RightRevBear said:
And let's be honest, greed did fuel slavery and Jim Crow laws. It fuels people using cheap illegal immigrant labor.
It's interesting points…unchecked greed is as but we have had 2,000 of Christian thinkers and writers who have already told us that.
Baylor is not breaking new ground supporting this kind of stuff (traditional Christian teaching on greed but now mixed in with a hyper focus on race)
And for what it's worth I don't think Financial greed (however we define the term) was that much involved in Jim Crow. It was more a movement that was motivated to restore/regain political control & reestablish "social stability"…stability of course through taking rights from others
But most people don't know that it was big business & capitalism that was against Jim Crow from the very beginning…because those laws put constraints on business, trade, and making money.
[ Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) was a landmark civil rights case…the East Louisiana Railroad did oppose the 1890 Louisiana's Separate Car Act because it was expensive, the case was specifically designed by the Committee of Citizens to challenge the constitutionality of legalized racial segregation under the Fourteenth Amendment.…The railroad company cooperated with the challenge because it objected to the financial cost of operating separate cars.]
[Opposition was most common among national corporations and transportation companies that found segregation expensive and operationally difficult]
[Large national chains often resisted local segregation customs to avoid alienating customers in Northern states. For example, in 1964, the CEO of Coca-Cola threatened to move the company out of Atlanta if the city's business elite did not support a dinner honoring Martin Luther King Jr.]