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Do non-Mormons face discrimination in Southern Utah?
SUIndependent.com (Southern Utah Independent) ^ | Jan. 29, 2014 | Michael Flynn

Posted on 01/29/2015 4:52:10 PM PST by Colofornian

“It is oppressive to live in the city of St. George as a non-Mormon,” St. George City Council applicant Tara Dunn announced to a crowd comprised of some of Southern Utah’s most influential people, many of whom are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Her words seemed to hang in the air on Jan. 23 during the brief but tense pause that followed her speech in the St. George City Council chambers. Many were shocked to hear such strongly worded criticism of Latter-day Saint culture. Some were offended at what they felt was an attack on the LDS faith itself.

“I thought it was repulsive,” said St. George City Councilman Gil Almquist, who also serves as the president of a local LDS stake. “I felt very misunderstood that night,” he added.

Others have said they felt inspired by Dunn’s words. “Her speech made people uncomfortable,” said Dorothy Engelman, chair of the Washington County Democratic party. “Oftentimes we are uncomfortable hearing things that we know are true but are unwilling or afraid to say ourselves.”

“Yes, I do think non-Mormons sometimes face discrimination,” she added. “I think that there are several groups that face discrimination in Southern Utah, non-Mormons being one of them.”

Some members of the LDS church have said they actually agreed with much of what Dunn said in her speech.

“I think there’s truth to what she’s saying,” said Bryan Hyde, host of the popular political talk show “Perspectives” on FOX 1450 AM. “Particularly this sense of people feeling disenfranchised and not fitting in because they are not LDS. I think that’s a legitimate concern.”

However, Hyde said he thinks Dunn’s confrontational tone may have detracted from her message.

“I think it was a missed opportunity for her,” he said, “She has done some remarkable things and I think she has made some tremendous gains in gaining the trust of voters. The tone she took actually harmed the message she was trying to get out.”

“We (non-Mormons) have never had any form of meaningful representation,” Dunn said in her speech, “and, worse, it has become somewhat of an unspoken culture that we accept that we are second-class citizens in silence. Today and right now, I break that silence.”

Dunn said she expected to be condemned by some for her words, but she felt someone needed to say it.

“When you make people operate in these confines, you know who you hurt? You hurt the victims of domestic violence, you hurt the rape victims, you hurt the children, you hurt the disabled, you hurt the elderly, you hurt the little guys,” she said in an interview after delivering the speech. “That’s who you hurt when you don’t call people out on this culture of ‘no one say anything.’ That kind of culture is enabling of all kinds of horrible things.”

“You don’t hurt me,” she added. “I’m strong. I can take it, I’m strong.”

Dunn has been a controversial figure in St. George city politics since 2011, when she first ran for a position on the St. George City Council. In both the 2011 and 2013 races, Dunn waged campaigns that were overtly critical of the current city government, which she says is rife with self-dealing and cronyism. While some have criticized her campaign style for being too negative for Southern Utah, Dunn came very close to winning in both races.

Dunn delivered the speech in question on Thursday evening last week at the city council chambers. She was one of 24 applicants for Mayor Jon Pike’s recently vacated council seat. Each of the applicants was permitted to address the council, mayor and audience members before a vote was taken by the council to fill Pike’s seat. Dunn’s three-minute address has been seen by some as a death knell for her political aspirations in Southern Utah. David DeMille, a local journalist for the St. George Spectrum, described the speech in a tweet from city hall as Dunn, “going out, guns a-blazin,” like an outlaw gunfighter.

Now that the dust has had a chance to settle on Facebook and in the comment threads regarding Dunn’s controversial remarks, the question remains: Is there any truth to what she said on Thursday? Is there a penalty to pay for not being a member of the LDS Church in Southern Utah? If there is, why is it so and to what degree? Can the atmosphere in St. George really be described as oppressive for non-Mormons?

“Ms. Dunn is correct that non-Mormons in Southern Utah are treated as second-class citizens,” said Lori McArthur Cottam, who says her pioneer heritage goes back to Daniel D. McArthur, one of the early Mormon settlers of the Salt Lake Valley in 1848 and one of the original pioneers who founded St. George in 1861. As an ex-Mormon whose husband and children are practicing members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Cottam said she believes she has a unique perspective on the cultural tension between members and non-members – and she said she doesn’t believe Mormons intend to discriminate against or alienate anybody.

“They just don’t think about it,” she said. “It’s part of their culture – it’s the way they were raised.” Cottam added that many of the things about LDS culture that non-members find offensive or off-putting are done in a spirit of kindness and compassion.

“In fact,” she said, “their religion teaches that the only way to be a true friend is to help everyone find a happiness that only the true church can bring. They feel that if they don’t convert us, they will have failed us. That surely breeds an us-versus-them mentality.”

In yet another dimension of this debate, many Mormons and non-Mormons who heard Dunn’s speech have said they can’t relate to what she described. One commenter on The Independent’s website, self-identified as a non-Mormon, said they cannot relate to Dunn’s portrayal. “Folks know I’m not Mormon and they’re always there to help and offer a kind word,” the commenter said.

Gil Almquist said he’s never heard of non-Mormons being discriminated against. “I can only speak for myself and everyone that I know and emphatically state that, no, that does not exist,” he said.

Almquist said he, too, has a unique perspective on this issue. “I haven’t always been LDS,” he said. “I see people in a different light, maybe, than some who have been in the church their entire life.”

“I have never made a decision, public or private, based on someone’s race, creed, color, gender, status in the community, or their religion,” he said. “It’s ridiculous to think that there is a question on a form that says, ‘What religion are you?’ Give me a break. It’s against the law.”

However, Bryan Hyde, who is a Mormon, said he is aware of instances of intolerance towards non-Mormons by members of his faith.

“You know, there are individuals who, for whatever reason, say ‘your kid can’t play with my kid,’” said Hyde. “Why not? ‘Well, because you’re not a member of our church.’ Those are pretty rare instances, but they do happen.”

“That probably does exist somewhere,” Almquist admitted, “but if somebody from the LDS church has offended somebody wrongfully, well, they’re not in good standing. They need to repent.”

However, Cottam said much of the discriminating behavior that occurs happens unconsciously.

“It’s important to realize that Mormons don’t do any of this on purpose,” she said. She offered an example of how she believes the church can sometimes unintentionally foster negative attitudes about non-members.

“At my daughter’s ward last month,” she said, “a speaker told 11- to 17-year-old girls that if they didn’t do it God’s way, they would end up so sad that they would commit suicide like the star of TV’s ‘Glee.’ These kinds of stories are not only wrong, but they teach these children to be deathly afraid of all things non-Mormon.”

Dorothy Engelman and Tara Dunn both spoke about small-business owners they know who have lost business when customers discovered they are not LDS. Dunn mentioned a realtor she knows who said many LDS people will not list their homes with non-LDS realtors.

“If your livelihood is dependent upon being accepted by folks of the LDS faith, and they are paying you for your services, then you have to be very careful where you step,” said Engelman.

Kevin Hansen, a local contractor who is a Mormon, said he believes Mormon people are, on average, more trustworthy than non-Mormons. He said he doesn’t see a big problem with favoring LDS people in business dealings.

“People who practice this faith and believe this religion are different,” he said. “We start from youth to believe in the Ten Commandments.” He went on to discuss the discipline and work ethics Latter-day Saint men and women learn on their missions.

“We freely put ourselves through that kind of scrutiny to be members in good standing,” he said. “If there’s a confessional in some other church – well, that’s totally voluntary. We confess once every two years as adults that are temple worthy.”

Hansen paused, however, when asked how overlooking non-Mormon businesses or job applicants was any different than shunning, for instance, Jewish businesses and employees because they do not recognize the divinity of Jesus.

“Well, I can see how other people could look at it that way,” he said.

Cottam repeatedly stressed that the vast majority of LDS people have the best of intentions, even when they are doing things that non-members find alienating.

Bryan Hyde said that in order for the gap to close between the cultural experiences of LDS and non-LDS folks, people need to try and be more open and accepting of those who make different choices and have different values than they do.

“The only thing that I can think of to make a difference is for both sides to move in the direction of those who they perceive as their cultural opponent,” he said.

“Instead of teaching our kids that, ‘Oh, that person has tattoos, they must be bad,’ maybe it’s OK if your kid says, ‘That’s a really cool tattoo.’ You can appreciate it and you still haven’t abandoned your values; instead, what you’ve done is shown some appreciation for somebody.”

Constructive communication can’t take place, he said, until people begin to understand where others are coming from – even if they don’t agree.

“Rather than fearing or resenting our neighbors for being different, maybe we ought to embrace them for it,” Hyde said. “This really is an amazing place and there is room enough to share it. I want the people who come here to feel welcome, and anything we can do to facilitate a dialogue, well, I’m all for that."


TOPICS: General Discusssion; Other non-Christian; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: lds; mormon; nonmormons; utah
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To: Regulator

Notice what appears to be US Army Cavalry in the far background guarding the execution site. John D. Lee was one of B. Young’s enforcers when they moved across the US to the Utah “Kingdom of Zion”.


21 posted on 01/29/2015 8:34:48 PM PST by TaMoDee (Go Pack Go! The Pack will be back in 2015!)
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To: Colofornian

I used to live in Pocatello, ID which is about 65% LDS. My observation is that when Mo’s become the majority in an area all of the non-Mo’s become Gentiles and are most definitely discriminated against in business, professional, and social situations. The worst thing is, they don’t even realize that they’re doing it - nor do they care.


22 posted on 01/29/2015 9:10:25 PM PST by 43north (BHO: 50% black, 50% white, 100% RED.)
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To: Colofornian

Is the pope Catholic?


23 posted on 01/30/2015 3:29:53 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Regulator

If you don’t like it in st. George—move to Nevada or any of the other 49 states. Mormons built Utah—and it wasn’t easy. They will do what they want—what do you think? join the LDS or move on.


24 posted on 01/30/2015 4:06:31 AM PST by Forward the Light Brigade (Into the Jaws of H*ll Onward! Ride to the sound of the guns!)
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To: Forward the Light Brigade
join the LDS or move on.


25 posted on 01/30/2015 5:01:04 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Dilbert San Diego
I understand Salt Lake has large non LDS population so the social climate in that city may be very different than that of smaller towns or rural Utah.

This place has a large population OF Mormons!!


26 posted on 01/30/2015 5:04:14 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Regulator; Utah Binger
So its just like any other community. You be polite, dont step on toes, fit in as best you can and shop at all the local stores.

After a while they get used to you and vice versa. You don’t have to convert, a lot of them are Jack Mormons and get caught at the bars like everyone else. Most of these people are hard workin ruralists...farms, ranches, oil rigs, mines...they have a hard time walking the straight and narrow too.

27 posted on 01/30/2015 5:05:47 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie

A non Mormon at a gathering in Southern Utah. John Wesley Powell is the guy on the left with his sleeve dangling. Albumen photograph circa 1872-73.

28 posted on 01/30/2015 7:16:06 AM PST by Utah Binger (Political Razors: Men's Schick, Ladies Schick and Chicken Schick)
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To: Elsie
Non Mormon stole my dog.


29 posted on 01/30/2015 7:22:29 AM PST by Utah Binger (Political Razors: Men's Schick, Ladies Schick and Chicken Schick)
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To: Forward the Light Brigade; Elsie; Utah Binger
Join the LDS or move on

Oooooo, a threat! How skeery!

Hey Junior....you wanna make us all leave the Land of Zion, why doncha step out from behind the curtain, say your name, and tell us how yer gonna do it?

Otherwise dry up and blow away, loudmouth.

30 posted on 01/30/2015 8:26:44 AM PST by Regulator
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To: Utah Binger
Where are they NOW, considering...



 

The gruesome be headings of some 40 Ute corpses in 1850, heads stacked in boxes,
and hung by their long hair from the eves of buildings at Fort Utah,
 has long been ignored, “You didn’t see the Indians beheading the Mormons.”
 
-- Historian Robert Carter

31 posted on 01/30/2015 8:28:36 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Utah Binger

Both quite handsome fellas!


32 posted on 01/30/2015 8:29:21 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Graybeard58
“People who practice this faith and believe this religion are different,”


Amoung the MORMONs chapter 8
 
 
The first thing that struck me was
the sermons Brigham delivered directly
we corralled at night He would declaim
for an hour, and we had to sit around and 
listen. Sometimes he would be followed
by others, and the ranting would be kept up for two or
even three hours.

=======================================================
 
The followers generally seemed to me an ignorant
lot of people, drawn from the lowest classes.  The
religious mania had a decidedly strong grip upon them,
and I believe if these lengthy services had not been
held every day somebody would have been killed.
They would have thought as little about murdering me
as they would one another.
 
==============================================
 
At Laramie we picked up about a dozen people
whom the Mormons had managed to inveigle into join-
ing their community. They had a good hard Xxy to get
me into the fold, and held out as an inducement the bait
of half a dozen wives. I said that was good enough for
me, but I would reserve my decision until later on,
especially as I had matters concerning their welfare and
safety on my mind that were more important for the
moment. So they agreed not to pursue the subject
further, and left me unmolested for quite a considerable
time.
 
=========================================================
 
Had there been an outlet to the Pacific Ocean there
is little doubt in my mind that Brigham would have
proclaimed himself King of Utah, for I had over and
over again heard him discuss the project with some of
his ministering angels.
 
 
====================================================

Now Brigham Young decided to send a party back
to Nebraska, in order to make arrangements for bring-
ing out a large body of the chosen people. Ninety-two
were selected for the purpose, and the old Mexican and
I accompanied them. Brigham asked me to remain,
but I was rather tired of the Latter Day Saints by this
time, and anxious to get back to my squaws and the
old life I could live without any feeling of restraint.

We had a pathetic leave-taking, which was again
the occasion of a lengthy religious ceremony, and I
galloped out of camp with a light heart and a full
pocket, only too glad to think I had got safely away
from this crowd of peculiar people.
 
 
 
===============================================
Chapter XVLI
 
I made my way straight down
to the stream. When the Indians saw me coming all
alone, they came out of the high cane-like rushes, which 
were very tall there, and stood right in my path. I still
went unconcernedly on until I got up to them, when one
of them, a tremendously tall fellow, asked me in broken
English where I was going, and if I was a Mormon.

" Yes, I am a Mormon," I replied, " and I am going
home to Salt Lake City."

" What ward do you live in ? "

" No. 15, just below the Court-house."

I saw at a glance that he was a white man, although
he was painted, and guessed he was one of the fanatical
renegade-destroying angels, whose mission was to kill
every white man not belonging to the sect, and patrticularly
those who were apostates.
====================================================
 
I sauntered leisurely along until I was well clear of
the cane brake, and then I started off at a run, which I
kept up until I had placed a good twenty miles between
Mr. White Chief of the Utes and his band of murdering
rascals. I was not quite satisfied in my mind whether
he might not repent of his leniency, and suddenly develop
a craving for my gun, pistols, and ammunition. As to his
followers, my hair, which was long and wavy, offered an
attraction which made all their mouths water whilst I
was in the camp.

Whether they ever started after me or not, I do not
know. I kept on my erratic course for six days and
nights, and eventually reached a small Mormon settlement
of some ten or fifteen houses on the Bear River. I
put up at a ranche, and stayed there a week, as my legs
were so stiff and swollen, I could hardly move. In fact,
the morning after my arrival I tried to get up, but could
not. I had covered the distance in pretty good time,
considering the country I had passed through, and,
reckoning it over three hundred miles, had done on an
average about sixty miles a day.
 
=========================================
 
During this time old Joshua was always preaching
to me, and trying to convert me to Mormonisn. He
said I could never expect to get along in the world and
prosper so long as I lived in darkness and unbelief

I told him what Two Buck Elk said about the Great
Spirit feeding the birds and the buffaloes, and said I
guessed, no matter what I believed in, I should always
get enough to eat.

He seemed to take the same view that I did when I
first heard Two Buck Elk say this, and pointed out that
a man did not live to eat alone, that he had another
mission to fulfil — to become prosperous, till the soil,
fructify the earth, and a whole lot of other things, which,
boiled down, were reduced to my becoming a Mormon
straight away. He told me that if I did he would
ensure me more work than I could do, in a light, easy
way, and that my life would be one of perpetual happi-
ness and bliss.

« Well, Joshua," I said, " I will think it over and let
you know when I have fully made up my mind one way
or the other." I resolved inwardly that as long as I had
a dollar left I would be independent of the Mormon
crew, whom I heartily despised.
================================================
 
I must candidly confess I saw nothing repulsive or
bad in the Mormon religion. The only thing I objected
to was polygamy — and I was not particularly squeamish
about that, considering my experience with my own
squaws. But what can be tolerated in an Indian cannot
in a white woman — at least, that was the view I took
of it.

I found the Mormons, as a rule, a hard-working class
of people, who thought they were doing right. They
had been gulled by a few smart men like Brigham
Young, Joseph Smith, Hcbcr C. Kimball, Joseph Young
and his brother, Daniel Wells, and a number of others,
who feathered their nests by fattening on their poor
deluded followers.

Brigham Young was certainly the smartest man I
ever saw. If he had been President of the United
States instead of Utah, his name would have been
handed down for generations ; but, like a good many
others, he fell short of what he aimed it.

I have heard him preach more than fifty times, and
I must do him the justice to say he did not go in for
hell and damnation, as many of the other priests did.
His creed was simply — Be kind, good, and just to all
mankind ; take plenty of wives, multiply and replenish
the earth. Teach this to your children, who will be the
only children of God. We are the Latter Day Saints.
Our salvation is ensured.

Out of the tabernacle Brigham was a very sociable
and convivial fellow. He was very pleased to see me
again and to hear that I had at last entered the Church.
He reminded me that ten years of my life had been
wasted, and that if I had taken his advice and done so
when at Laramie I might have occupied by this time
a high position under him, like many of the early
pioneers.

He next inquired what had brought me to Salt
Lake City again, and I told him I had come with the
troops, and that immediately upon my arrival I had
seen the error of my ways, and hastened to receive
absolution upon the first opportunity. I further said
that during the ten long years we had been separated
1 had wished over and over again to be received into
the Church, and that now it had liappcned I was just
as happy as I had before been miserable.

He was pleased to see that my eyes had at length
been opened, and he knew when he first met me on the
Platte that sooner or later I should be received into the
fold. The Great Book said they were to increase and
multiply and replenish the earth, and he hoped I would
settle down and take many wives, and so carry out its
precepts.

I said that was just what I intended, directly I
had decided what I was going to do.
 
=========================================
 
A Gentile hotel had been started in the city, and one
of the waitresses was a good-looking English girl to
whom I was very partial ; we used to go out together



A LOST /DEPUTATION 205

and compare notes about the Mormons. I never told
her that I was one — in fact, I swore I hated them as
heartily as she herself did ; but one Sunday night we
had been out walking, and wandered into a man's
garden, where we got larking about. He sneaked out
and caught us, and, recognising me, reported me to
Brother Godby.

This was a fine thing for my reputation. Here was I,
a psalm-singing goody-goody young Mormon, bowled
out at one go. Away went my good character, and I
stood revealed in all my bare iniquity. I thought to
myself, John, my boy, you had better seek some more
congenial atmosphere before anything more is found
out about you. Accordingly I cast round to find some-
body who was going anywhere, or doing anything,
whom I might accompany and so get away from the
city.

This I knew was no easy matter, for apostates were
well looked after by the destroying angels, and few
who signified their intention of leaving got away safely,
unless under a Government escort. Many men, women,
and children have been butchered trying to escape from
the Mormon Hell, and yet the murders could never be
traced to any individuals. I knew, though, who were the
moving spirits, and these were Porter Rockwell, who
knew me well. Bill Hickman and his son. All Hunting-
ton, Lot Huntington, J. C. Luice, and others. I was
therefore not anxious for it to get wind that I intended
making tracks.
 
=================================
 
Long before daybreak the following morning I was
up, and, bidding a mental adieu to everything around me,
I started off as hard as I could go after the caravan. I
met one or two people I knew in the city, who asked
me where I was going in such a hurry, and I told them I
was carrying some medicine from Brother Godby's to
some one sick.

Arrived at the mouth of Echo Canyon, I stopped for
a moment to take breath, and there, as solemnly as I
had taken it up, I laid Mormonism down for ever. I had
had quite enough of that to last me my lifetime. Turn-
ing round and taking a final look at the city where I
had had as much fun as most men, I put on the steam
and doubled through the canyon as fast as my legs would
carry me.



LINK to https://archive.org/stream/lifeamongamerica00nelsrich/lifeamongamerica00nelsrich_djvu.txt

33 posted on 01/30/2015 8:32:37 AM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Regulator; Elsie

Over here in Mount Carmel, the Mormons of Long Valley show great respect for our activities in bringing a new perspective to the region. They also understand my position on the matter of religion.

Do they talk behind my back? Of course, but have most likely confused me with someone who gives a shit.

http://www.thunderbirdfoundation.org
http://www.thunderbirdfoundation.com/index.cfm/shop/product.cfm?product=349


34 posted on 01/30/2015 8:43:44 AM PST by Utah Binger (Political Razors: Men's Schick, Ladies Schick and Chicken Schick)
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To: Utah Binger; Elsie

That’s beautiful. I luv Mt. Carmel and Southern Utah as anyone would. Never lived there but been through it at least 50 times on my way to or from SLC, flown over the whole area for many hours just touring from the top.

And like I said...living in rural Northern Utah was just fine. People were a bit peculiar...but just people.


35 posted on 01/30/2015 9:04:17 AM PST by Regulator
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To: Dilbert San Diego
They told me that outwardly the Mormon people are very friendly and courteous. But that they are also very aware of who is LDS and who is not. And they always want to know if you are Mormon or what religion you are.

True. We live in the middle of 'em. As someone mentioned here elsewhere, the tip off question is "What Ward are you in?" If you tell 'em "None" or "I'm not Mormon" you can sense the deflectors go up. They are still friendly, but . . .

We did make friends with one elderly couple. The husband died soon after and she was on some hard times. The Church came in and helped her out, but boy, they made her pay for years afterwards in "volunteerism". They ALWAYS had something for that poor woman to do and she kept referring to it as "being called". What got me is when she said that in their working years they had to show the Elder/Bishop their W-2 forms to prove they were tithing their 10%. The Church sure does run their lives to an extent that many here, including me, would rebel.

Hypocrisy is in all religions and they are no different. We went through the border town of Mesquite, NV and stopped at a discount liquor store. The parking lot was loaded with Utah tagged cars. I asked the clerk what was up and he said the all the Mormons come over and stocked up for the weekend. A running joke was that you never asked just one Mormon to go fishing/drinking beer with you as the guy would drain you dry. Ask two along and neither will touch the stuff for fear of being ratted out by the other.

All that being said, every time we went to St. George, even at the height of the recession, the place always had a thriving appearance. Wife and I would ask "Recession? What Recession?". Stores went empty but didn't stay that way long. In fact, the whole state gives you the impression that it is prosperous and well run.

36 posted on 01/30/2015 9:13:51 AM PST by Oatka (This is America. Assimilate or evaporate.)
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Sounds like Switzerland to non Swiss in my time there

I like Utah


37 posted on 01/30/2015 9:20:30 AM PST by wardaddy (glenn beck is a nauseous politically correct conservative on LSD)
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To: Colofornian

As a native on a southern Utah small town, and ex-mormon I can confidently answer the title questions with....

Yes, and no.


38 posted on 01/30/2015 9:22:16 AM PST by colorcountry (The gospel will transform our politics, not vice versa (Romans 12:1,2))
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To: Forward the Light Brigade

I agree

All this whining about discrimination and oppression is libtard talk

We all get how Mormonism is and its past

But it’s not today’s Mormons fault


39 posted on 01/30/2015 9:26:50 AM PST by wardaddy (glenn beck is a nauseous politically correct conservative on LSD)
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To: Utah Binger

And omt now that its quiet on this thread.

I grew up about a mile from Dixon’s house in Tucson.

The view in Cloudbanks and Shadows was also the view out our front door.

My grandparents knew him casually in the 40s; it was a small town then but with many interesting people.

dont think I ever knew about the house at Mt. Carmel - great idea to open it. Have been planning to do that drive someday soon, need to take my kid through the real West. Maybe we’ll stop by, still love Dixon’s work.

It’s the West I remember.


40 posted on 01/30/2015 8:14:08 PM PST by Regulator
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