Elliot Spitzer and America's
Ethical Perversity
By Rabbi Michael Lerner
Tikkun.org, March 19, 2008
The cross-the-political-spectrum attacks on Elliot Spitzer and the
intensity of the demands that he resign his office show just how far the
Right-wing sexual moralizing has been able to trump any other kind of
ethical reasoning in American society.
Going to a prostitute is legal in some states and some countries around
the world, and is often the very arrangement that saves families from
splitting up whose sexual energies have diminished but whose love is
intact. It's not uncommon for men (and now increasingly women as well)
who have achieved great power in our society by adopting an outer show
of ruthless pursuit of power and influence (even, as in Spitzer's case,
if the power is aimed at pursuing laudable ends) to feel a deep
emptiness and loneliness that is not addressed by friends or spouse, and
hence to seek some kind of outside connection no matter how superficial
that is not bound by previous rules and roles. Nevertheless, I and many
others in the religious and spiritual world oppose that practice when it
involves adultery or prostitution, because it depends on the
objectification of another human being, so that sex is disconnected in
ways that it should not be from a significant encounter with the spirit
of God in the other or a deep recognition that is the only real way to
overcome existential or situational alienation.
Moreover, the trade in women for sexual purposes has frequently led to
rape and abuse and the kidnapping of young women who are sold into
sexual slavery. All of these outrageous practices are abhorrent and
should be challenged. The flaunting of sexuality in the media, and the
implicit message that the only real satisfaction comes from having the
most physically attractive people as sexual partners, not only generates
huge dissatisfaction even as it allows corporate advertise to become
predators manipulating our personal sense of inadequacy to sell their
products, but also generates desires that feed the sexual trade in
women. Given this larger social context, until sexual satisfaction is so
broadly available in our society that no one has to pay for it and so
deeply tied to love that no one is objectified in the process, this kind
of exploitation of women and degradation of sex is likely to continue.
All of these practices foster the sexual predators of the contemporary
world.
So Elliot Spitzer deserves to be critiqued and ought to be doing deep
atonement for what he did. His previous moral arrogance and
willingness when he had power to do so to prosecute others for their
participation in creating prostitution rings makes him an easy target.
We, in turn, might practice the forgiveness that our religious and
spiritual traditions preach, particularly those of us who have been
willing to honeslty face how flawed we ourselves are, and how at times
we ourselves fail to embody in our actual practice with others the
values that we publicly espouse. Humility and compassion are also part
of the path of a spiritual progressive.
But the intensity of the critique of the N.Y. governor, tied with the
demand that he resign, shows more about American society's ethical
perversity than about Spitzer.
The President of the U.S. and the Vice President, working in concert
with several other high ranking officers of our government, lied and
distorted to get us involved in a war that has led to the death of over
a million Iraqis, the displacement of 3 million more, the death of 4,000
Americans and the wounding of tens of thousands more. After token
opposition in Congress, our elected representatives have overwhelmingly
passed budgets funding this war, rather than refuse to fund any military
projects until the President stopped the war and withdrew the troops.
Meanwhile, our government has overtly engaged in torture, wiretapping
of our phones, and violation of our human rights and the rights of
people around the world. Senator Diane Feinstein and Senator Charles
Schumer votes to confirm as Attonrey General a right-wing judge who
refused to repudiate these crimes.
The U.S. government has rejected every attempt to implement the Kyoto
environmental agreements or to work out new agreements sufficiently
strong to reverse environmental destruction that is certain to lead to
new levels of flooding particularly in several poor countries around the
world. The consequence: tens of millions of deaths.
The Clinton Administration pushed, along with corporate support, a set
of trade agreements that have devastated the farmers of many developing
countries, forcing many off their farms and into city slums where their
daughters and sons are often sold into sexual slavery. The global
economic system we have fostered has led to increasing gaps between the
rich and the poor, so that over one out of every three people on the
planet lives on less than $2 a day, 1.5 billion live on less than one
dollar a day, and over 15,000 children die every day from
malnutrition-related diseases and inadequate availability of medicine
that is hoarded by the rich countries who can afford the prices made to
ensure huge profits to the pharmaceutical industry.
Health insurance companies and private medical profiteers are doing all
they can to ensure that there will be no health care for tens of
millions of Americans, unless that is provided in ways that guarantee
corporate super-profits and thereby guarantee that the cost of health
care paid through taxes will be huge and create anger at all government
social welfare and well-being programs, leading to their likely
de-funding.
People in the US have faced severe economic crises on a regional and
soon on a national level because corporations move their centers of
production to countries in Asia where they can exploit workers with less
government or union interference and where they can destroy the
environment with less societal restraints. Wild to achieve greater
profits, corporations and the rich have managed to support politicians
who lower the taxes on the rich, in the process bankrupting the public
sector or severely reducing its ability to provide enough funds for
quality education, health care, libraries, public transportation, and
social welfare.
That there is no outcry for these government officials and corporate
leaders to resign immediately or be impeached, that there is no moral
outrage at the entire system that produces this impact, is America's
ethical perversity. Instead, the only crime against humanity that the
media takes seriously and the politicians fear is being exposed for
personal sexual immorality. While everyone basks in their own
self-righteous demands on Spitzer, we all allow media and elected
officials to fundamentally distort our ethical vision and play out our
morality on the smallest of possible stages while ignoring the global
and personal consequences of our larger ethical failures.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of Tikkun magazine
www.tikkun.org <http://www.tikkun.org>
, Chair of the Network of Spiritual Progressives
www.spiritualprogressives.org <http://www.spiritualprogressives.org>
, rabbi of Beyt Tikkun synagogue-without-walls in San Francisco
and Berkeley, and author of The Left Hand of God. He welcomes comments
at RabbiLerner@tiikkun.org
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