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The Profits of Religion, Fifth Edition by Upton Sinclair
page 29 of 323 (08%)
priests of this cult should be lukewarm towards the prohibition
movement, and should piously refuse to administer their sacrament with
unfermented and uninteresting grape-juice.

#Priestly Empires#

In every human society of which we have record there has been one
class which has done the hard and exhausting work, the "hewers of wood
and drawers of water"; and there has been another, much smaller class
which has done the directing. To belong to this latter class is to
work also, but with the head instead of the hands; it is also to enjoy
the good things of life, to live in the best houses, to eat the best
food, to have choice of the most desirable women; it is to have
leisure to cultivate the mind and appreciate the arts, to acquire
graces and distinctions, to give laws and moral codes, to shape
fashions and tastes, to be revered and regarded--in short, to have
Power. How to get this Power and to hold it has been the first object
of the thoughts of men from the beginning of time.

The most obvious method is by the sword; but this method is uncertain,
for any man may take up a sword, and some may succeed with it. It will
be found that empires based upon military force alone, however cruel
they may be, are not permanent, and therefore not so dangerous to
progress; it is only when resistance is paralyzed by the agency of
Superstition, that the race can be subjected to systems of
exploitation for hundreds and even thousands of years. The ancient
empires were all priestly empires; the kings ruled because they obeyed
the will of the priests, taught to them from childhood as the word of
the gods.

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