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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 04:58 PM
Original message
Someone You Should Know
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Jim Wallis: Someone You Should Know



I want to introduce you to someone. His name is Gordon Brown, and he just became Britain's new Prime Minister. You have probably been hearing and reading the news about the transition from Tony Blair to Brown.

(snip)

Let me share a few of his words from his speech this week on his transition to the new post of Labor Party Leader and Prime Minister.

First on his values and moral compass:

    All I believe and all I try to do comes from the values that I grew up with: duty, honesty, hard work, family, and respect for others.

    And this is what my parents taught me and will never leave me: that each and everyone of us has a talent, each and everyone of us should have the chance to develop their talent, and that each of us should use whatever talents we have to enable people least able to help themselves.

    And so I say honestly: I am a conviction politician. My conviction that everyone deserves a fair chance in life. My conviction that each of us has a responsibility to each other. And my conviction that when the strong help the weak, it makes us all stronger. Call it ‘the driving power of social conscience’, call it 'the better angels of our nature’, call it ‘our moral sense’, call it a belief in ‘civic duty’.

    I joined this party as a teenager because I believed in these values. They guide my work, they are my moral compass. This is who I am. And because these are the values of our party, too, the party I lead must have more than a set of policies – we must have a soul.

On children in poverty:

    ... let me say also that in the fourth richest country in the world it is simply wrong – wrong that any child should grow up in poverty. To address this poverty of income and to address also the poverty of aspirations by better parenting, better schools, and more one-to-one support, I want to bring together all the forces of compassion – charities, voluntary sector, local councils, so that at the heart of building a better Britain is the cause of ending child poverty.

On foreign policy:

    Our foreign policy in years ahead will reflect the truth that to isolate and defeat terrorist extremism now involves more than military force – it is also a struggle of ideas and ideals that in the coming years will be waged and won for hearts and minds here at home and round the world. And an essential contribution to this will be what becomes daily more urgent – a Middle East settlement upholding a two state solution, that protects the security of Israel and the legitimate enduring desire for a Palestinian state.

    Because we all want to address the roots of injustice, I can tell you today that we will strengthen and enhance the work of the department of international development and align aid, debt relief and trade policies to wage an unremitting battle against the poverty, illiteracy, disease and environmental degradation that it has fallen to our generation to eradicate.

Gordon Brown is one of a new kind of political leader who seeks to practice moral politics. He has already worked very closely with the community of faith and seeks a vital partnership. He knows that even politicians like him need to be challenged and held accountable by social movements with spiritual foundations. He once told me that without Jubilee 2000, the church-based movement to cancel Third World debt, the Labor government would have never done so. He encouraged me to keep building such movements because the world of politics needs them.

So pay attention to what Gordon Brown does now and please pray for him. I believe he could become the kind of international leader who really helps to change things. I watched his remarks on the BBC, just before he and his wife walked through the door of #10 Downing Street to spend his first night as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. I’m glad he is there.


http://blog.beliefnet.com/godspolitics/2007/06/jim-wallis-someone-you-should.html#comments



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Robbien Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 05:03 PM
Response to Original message
1. Uh oh, sounds as if the Labour Party may be taking a hard turn left
away from the corporatist viewpoint.

We can only hope.
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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 05:04 PM
Response to Original message
2. I sure hope you are correct, no British leader in the last 20 years has come
...even close to that ideal, they lie and deceive as much as U.S. Presidents
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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 05:41 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. "Hope means believing in spite of the evidence, then watching the evidence change."
More from the article...

I have taken American heads of churches and development agencies to visit with Brown, and they have been universally and amazingly impressed with his deep understanding of the issues of globalization and his personal commitment to tackling the moral challenge of inequality. I believe that Gordon Brown has more passion (and knowledge) about the issues of global poverty and social justice than any other Western leader today. And I believe his leadership could make a great difference. He is somebody you should know and follow closely.

http://blog.beliefnet.com/godspolitics/2007/06/jim-wallis-someone-you-should.html



And from another article...

UK Christians Hear Call for 'Justice Revival' to Call Brown to Account
Ekklesia 6-24-2007

~excerpt ~

Mr Wallis said: "What we’re facing is too big for all of our best ideas. Unless we catch fire, we won’t move mountains. Our slogging through urban ministry won’t move mountains, unless we understand that we need a revival of faith. Hope means believing in spite of the evidence, then watching the evidence change."

Wallis is known to be one of the voices listened to by incoming British PM Gordon Brown, the son of a Scottish Presbyterian minister. Another is Rabbi Jonathan Sachs.

"Gordon Brown has a moral compass on poverty that I haven’t seen in many heads of state", he declared. "But even the best ones can’t change the big things unless there’s a social movement."


http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=news.display_article&mode=S&NewsID=5996



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BlackHawk706867 Donating Member (670 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 05:04 PM
Response to Original message
3. When I hear him say that although my predecessor sided with the
US Administration, "I do not" then he has my ear... Oh and when he gets his people the hell out of Iraq and apologizes for Tony's mis-deads....

ww
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Bitwit1234 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-28-07 05:50 PM
Response to Original message
5. Changing Britian will be a hard thing to do.
Since early times Britian has had it's hand in the Middle East and Africa. We all know this. I hope this guy can do it. Changing from fighting to negotitating and building ideas is a start.
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