Opinion
The Tyranny of Money
One of the priestly admonitions that is easy to preach but difficult to live by is: “The love of money is the root of all evil”. Not even the priests or pastors that preache it, nor those who exude a façade of pseudo-indifference to money and deny themselves the mundane pleasure of this world find themselves capable of living by this admonition.
It is easy for man to console himself that money is not the greatest god, but there is no atheist so true to himself who does not obey and do the bidding of money. Just as there is no priest ever so pious, ever so full of the beautiful thoughts of heaven who can ignore money even if he exhorts his flock not to take money seriously.
If not, why does the priest ask his flock to pay ten per cent? Why does he exhort them to be cheerful givers? Why do we always see pastors in ritzy cars, expensive dresses and shoes? Never blame them. The love of money may indeed be the root of evil, but the lack of money itself is the father of evil. The Bible costs money, so does the tabernacle. And the priest himself needs money to carry on his faithful work of turning all the 99 lost sheep back to God.
There is no arguing the point: Money rules the world. Love it or hate it, its intrusion in the private and public life of man is pervasive. It can not be ignored by nations and individuals. Indeed, nations and individuals measure their worth in terms of money. The more of it they have, the greater their worth. The converse is equally true. The value of money lies in its scarcity, Yet, its beauty is in its abundance.
It is not only ironical but also paradoxical that man mints money, but still struggles for money. Nothing ever made by man rules him so totally. And nothing ever made by man is so scarce as money. Otherwise, how can a nation that mints money run short of money, become impoverished and consequently create social and economic anomie for its citizens? The answer lies in the tyranny of money.
It is the paradox, okay, tyranny of money, that makes nations of the world, as well as individuals devote their energies and sinew to have enough of the elusive commodity at all times, with the hope of crossing from the side of the have-nots to the side of the haves.
Even those who swim in money never rest on their oars. After all, the rich also cry. Such is the vagary of life and money that no one, not even the rich among us, can trust money to stay at any one place for a long time in the right quantity.
The fear is that a nation which has crossed the great gulf and Rubicon to join the group of the haves may find itself dragged back sooner than later to the comity of the have-nots. It is such vagaries, such uncertainties that make kings become paupers and paupers become kings. If you are in doubt, why does the once-upon-a-time land of gold and oil, whose wealth was said to be inexhaustible (remember money is not Nigeria’s problem episode) become a member of the wretched of the earth? Why does a one-time police of the world become a victim of arrest? Why does USSR now play second fiddle to the United States of America?
Today, if America sneezes, the other nations of the world do not only catch cold, they tremble. That is the tyranny of money. Surely, it is the same vagary and tyranny of money that makes Nigeria wear its poverty like a sackcloth and yesterday’s apartheid South Africa now wears its pride like a hair style.
In other words, money is the gateway to stardom. It makes man, it destroys man. The mere mention of it makes some people grin with smile, others mourn its absence. Money is difficult to have, but very easy to have not. It is the lack of it that makes the streets filled with the hungry, the angry, and the sullenly resentful. It is also its abundance that permits the lucky ones to feed fat.
However, while the upper rung of the ladder among us are feeding fat on the collective blessing of the nation and wear the crown of gold from our earth, they should not forget the Lazarus and Daves among us. This is because an employer who does not give a tinker’s care about the welfare of his workers should be prepared to play host to the tantrums of his workers. For while it is ideal to appeal to the frayed proclivity of the labour towards lawlessness and insurrection, it is equally noble for the employer not to divest the labour of his dues and rights.
Perhaps, there is the truth in the old cynical contention that giving more to those who already have and taking from the have-not may not be new, but how do we reconcile it with egalitarian democracy which we preach and the commitment to guarantee to all, adequate food, clothing, shelter, water, health and education?
So, let nobody blame the worker who agitates for more pay; and let no one curse a man who carries placards for being denied the means of livelihood. An hungry man, they say, is an angry man.
I only hope the state governors who refuse to pay the minimum wage and the Federal Government who proposes the removal of fuel subsidy will listen to this philosophical thought, and not allow the fence of the Nigerian nation to fall.
Boye Salau
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