You know, I didn't think about it until now, but I guess I have some input on this pastor thing.
See, my grandfather was a pastor. A wealthy one. At least a millionaire at some point. He didn't have a megachurch....but it was definitely a nice, modern church. He built his wealth as a businessman/restauranteur before becoming a pastor, and it is impossible for me to know how much of his wealth came from one place or another. But he was old school. I don't think he made much if anything off the church. What he did make usually went back into it, and he kept his own finances separate. When he passed, my family's affiliation with the church pretty much ended.
But that generally explains my reaction to the intersection of money and religion. If I'd asked him I suppose he might have said his success was divinely inspired, or that God was at least watching out for him when he wasn't religious so he could get to his real life's work....but I don't think he would have ever denied that it was actual work that made him wealthy, and I think he would have found the idea of wealth earned on the backs of his congregation repugnant. He also had a Board of Elders to answer to.
When you combine evangelicalism with business, I think it confuses your motivations because they go hand-in-hand to the point they're indistinguishable. It's even further confused when the message becomes "God wants you to be wealthy. Wealth is an expression of God's favor." Thinking like that swiftly becomes self-serving and ultimately indefensible.
Well for one thing, if a politician is corrupt, they probably aren't above paying journalists to keep their noses out of it, and journalists will usually take that money because they are underpaid and overworked.
Eh.....I highly doubt any public figure stoops to trying to bribe the person running the story. It's more much efficient and untraceable to pressure their superiors into suppressing the story. (Usually with the threat of cutting off access.) Unless you've done something really, really foul, that's generally enough to, if not kill a story, take the teeth out of it. More than a few journalists have found their stories altered by the time it goes through copy, unbeknownst to them.