Hurling brickbats at hankers is a popular pastime. The "Occupy Wall Street" movement and its various offshoots complain that a v

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问题     Hurling brickbats at hankers is a popular pastime. The "Occupy Wall Street" movement and its various offshoots complain that a vicious 1%, many of them bankers, are ripping off the virtuous 99%. Hollywood has vilified financiers, and mountains of books make the same point without using Michael Douglas.
    Anger is understandable. The financial crisis of 2007—2008 has produced the deepest recession since the 1930s. Most of the financiers at the heart of it have got off scot-free. The biggest banks are bigger than ever. Bonuses are flowing once again. The old saw about bankers—that they believe in capitalism when it comes to pocketing the profits and socialism when it comes to paying for the losses—is too true for comfort.
    But is the backlash in danger of going too far? Could fair criticism warp into ugly prejudice? And could ugly prejudice produce prosperity-destroying policies? A glance at history suggests that we should be nervous. For centuries the hatred of money-lending—of money begetting more money—went hand in hand with a hatred of rootlessness. Cosmopolitan moneylenders were harder to tax than immobile landowners, governments grumbled. In a diatribe against the Rothschilds, Heinrich Heine, a German poet, fumed that money "is more fluid than water and less steady than air. "
    This prejudice has proven dangerous. Without money to grease them, the wheels of commerce turn slowly or not at all. Civilizations that have eased the ban on money-lending have grown rich. Those that have retained it have stagnated. Northern Italy boomed in the 15th century when the Medicis and other banking families found ways to bend the rules. Economic leadership passed to Protestant Europe when Luther and Calvin made money-lending acceptable. As Europe pulled ahead, the usury-banning Islamic world remained mired in poverty. In 1000 western Europe’s share of global GDP was 11. 1% compared with the Middle East’s 8. 6%. By 1700 western Europe had a 13. 5% share compared with the Middle East’s 3.4%.
    The rise of banking has often been accompanied by a flowering of civilization. Artists and academics railing against the "agents of the Apocalypse" might also learn from history. Great financial centers have often been great artistic centers—from Florence in the Renaissance to Amsterdam in the 17th century to London and New York today. Countries that have chased away the moneylenders have been artistic deserts. Where would New York’s SoHo be without Wall Street? Or the great American universities without the flow of gold into their coffers?
    Prejudice against financiers can cause non-economic damage, too. Throughout history, moneylenders have been persecuted. Ethnic minorities—most obviously the Jews in Europe and America but also the Chinese in Asia—have clustered in the financial sector first because they were barred from more "respectable" pursuits and later because success begets success. At times, anti-banking prejudice has acquired a strong tinge of ethnic hatred.
    This is not to say that the Occupy protesters are guilty of ethnic prejudice: they belong to a class and a generation that is largely free from such vices. But demonisation can easily mutate into new forms. In the August issue of the Journal of Business Ethics one Clive Boddy argues that the financial sector has been taken over by psychopaths: "people who perhaps due to physical factors to do with abnormal brain connectivity and chemistry", lack a "conscience, have few emotions and display an inability to have any feelings of sympathy or empathy for other people".
    Railing against the 1 %—particularly when so many of them work for companies with names like Goldman Sachs and N. M. Rothschild—can unleash emotions that are difficult to cage. A survey in the Boston Review in 2009 found that 25% of non-Jewish Americas blamed Jews for the financial crisis, with a higher percentage among Democrats than Republicans. Ethnic hatreds are even rawer in parts of Asia. The Asian financial crisis 1997—1998 sparked murderous riots against rich Chinese in places such as Indonesia. Today, the combination of hard times and harsh rhetoric could also produce something nasty.
    The crisis of 2008 showed that global finance requires tough medicine. Banks must be forced to hold bigger reserves. "Weapons of mass destruction" must be defused. The culture of short-term incentives needs to be revised. But demonizing bankers will not solve these problems—and may well, if unchecked, bring a lot of ancient ugliness back to life.
The text tries to convey the idea that hatred of bankers is________.

选项 A、a most dangerous prejudice
B、a natural response to recession
C、an unignorable warning to financiers
D、a historically justified phenomenon

答案A

解析 主旨大意题。全文分九个段落,前两段说明了人们憎恶银行家的原因;第三段提出对这种憎恶是否会演变为破坏经济繁荣的偏见的担忧;然后在接下来五段中分别从社会的经济发展、文化发展、种族偏见等论述了对银行家的偏见将对社会产生的危害;最后一段表明观点,反对银行家是极其危险的偏见,非但解决不了问题,反而会让历史问题重现。故A项为答案。
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