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Obama Calls It Fairness. The GOP Calls It Class Warfare. Scripture Calls It Envy
Townhall.com ^ | January 29, 2012 | Doug Giles

Posted on 01/29/2012 4:43:34 AM PST by Kaslin

Obama, in his State of the Union address and during his initial five-state, multi-million dollar taxpayer funded re-election jaunt has stated repeatedly that his platform and policies are not about class warfare, which means, of course, that his ticket is all about class warfare—or “fairness,” as he likes to call it … or as the Scripture labels it, envy.

You don’t hear much about envy anymore, do you? We hear a lot about greed being bad, but in Obamaland envy is no longer a rank vice but a right and a virtue. However, historically speaking, envy has always been seen as a high-ranking sin. Envy, matter of fact, is second on the Seven Deadly Sins list as it lags behind pride a wee bit in being the nastiest and most common vice.

Ancient in its poison, envy forms a big chunk of the foul compost heap that stimulates the growth of human stupidity. Envy is an extremely toxic sin that doesn’t get the verbal hailstorm that other sins receive in our current entitlement culture with its totemic view of vice. Someone who has been saddled by the envy monkey will probably not make the evening news like a politician who has been caught in bed with a live man or a dead woman or who keeps his freezer stuffed with cash.

No, envy is not that sexy and doesn’t have the buzz that zings around a greedy Goldman Sachs exec. Because this sin doesn’t get MSNBC’s attention like the more juicy transgressions, we tend to see it as less naughty. But be not deceived, my brethren: This sin is disastrous once it sticks its talons into a person, party, religion, or nation.

Another distinguishing feature of the funk of envy is that it is no fun. All vices sport a momentary spice. All of them, that is, except for envy. Envy is the one sin the sinner will never like or admit. You’ll never see someone who is envious chilling out, laughing his butt off, or relaxing with his friends while this demon rules the roost. The more envy grows, the more it drives its impenitent coddler nuts.

So, what is envy? Well … let’s start with what it is not. It’s not admiring what someone else has and wanting some good stuff also. This desire will make you get off your butt in the morning and get busy. It is good to crave; a man’s appetite will make him work. Where envy differs from admiration/emulation is that envy is “sorrow at another’s good” (said Thomas Aquinas). Someone who is centered can watch another person, party, or nation prosper and not grow hateful because of it.

The whacked, petty, envious dolt, however, sees someone else excel and is slapped in the face with the reality that he just got dogged. So, instead of sucking it up and working harder and smarter, the unwise envious freak allows his pride to fuel his wounded little spirit. This sets the dejected perp down a path of disparagement of the prosperous that eventually morphs into the desire to destroy the person, party or nation that has just trumped this sad little person.

Os Guinness, best-selling author and renowned lecturer, states that the sin of envy has several common characteristics:

1. Envy is the vice of proximity. We are always prone to envy people close to us in temperament, gifts or position.

2. Envy is highly subjective. It is in the eye of the beholder. It is not the objective difference between people that feeds envy, but the subjective perception. As a Russian proverb says, “envy looks at a juniper bush and sees a pine forest.”

3. Envy doesn’t lessen with age. It gets worse as we run into more and more people of happiness and success, offering more fodder for envy.

4. Envy is often petty but always insatiable and all consuming. However small the occasion that gives rise to it, envy becomes central to the envier’s whole being. The envier “stews in his juice.” Envy begins with pride and then plunges the person into hatred.

5. Envy is always self-destructive. What the envier cannot enjoy, no one should enjoy, and thus the envier loses every enjoyment. The envier’s motto is “if not I, then no one.” As an eighth-century Jewish teacher put it, “the one who envies gains nothing for himself and deprives the one he envies of nothing. He only loses thereby.”

Y’know, there are many forces tearing at this land and many nations that would like to level our nation. That said, I believe this envious entitlement funk that’s speedily weaving its way into the fabric of our national life will destroy it faster than al-Qaeda could ever al-Hope to.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: classwarfare; dncstrategy; envy; sin
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To: Kaslin
one of the 7 deadly sins...
21 posted on 01/29/2012 8:03:33 AM PST by Chode (American Hedonist - *DTOM* -ww- NO Pity for the LAZY)
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To: Kaslin
I see some of this playing out with my adult children and their friends. My youngest, 24, started a chimney sweep business about 2+ years ago, $500,000+ gross sales in that time!

He now has three full time employees, getting there he had his friends from school who need the job, help him. He is constantly having trouble with their promptness, courteousness to the customer, quality of job, etc. When after much warning, he is way too nice, he fires them.

One recently fired "friend" went online and trashed his name and reputation on Emily's list and other consumer websites. He partnered with another disgruntled, envious former friend and employee to post bad things on Facebook and Twitter and Linkedin.

My son threatened to sue and they backed off for now, the point being it is not only in politics but envy is present in an attempt to take down a industrious entrepreneur citizen trying to build something positive and help others.

One of his employees is his, college graduate cousin. They make a great team and the cousin is very grateful to have a job as the office manager. The problem? my own sister and brother in law are bad mouthing the kind of business, dirty work with your hands manual labor job that he finally got after two years out of college. Is that envy as well?

22 posted on 01/29/2012 9:51:01 AM PST by thirst4truth (The left elected a mouth that is unattached to an eye, brain or muscle.)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

For all the good he did, Reagan too made mistakes. Amnesty and the 47% are two. Time for us to rectify both - attrition the illegals OUT and make sure EVERYONE pays their fair share.


23 posted on 01/29/2012 12:35:46 PM PST by NTHockey (Rules of engagement #1: Take no prisoners)
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To: thirst4truth

I believe it is not only envy, but also snobbery


24 posted on 01/29/2012 12:41:01 PM PST by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin
We hear a lot about greed being bad, but in Obamaland envy is no longer a rank vice but a right and a virtue. However, historically speaking, envy has always been seen as a high-ranking sin. Envy, matter of fact, is second on the Seven Deadly Sins list as it lags behind pride a wee bit in being the nastiest and most common vice.

I'm not familiar with any particular "ranking" of the Seven Deadly Sins, but would suggest that six of them actually represent good things taken to excess. Envy is the only one of the Seven Deadly Sins which is bad in any quantity.

25 posted on 01/29/2012 5:22:52 PM PST by supercat (Renounce Covetousness.)
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