“It is astonishing that critical scholarship has asked forever
about the identification of these store-house cities, but without ever
asking about the skewed exploitative social relationships between owner
and laborers that the project exhibits. The store-house cities are an
ancient parallel to the great banks and insurance houses where surplus
wealth is kept among us. That surplus wealth, produced by the cheap
labor of peasants, must now be protected from the peasants by law and by
military force.”
“It is astonishing that critical scholarship has asked forever
about the identification of these store-house cities, but without ever
asking about the skewed exploitative social relationships between owner
and laborers that the project exhibits. The store-house cities are an
ancient parallel to the great banks and insurance houses where surplus
wealth is kept among us. That surplus wealth, produced by the cheap
labor of peasants, must now be protected from the peasants by law and by
military force.”
Walter Brueggemann,
Truth Speaks to Power: The Countercultural Nature of Scripture
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