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They Shoot Mormons, Don't They? Religious Bigotry, alive and well today
Saundra Duffy

Posted on 05/04/2007 5:46:36 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy

They Shoot Mormons, Don't They? Religious bigotry, alive and well today

May 4, 2007 - by Saundra Duffy-Hawkins

“I wouldn’t vote for a Mormon for dogcatcher, much less President of the United States!” There’s a lot of that kind of hateful rhetoric going around since Mitt Romney decided to throw his hat in the ring – as if Mormons are some kind of hideous evil monsters. The loudest anti-Mormon shouts, sad to say, are coming from America’s so-called “Christian right”. How can Mitt Romney hope to get a fair shake in this spiritually polluted atmosphere?

There was another man running for President who faced the same dilemma – John F. Kennedy – only he was the target of anti-CATHOLIC bigotry. In his 1960 speech to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association, JFK said the following: “. . .I believe in an America where religious intolerance will someday end - where all men and all churches are treated as equal - where man has the same right to attend or not attend the church of his choice - where there is no Catholic vote, no anti-Catholic vote, no bloc voting of any kind - and where Catholics, Protestants and Jews, at both the lay and pastoral level, will refrain from those attitudes of disdain and division which have so often marred their words in the past, and promote instead the American ideal of brotherhood.” John F. Kennedy Library & Museum (Speeches, 1960). By the way, if you listen to the audio version of JFK’s speech, you will hear the hurt and frustration in his voice and the unfair treatment surely must have caused many a sleepless night.

Fast forward to 2007 where JFK might as well have been “whistlin’ Dixie”. The hostility toward Mormons today, in my opinion, is even worse than that suffered by JFK. Although it is said that JFK lost about a million votes to religious intolerance, Romney stands to lose even more if the anti-Mormon evangelicals hang together.

According to Media Matters for America - “. . . a Web-based, not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) progressive research and information center dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media” - FOX News is not reporting accurately on the level of evangelical hostility to the Romney run. Media Matters for America points out that among evangelical leaders rejecting Mormons: Shirley and James Dobson (National Day of Prayer and Focus on the Family, respectively), the Southern Baptist Convention (collectively), Pat Robertson (Christian Broadcasting Network), and Dr. D. James Kennedy (Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Florida). “Among many conservative evangelicals – who comprise a significant part of the Republican base – Mormonism is considered an un-Christian cult.” Media Matters for America (2007)

While stumping in Florida, a man in the audience stood up during the Q&A portion and said the following to Romney: “You, sir, you’re a pretender. You do not know the Lord. You’re a Mormon.” Media Matters for America (2007). This is the kind of un-American, disrespectful treatment Mitt Romney will apparently have to endure throughout the entire campaign – as if just being a Mormon is reason enough to open the floodgates for free flow of pent-up hatred and vindictiveness.

For the record, the Mormon bashers know full well that the official name of Romney’s church is “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints” and the members should rightfully be called “members of the LDS Church” but the words “Mormon” and “Mormonism” have an aura of negativity so they prefer to use the “M” word as if it were dirty.

Less than five minutes cruising around the official LDS website (LDS.org) will show anyone who’s interested that the Church is a Christian organization, with Jesus Christ at the Head. There are no paid clergy – all are volunteers. Humanitarian aid is legendary. Members of the LDS Church believe in strong family values; they are patriotic, they are law-abiding upstanding citizens of their community. Many LDS young men right out of high school go on two-year missions – you know, the guys on bikes – and during their mission they don’t date, read newspapers, go to movies or watch TV; but rather they dedicate two years of their lives to serving others. Many women go on missions as well, and couples, only theirs is 18 months in length but the obligations are basically the same. Most members do not shop or go out to eat on Sundays – reminiscent of the good old days when shops and stores were closed in obedience to the Commandment, “Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy”. If they can help it, LDS Church members do not work on Sundays, either, preferring to spend the day at church and with their families. Church members are encouraged to store up a year’s supply of food and water so they will be able to care for their families in the event of an emergency. The LDS Church believes in self-sufficiency and self-reliance but in the event of a financial hardship the Church distributes food and supplies through their welfare (Bishop’s Storehouse) program. Members of the LDS Church do not drink alcohol nor do they use illicit drugs; they do not drink coffee and tea. A Mormon in good standing, therefore, will not be found in a drunken stupor puking her guts out at 3 a.m. anywhere in the world. Furthermore, members of the church are encouraged to dress modestly, be polite and courteous. And members of the LDS Church are faithful tithe payers. Come on, people, what’s not to love?

So what on earth is their beef, the anti-Mormon zealots? Why is there such disdain for the LDS Church and its members? In Hugh Hewitt’s book, “Mormon in the White House?” he states his thesis that the fierce anti-Mormon sentiment among main-stream Christians stems from one or two or all three of the following factors (in order of importance):

1) “It is just too weird.

2) “A Mormon president will supercharge Mormons’ missionary work.

3) “If there is a Mormon in the White House, Salt Lake City will call the shots, at least on the biggest issues.” Hewitt (2007, p. 221-227)

Hugh Hewitt has written an exquisite book about the Romney campaign and overcoming the “Mormon problem.” It’s a good read and I highly recommend it. Of the three problem points listed in the previous paragraph, Hewitt believes – unless some unforeseen blunder destroys his chances – none of the three is insurmountable for Mitt Romney. (Plus, he has the best hair.)

Well, I’m no Hugh Hewitt, not even close; he’s an icon on the conservative radio talk show circuit. Hewitt could talk circles around me (I’ve seen him in action in Sacramento); he’s brilliant; he’s well educated, well read, no doubt a genius, plus he’s kind of cute. I’m basically a “nobody” – an overweight grandma – but after having researched for this paper, I have come to a totally different conclusion as to why there is such in-your-face angst over Romney’s religion of choice: It’s all about money, power and control (in that order). I think they’re (the evangelical religious bigots, that is) scared half to death and are revving up their attacks, not to save souls, but to save their reputations (which if tarnished would lead to financial ruin).

As I said, all one must do is browse around the LDS official web site to see what the LDS Church believes and stands for. Any reasonable person would conclude that Mormons are not evil monsters at all. In fact, they are God fearing, Christ believing, Holy Ghost following people going about doing good. “You will know them by their fruit” and the LDS has plenty of fruit and they are willing to share.

Earlier, I stated that some high-powered ministries have publicly condemned Mormons: Shirley and James Dobson, the Southern Baptist Convention, Pat Robertson, and Dr. D. James Kennedy – just to name a few. There are hoards of others. Sunday after Sunday, preachers, evangelists, reverends and ministers from all Christian denominations pound the pulpit with anti-Mormon rhetoric. I heard the message loud clear when I was a Baptist and when I tiptoed through evangelical/Pentecostal territories. Was I ever miffed when I later learned for myself the Gospel truth about the LDS Church.

Just think about it, please. If Dr. D. James Kennedy, for example, who wrote the book, The Wolves Among Us, were to admit he’d been wrong in labeling the LDS Church a “cult” that leads unwary ignorant people astray (to hell), what would become of his multi-million-dollar ministry? Suffice it to say, there’s big money to be had by sale of books, tapes, CD’s, videos, and other anti-Mormon propaganda, not to mention speaking engagements and world-wide religious crusades. We’re talking trillions, all told. I realize the anti-Mormon aspect of these ministries is but a small portion of the business, but if the truth came out, that they had been using falsehoods about the LDS Church as a cash cow, their entire empires could tumble.

The ABC News program 20/20 aired on March 23, 2007, exposed the lavish lifestyles of some of the top evangelical preachers – million dollar mansions and personal jets. ABC News - 20/20 (2007) (Again, the LDS Church has no paid clergy.)

It’s nothing new. Severe harassment and persecution has been the lot of the LDS Church since it’s inception in 1820 when a 14-year-old boy named Joseph Smith saw visions and communed with heavenly beings. Rather than discuss the spiritual aspects of the LDS Church, however, let’s stick to facts of history. Taken from a college-level early American history textbook, Joseph Smith, upon experiencing the visions and visitations, believed “that God had work for me to do, and that my name should be for good and evil among all nations, kindreds and tongues.” Ayers, Gould, Oshinsky, and Soderlund (2004, p. 292). The textbook continues, “They were met with hostility virtually everywhere they went . . . . As the movement gathered momentum, hundreds of people joined the church; entire congregations of churches of other faiths joined . . .” Ayers, Gould, Oshinsky, and Soderlund (2004, p. 293)

During the dark time of American history when slavery was flourishing and when Native Americans were forced from their lands, the pioneers of the LDS Church also suffered at the hands of unscrupulous politicians, governmental leaders, and angry hate-filled mobs. “In the face of relentless persecution, Joseph Smith, the founder of the church, had led his flock to Illinois. There they had established the town of Nauvoo, which by the mid-1840’s had become the largest city in Illinois with over 15,000 people. . . In June 1844, a mob of non-Mormons broke into the jail where Smith was being held and killed both him and his brother. . .The Mormons abandoned Nauvoo in the spring of 1846 as anti-Mormons pounded the town with cannon, destroying the Great Temple. In a well-coordinated migration, 15,000 Mormons moved in stages to the Great Salt Lake.” Ayers, Gould, Oshinsky, and Soderlund (2004, p. 334-335) Many walked all the way and many died along the way, including innocent babes.

Joseph Smith at one time was tarred and feathered by a mob. No jury, no trial, no judge – and they had planned to castrate him, too. On October 27, 1838, the then governor of Missouri issued an “extermination order”: “The Mormons must be treated as enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the State if necessary . . .” Far West History (n.d.) Please note that the order called for exterminating “Mormons” making no distinction between men, women and children, and indeed women and children were subject to the extermination order.

In an event known in LDS history as “the Haun’s Mill Massacre”, precipitated by the extermination order, 30 to 40 LDS families were surprised by some 200 to 250 militia. After the smoke cleared, seventeen LDS people lay dead including a ten-year-old boy. Thirteen LDS members were wounded including a woman and a seven-year-old boy. “A few Missourians returned the next day and took plunder.” LDS FAQ (n.d.) No Missouri militiamen were killed but three were wounded. Just a few years earlier, the LDS folk who died that day had been members of other churches - Congregational or Methodist or Baptist or Presbyterian.

In l976, Governor Bond of Missouri officially rescinded the extermination order and presented apologies for the “unfortunate developments” it caused. Quoting from Governor Bond’s Executive Order: “WHEREAS, Governor Boggs’ order clearly contravened the rights to life, liberty, property and religious freedom as guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States, as well as the Constitution of the State of Missouri; and . . . Expressing on behalf of all Missourians our deep regret for the injustice and undue suffering rescind Executive Order Number 44 dated October 27, 1838, issued by Governor W. Boggs. . .” Far West History (n.d.) The individuals who harassed, abused, and even murdered Mormons in cold blood were never tried for their crimes.

I read Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail and it really touched my heart. There he was, suffering for the Lord in jail, and these religious leaders with highfalutin titles on the outside wrote an open letter (“A Call for Unity”) in which they criticize King’s tactics and basically blame King for the racial turmoil of the time. Though you can tell King is upset and hurt by the attack – made worse because he’s stuck in jail and can’t confront the religious leaders face-to-face – his response is gentle genius. “I wish you had commended the Negro sit-inners and demonstrators of Birmingham for their sublime courage, their willingness to suffer, and their amazing discipline in the midst of great provocation. One day the South will recognize its real heroes.” Barnet and Bedau (2005, p. 881)

King has a few choice words for the Church, too: “If today’s church does not recapture the sacrificial spirit of the early church, it will lose its authenticity, forfeit the loyalty of millions, and be dismissed as an irrelevant social club with no meaning for the twentieth century. Every day I meet young people whose disappointment with the church has turned into outright disgust.” Barnet and Bedau (2005, p. 880)

King signs off with “Yours for the cause of Peace and Brotherhood”.

There’s an eerie commonality between what JFK and MLK endured at the hands of the religious bigots of their day and what Mitt Romney is facing today. I hope and pray that Romney will be able to fend off these undeserved attacks from the religious hypocrites with the same grace, dignity and God-inspired resolve displayed by the other two.

A few popular bumper stickers read: “Honk if you love Jesus” and “Christians aren’t perfect, just forgiven” or “Jesus is my co-pilot”. Yet, apparently, these same bumper-sticker Christians are the ones waging war against Mitt Romney’s run for the Presidency solely on the basis of his chosen faith in a Church that bears the name of the Savior of the world.

References

ABC News - 20/20 (2007). Philanthropic donations come from your heart, but where do they end up? Ex-money manager says "enough!" to secretive Christian Ministry spending. Glenn Ruppel & John Stossel. United States: ABC News.

Ayers, E. L., Gould, L. L., Oshinsky, D. M., & Soderlund, J. R. (2004). American Passages - a history of the United States - Volume I: to 1877 (2nd ed.). Belmont, California: Thomson/Wadsworth.

Barnet, S., & Bedau, H. (2005). Letter from Birmingham Jail. Current Issues and Enduring Questions - a guide to critical thinking and argument, with readings (7th ed., pp. 867-882). Boston and New York: Bedford/St. Martin's.

Far West History. (n.d.). The Extermination Order and how it was rescinded. Retrieved April 28, 2007, from http://www.jwha.info/mmff/exorder.htm

Hewitt, H. (2007). A Mormon in the White House? 10 things every American should know about Mitt Romney. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, Inc.

John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum. (1960, September 12). Address of Senator John F. Kennedy to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association. Retrieved April 22, 2007, from http://www.jfklibrary.org

Lds Faq. (n.d.). What was the Haun's Mill Massacre? Retrieved April 28-2007, 2004, from Brigham Young University Web Site: http://ldsfaq.byu.edu/view.asp?q=57

Media Matters for America. (2007). Fox News whitewashes evangelical hostility to Romney's faith. Retrieved April 22, 2007, from http://mediamatters.org/items/printable/200702280002


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: boggsforgovernor; cuespookymusic; election; lds; mormon; mormons; romney; whitesalamanderblues
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To: colorado tanker
I’m a Protestant, but I’m not any more fond of Mormon-bashing than I am of Catholic-bashing, both are just wrong. In a nation that is supposed to adhere to the Second Amendment, we ought to be prepared to vote for someone who fits our values and stand on the issues, regardless of their faith.

Are you consistent, then? Would you say: "In a nation that is supposed to adhere to the Second Amendment, we ought to be prepared to vote for someone who fits our values and stand on the issues, regardless of their faith--OR LACK OF IT."

If the content and direction of faith is 100% irrelevant to who's in the Oval Office, then I guess you and many others in this thread wouldn't care if an atheist was in office--as long as he/she shared many of your prominent values. Correct?

181 posted on 05/04/2007 9:21:49 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: hellinahandcart
Have you informed the Mormon Tabernacle Choir?

LOL :)

182 posted on 05/04/2007 9:23:00 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: Boston Blackie
From your link: We unite to lift our hearts and open our minds to a larger reality; To accept, support and encourage one another; To seek the wisdom in all religions; To cherish and sustain the web of life; And to strive for justice, compassion and peace. This congregation welcomes all persons without regard to age, gender, sexual orientation, race, disability or other class of exclusion. Our building is not yet wheelchair accessible, but we are working toward that goal.

Somehow I don't believe John Adam belief was this.

He believed that Jesus was the ONLY way to get to the Father, and that the Bible was the Word of God.

More from that site:

They hate liberated women and all that symbolizes them. They hate it when women compete with men in the workplace, when they decide when or whether they will bear children, when they show the independence of getting abortions. They hate changes in laws that previously gave men more power over women. They hate the wide range of sexual orientations and lifestyles that have always characterized human societies. They hate homosexuality. They hate individual freedoms that allow people to stray from the rigid sort of truth they want to constrain all people. They hate individual rights that let others slough off their simple certainties

United States Torture Must End Support of the United Farm Workers' Boycott of Gallo Wines Support for the Millennium Development Goal One: Ending Extreme Poverty End Crimes Against Humanity in Darfur, Sudan Defending and Expanding Freedom of the Airwaves A Call for Support and a Fair Trial for Dr. Sami Al-Arian

Not the same, I tell ya.
183 posted on 05/04/2007 9:27:13 AM PDT by Delphinium
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To: Lurking in Kansas
This anti-Mormon/Romney issue is being fanned by the left, not the right, as a means to divide the GOP.

To "fan" a division means you have to recognize an underlying faultline is already present. So, you should have added the qualifier, "further" divide the GOP. (I mean it's not like the GOP is united in presidential candidates already, right?).

It's the pro-Romney folks who want to pretend that there is no division, and to just right it off to "bigots" and "loonies."

And this way, they are acting like the "left," whose philosophy is "all we have to do is label somebody in such a way and we can effectively marginalize them."

Shame on so-called "conservatives" to use the left's tactics!

184 posted on 05/04/2007 9:28:40 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: tabsternager
Any religion that teaches that Jesus was a created being, the brother of Satan, and that the members of that religion themselves will become gods who control their own universe someday is definitely not Christian no matter what’s in their “title” and can’t be compared with Catholicism, which isn’t a cult.

It always strikes me that the LDS general authorities and LDS grass roots can be so vigorous to distance themselves from fundamental LDS polygamists in the Southern part of Utah/No AZ--all over (a) polygamy; and (b) which prophet to follow...

...But Christians from historic traditions are supposed to look the other way when deeper and more significant differences are identified between us and LDS.

Yet another inconsistency that shows a lack of intellectual integrity.

185 posted on 05/04/2007 9:33:21 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: Colofornian
If the content and direction of faith is 100% irrelevant to who's in the Oval Office, then I guess you and many others in this thread wouldn't care if an atheist was in office--as long as he/she shared many of your prominent values. Correct?

Sorry, that's a straw-man. As there are very few pro-life athiests, this is very, very unlikely to happen.

186 posted on 05/04/2007 9:36:18 AM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: Colofornian
To "fan" a division means you have to recognize an underlying faultline is already present. So, you should have added the qualifier, "further" divide the GOP.

Point taken.

187 posted on 05/04/2007 9:45:56 AM PDT by Lurking in Kansas (Nothing witty here... move on.)
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To: Delphinium
From your link: We unite to lift our hearts and open our minds to a larger reality; To accept, support and encourage one another; To seek the wisdom in all religions; To cherish and sustain the web of life; And to strive for justice, compassion and peace. This congregation welcomes all persons without regard to age, gender, sexual orientation, race, disability or other class of exclusion. Our building is not yet wheelchair accessible, but we are working toward that goal.

Somehow I don't believe John Adam belief was this.

I agree...that covenant was adopted in 1991 according to their website. The church was founded in 1639. It is the church John and Abigail Adams attended when at home.

How it has changed over the years is another story.

188 posted on 05/04/2007 9:47:15 AM PDT by Boston Blackie
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To: Saundra Duffy
They Shoot Mormons, Don't They? Religious Bigotry, alive and well today

This is my paper. Copyright 2007.

What class was it in, "How to use hyper-emotional hyperbolic rhetoric to play the victim's role"????

189 posted on 05/04/2007 9:47:56 AM PDT by needlenose_neely
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To: greyfoxx39

Where did the author of the thread go? This seems strange.


190 posted on 05/04/2007 9:49:45 AM PDT by Pan_Yans Wife (Life isn't fair. It's just fairer than death, that's all.--William Goldman)
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To: Diamond
I think he founded Mormonism just to give him a justification to have sex with many women.

It's hard to know whether that was in his mind at the beginning....

If it wasn't, it didn't take ol' Joe long to thunk it up.

191 posted on 05/04/2007 9:52:05 AM PDT by needlenose_neely
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To: Saundra Duffy; cookcounty; wintertime; Paulus Invictus; P-Marlowe; tabsternager; GrandEagle; ...
antimormon

Can we stop with this "antimormon" labeling?

I mean the Book of Mormon says there are only two churches--either the one belonging to Jesus Christ (which LDS say is their church alone) or the one that is "the church of the devil" (every other church).

So do Evangelicals, Protestants, RC, Eastern Orthodox always go around saying that the Book of Mormon is "anti-evangelical?" "anti-Protestant?" "anti-Catholic?" etc

The New Testament paints the most wonderful picture of Jews--the fact that the Son of God was willing to be one.

But it also paints a number of negative portrayals...from the way it highlights Judas, the elders, the chief priest, the scribes, the Pharisees to the way Stephen summarized them prior to be stoned to his death by these very same folks. (And then we have Saul/Paul, who gives us both sides)

That doesn't mean that the New Testament or early church is an "anti-Jew" document (in fact the bulk of the early church was Jewish). It is very much "pro-Jewish" because it has at its goal a spiritual exodus for that people group.

The fact is that a decent make-up of the Evangelical/Protestant church is either ex-Mormon or are descendents of Mormons. That doesn't automatically make these folks "anti-Mormons" when they speak up against the theology and practices of the LDS church. Like the NT does re: the Jews, these ex-Mormons and descendents of Mormons tend to give realistic praiseworthy assessments of LDS, but likewise negative ones as well.

And just because Apollos would go into the Synogogue in the book of Acts and vigorously debate the Jews did not make Apollos an "anti-Jew."

Just because God contends against even His people at times doesn't make God anti-humanity. Just because God judged the Israelites and sought reformation and renewal did not make God "anti-Jew."

Once again, we have some folks using the Left's tactics--to simply label someone and ostracize them.

192 posted on 05/04/2007 9:53:29 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: Pan_Yans Wife
Where did the author of the thread go? This seems strange.

A weekend junket to Kolob?

193 posted on 05/04/2007 9:56:37 AM PDT by needlenose_neely
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To: colorado tanker
As there are very few pro-life athiests, this is very, very unlikely to happen.

First of all, "very few" doesn't equal zero. Secondly, as an example, over 20% of self-id'd homosexuals voted for Pres. Bush. You can't stereotype every atheist or every homosexual according to your pre-conceived idea of what every atheist believes. You can speak of generalities and be generically true. That doesn't make it absolutely so.

You make it a "straw man" only because you choose to give no weight to what a minority of folks within a certain identity trait might believe and practice.

Just because most Mormons don't practice polygamy doesn't mean we won't one day have a polygamist Mormon run for public office somewhere. (Oh wait a minute...I guess there are certain mayors & city council members who already qualify under that description)

194 posted on 05/04/2007 9:59:01 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: Colofornian
So, are you consistent?

Yep. I vote for someone based on their position on the issues and their track record.

195 posted on 05/04/2007 9:59:19 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: MEGoody
Yep. I vote for someone based on their position on the issues and their track record.

So a person's "track record" as let's say, a Satanist or Wicca advanced witch wouldn't really enter into your consideration, because that's "religious" and not "policy" or "public persona."

196 posted on 05/04/2007 10:13:00 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: Boston Blackie

“You have to be kidding....there was a hatred for Catholics and especially Irish Catholics in Massachusetts to the point where jobs ads were posted with “no Irish need apply” in newspapers and at the hiring companies.”

Urban myth.

http://www.amren.com/mtnews/archives/2005/03/ano_irish_need.php


197 posted on 05/04/2007 10:13:15 AM PDT by GovernmentIsTheProblem (Capitalism is the economic expression of individual liberty. Pass it on.)
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To: Colofornian
So a person's "track record" as let's say, a Satanist or Wicca advanced witch wouldn't really enter into your consideration, because that's "religious" and not "policy" or "public persona."

Oh, their track record would include personal things, such as do they sacrifice chickens during their religious ceremonies. But merely being an atheist, a satanist or a Wiccan wouldn't cause me to not vote for that person. It would be what they do with that belief that counts.

198 posted on 05/04/2007 10:14:55 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: Saundra Duffy

As they might say in Jamaica,

Romney is a Moron, mon.


199 posted on 05/04/2007 10:18:16 AM PDT by GovernmentIsTheProblem (Capitalism is the economic expression of individual liberty. Pass it on.)
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To: Colofornian
Just because most Mormons don't practice polygamy doesn't mean we won't one day have a polygamist Mormon run for public office somewhere.

Oh, good grief. I guess you stand squarely in the basher camp.

200 posted on 05/04/2007 10:19:59 AM PDT by colorado tanker
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