Financial Leprosy

Title: “Curing Financial Leprosy” – Joe Canuck Interviews Bono & Nelly Furtado

Setting: A quiet studio in Toronto, with a mural of St. Francis embracing a leper behind the guests. The atmosphere is reverent but fiery, a blend of spirituality and economic justice.


Joe Canuck: Welcome, everyone, to The Great Healing. Today, we’re talking about curing what I call financial leprosy — the spiritual disease of debt slavery. With me are two voices who’ve sung for the soul of humanity: Bono of U2, and Canada’s own Nelly Furtado. Thank you both for being here.

Bono: Cheers, Joe. “Financial leprosy” — I love that phrase. That’s exactly what unpayable debt does. It isolates, it disfigures communities, it robs people of dignity.

Nelly Furtado: Yes, it’s a kind of invisible sickness. You can’t see it like a skin disease, but you feel it in the anxiety, the broken families, the hopelessness. Especially among working-class people, immigrants, artists — those trying to rise without selling their souls.

Joe Canuck: Exactly. The Book of Leviticus had the Jubilee — every fifty years, debts were forgiven, land returned, and the poor restored. Christ himself said, “Forgive us our debts.” What happened to that idea?

Bono: (smiling) It got replaced by compound interest, Joe. The new priesthood wears suits and works in skyscrapers. When I started the Jubilee 2000 campaign, I met bishops, presidents, and bankers. Most of them admitted they knew the system was unjust, but they called it “too big to change.”

Nelly Furtado: And yet, everything changes. Empires fall. Currency collapses. But compassion doesn’t. Imagine a system where lending is rooted in partnership, not exploitation — where capital serves the community, not the other way around.

Joe Canuck: Amen to that. You’re talking about ending usury, which used to be considered a mortal sin. The prophets, the Popes, even Shakespeare condemned it. Now it’s our global operating system.

Bono: (nodding) Usury is the original virus. It’s what turns a loaf of bread into a bond market. It’s why a child dies in Africa while another trades derivatives in London.

Nelly Furtado: That’s why we need a cultural Jubilee — music, art, and truth-telling that make forgiveness fashionable again. Let’s make mercy cool.

Joe Canuck: (grinning) You just coined a movement, Nelly. Mercy is the new luxury.

Bono: Beautiful. Because in a world addicted to profit, forgiveness is the true rebellion.

Nelly Furtado: The way I see it, Joe, we can’t heal the planet until we heal the heart. And the heart of our system is sick with greed. It’s time to put usury where it belongs — in the dust bin of history.

Joe Canuck: (leaning forward) Then let’s call this what it is — the spiritual reset. Debt forgiveness not as charity, but as justice.

Bono: Exactly. Justice is love with legs.

Nelly Furtado: And maybe a melody. (smiles)

Joe Canuck: Then sing us out, Nelly — what’s the anthem of this new age?

Nelly Furtado: (softly, almost like a prayer)
“Money’s not my master, love’s my creed,
Forgive the debt, let the poor be freed.
What we owe to each other, not what we own —
That’s the seed that makes peace grow.”

Joe Canuck: (applauding) That’s it. The cure for financial leprosy is compassion — paid in full.

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A Nation Without Usury

The idea began as a whisper in political circles, a bold and almost forgotten dream: the return of an interest-free national bank. For decades, Canada’s financial system had been dominated by private banks, reaping immense profits while saddling citizens and governments with crushing debt. But Prime Minister Nelly Furtado and renowned constitutional lawyer Rocco Galati were determined to change that.

Their plan was ambitious: to revive the Bank of Canada’s original mandate—to lend money to the government and citizens at no interest, funding public projects and stimulating the economy without the burden of compounding debt.


The Historical Context

In the mid-20th century, the Bank of Canada had operated as a public institution, providing interest-free loans to fund infrastructure projects like the Trans-Canada Highway and social programs. But in the 1970s, under pressure from international financial institutions, Canada shifted to borrowing from private banks at interest, leading to ballooning national debt.

Nelly and Rocco saw this as a betrayal of the Canadian people.

“Why should we pay billions in interest to private banks,” Nelly argued in Parliament, “when we have the power to create our own money, debt-free, for the public good?”


Father Antonio’s Blessing

Before unveiling their plan, Nelly and Rocco sought spiritual guidance from Father Antonio, the beloved priest of Our Lady of Fatima parish in Toronto. A scholar of scripture and an advocate for social justice, Father Antonio saw their initiative as not just an economic reform but a moral imperative.

During a special Mass attended by Nelly, Rocco, and their supporters, Father Antonio read from Psalm 15, emphasizing the verse:

“He who does not put out his money at interest and does not take a bribe against the innocent. He who does these things shall never be moved.”

Looking out at the congregation, Father Antonio declared: “To lend without interest is to honor the dignity of every person. It is a path to justice, a way to free the oppressed from the chains of debt.”


The Plan Unveiled

The cornerstone of the plan was simple yet revolutionary:

  1. Restore the Bank of Canada’s Sovereignty: The government would use the central bank to fund infrastructure, healthcare, education, and green energy projects.
  2. Eliminate Interest on Public Debt: Loans for federal and provincial projects would be interest-free, saving billions annually.
  3. Citizen Loans: Canadians could access low- or no-interest loans for housing, education, and small businesses, empowering them to build their futures without being trapped in debt.

Rocco, known for his fiery courtroom advocacy, took to the media to explain the legal framework. “The Bank of Canada Act gives us this power,” he said. “It’s time we used it for the people, not the profiteers.”


The Opposition

The plan faced fierce resistance from private banks and their allies. Critics warned of inflation, economic instability, and the wrath of international financial markets.

Nelly stood firm. In a televised address, she spoke directly to Canadians:

“For too long, we’ve been told there’s no alternative. That debt is inevitable, that interest is the price of progress. But that’s a lie. Together, we can reclaim our sovereignty and build a future where prosperity is shared, not hoarded.”


The People’s Movement

The plan ignited a grassroots movement. Canadians from all walks of life rallied behind Nelly and Rocco, flooding social media with messages of support and packing town halls to capacity.

In one memorable meeting in Winnipeg, a single mother named Sarah stood up to speak. “I’m drowning in student loans,” she said, tears streaming down her face. “If this plan can give my kids a better future, then I’ll fight for it with everything I have.”


The First Interest-Free Loan

The turning point came when the Bank of Canada issued its first interest-free loan in decades: $10 billion to fund affordable housing projects across the country. The move was met with skepticism by financial elites but celebrated by ordinary Canadians.

Father Antonio blessed the groundbreaking ceremony for the first housing development funded by the loan. Standing beside Nelly and Rocco, he prayed:

“May this be a house of hope, built on a foundation of justice. Let it stand as a testament to what we can achieve when we put people before profit.”


A New Era

As the plan expanded, the results were undeniable. Public debt began to shrink, infrastructure projects flourished, and families found relief from crushing financial burdens.

Nelly, addressing Parliament, reflected on the journey: “This isn’t just about money. It’s about freedom. Freedom from debt, freedom from fear, and freedom to dream.”

Rocco, ever the firebrand, added with a grin, “And if the bankers don’t like it, they can take us to court. We’re ready.”


The Legacy of Justice

The revival of the interest-free bank became one of the defining achievements of Nelly’s tenure as Prime Minister. It inspired other nations to rethink their economic systems and reignited global conversations about fairness and equity.

Father Antonio, reflecting on the movement, quoted Psalm 15 once more:

“He who does these things shall never be moved.”

And neither were Nelly and Rocco, standing firm in their commitment to a fairer, freer Canada.

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