Jason Bourne wrote:That is right. Thus my point about Mormonism is fair game for religious bigotry.
Don't get me wrong: I think there is a not-so-fine-line between "religious bigotry" and "significant concerns."
Using a person's religion as an excuse to dismiss and/or ridicule him or her counts as religious bigotry. It is unfortunate that Mormons are subject to this, but what can I say, the cold reality is that many people remain comfortable being bigoted toward those minorities whom they deem to be unable to effectively fight back. Is it wrong? Yes. But it is reality? Yes.
On the other hand, wishing to get the facts about a little-understood minority, religious or otherwise, is NOT bigotry, since the person's intent is to understand, not dismiss or ridicule.
So comments such as we see in the opening post of Rollo's thread are morally bankrupt, methinks. HOWEVER, if someone knows about a Mormon's temple vows to consecrate everything to "the Kingdom of God," which of course equals the LDS church for all intents and purposes, it is NOT bigotry to inquire into the likelihood of a Mormon president using his power to advance the LDS agenda at the expense of the American people at large.
Plus, the baptists don't (to my knowledge) have an overarching figurehead whose dictates they are expected to obey. Mormons, on the other hand, are constantly taught and exhorted to "follow the prophet, follow the prophet, follow the prophet," so I think a Mormon potential president will naturally garner more questions
vis-a-vis his religious devotion.
So, mere concerns about and inquiries into Romney's Mormonism do not necessarily or always equal "bigotry."
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"
--Louis Midgley