 am #
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Before Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s visionary work, people were “programmed” that women just did not vote. Before the labor rights movement, my grandfather used to have to work 7 days a week. Before the women’s rights movement in the 60’s, women represented a very small percentage of college graduates and the workforce.
Every movement has its beginnings, and it just takes a certain number of people to see a vision, feel the vision, and embody it in order for it to shift the consciousness of the majority.
Attacking those who are trying to bring forth a shift in the way we do things is not productive. Choosing to believe that “nothing will make a difference” is not productive. Changing our daily thoughts, words, and actions on the other hand, is. Seeing, Feeling, and Knowing that change is imminent and is, in fact, occurring right now, makes it so.
Reply to this | Report thisBy jkoch, November 21, 2007 at 6:40 am #
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Enough of that Jesus guy. He wasn’t much of a buyer an had a penchant to yield wine and loaves from nothing, and on credit terms settled in the hereafter and not by a bill due in January. One bleeding heart can’t represent a whole faith. Remember the Trinity. Besides the Son, there are two other divine elements: Father Christmas (aka Santa) and the Holiday Spirit (a mixture of shopping, snacking, and ethyl alcohol). There are also the elves, reindeer, snowmen, and kindred bearers of the faith. Jolly Mamon is also a welcome guest, since he helps pay the rent and the heating bill. Don’t abjure he that feeds you.
Reply to this | Report thisBy GW=MCHammered, November 21, 2007 at 6:27 am #
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These days, Jesus buys tacos. BTW, the elite killed that Jesus: Kill the Greed, Fill the Need.
Reply to this | Report thisBy 1drees, November 21, 2007 at 4:29 am #
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Jesus Would take one look at ..............
The actions of Christians in IRAQ ( learn about adventures in Vietnam, Korea, Elsalvador, Guatemala, etc etc) and maybe would want to buy a one way ticket back to heaven coz none of this is what he had taught and since all his words been wasted so he might as well be out of here.
If he saw the condition of the World in detail ( the poverty, wars, disease, greed for power and all ) then he’d say that maybe he needs to learn how to teach so he’d enroll himself in any University so that maybe in the future he can explain certain concepts better.
If jesus saw the actions of present day Zionists then most probably seeing that they havent changed a bit in the last 2000 years he might want to go for a course in endurance coz he might find the Zionists to be far more stubborn than him so far. (weird that they wasted him not believing to be “messenger” and ironically still waiting for theirs, who somehow has failed to show up, late by a couple of thousand years!)
If Jesus took one look at GWB, I am certain, he’d buy a gun and say that’s the devil himself.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Douglas Chalmers, November 21, 2007 at 3:35 am #
(2900 comments total)
#114788 by Mike Mid-City on 11/20 at 5:13 pm: “Jesus would weep at the way we celebrate his birth....”
Buy Nothing Days are becoming quite frequent for some people. But I think that Jesus wrote off the so-called christian church a long time ago. In return, they have kept him nailed to the cross....... on the wall where they can then go out and forget about him, uhh.
Reply to this | Report thisBy WSmart, November 21, 2007 at 12:34 am #
(4 comments total)
Amy,
Do you already have plans to see this movie? Would you like to make a date of it?
Bill
Reply to this | Report thisBy Paracelsus, November 20, 2007 at 11:29 pm #
(476 comments total)
Would Jesus invest in Exxon Mobil?
Reply to this | Report thisBy Autumn Rose, November 20, 2007 at 10:47 pm #
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Whether Jesus existed or not, I like his peace aphorisms. “Turn the other cheek” is better than “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth” of the old testament.
Reply to this | Report thisBy Ernest Canning, November 20, 2007 at 10:32 pm #
(1622 comments total)
Boycotting on Friday, then consuming on Monday will not accomplish a whole lot. It was the passage of NAFTA & the WTO which opened the door for America’s economic elite to outsource our manufacturing base in search of the sweat shop labor in China. (I had been posting, “in search of the $2/day laborer” but this article suggests that that its the $1.26/day laborer). This betrayal was brought to you courtesy of an alliance between Bill Clinton, Geo. H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan, which rammed these so-called “free trade” agreements through on the fast track.
Right now there is one, and only one, presidential candidate who is advocating a repeal of NAFTA & the WTO--Dennis Kucinich. If you are middle or working class and want to end the race to the bottom, better get with the Kucinich campaign because boycotting “Black Friday” in the long run won’t accomplish squat.
Reply to this | Report thisBy niloroth, November 20, 2007 at 7:58 pm #
(211 comments total)
hmm, seeing as there is scant evidence that he existed at all, i think he really wouldn’t give a %^&#.
And why am i not surprised spurlock is behind this? The man has as much integrity as cheney. Look into the documentary at http://www.bowlingformorgan.com/ The fact is, if you eat 6,000 calories and don’t exercise, you gain weight, it doesn’t matter what you eat. I could do the same thing at whole foods.
Idiot with an ax to grind + fictional demigod = stupidity. plain and simple.
Reply to this | Report thisBy thomas billis, November 20, 2007 at 7:16 pm #
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Try and get Americans to stop doing something they have been programmed to do.Be agood husband rather than give chocolates on Valentines day.Be a good father rather than give a bike on Christmas.These are self gratifying holidays that make the companies that promote them wealthy.I must be good look what a present I gave.Rather than giving things to the ones you love give of yourself.If you give of yourself all year these tokens are unnecessary.Your kid is not going to remember the bike as a sign of how much you care but he will remember that arm around after missing the winning shot or the catch in the front yard.If your wife really needs things to love you then just give her cash and some chewing gum.You should give things to people who are really in dire need of things.Those who are Christian should try to bring Christ back into christmas.
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