smac97 wrote:Melissa Harris-Lacewell, a blogress who by day teaches politics and African-American studies at Princeton University, defends Barack Obama's "spiritual mentor" with what she must think is a clever analogy:
I never thought I would say this, but I miss Mitt Romney.
After three full days of having to interpret, explain and apologize for Reverend Jeremiah Wright I am feeling a little religiously defensive. So I started fantasizing how different this would be going down if Mitt Romney were still challenging John McCain for the Republican nomination.
Instead of us Obama supporters sweating, Romney and his supporters would be fielding calls all day to explain Mormonism, polygamy and the relationship of Romney's faith to the cult compound in Texas. Does Mr. Romney believe that 14 year-old girls should marry? Does Mr. Romney plan to take additional wives in order to fulfill the moral requirements of his religion? If not why has Mr. Romney stayed affiliated and raised his children in a church with whom he so vehemently disagrees?
Yeah, Yeah, we know he gave some big speech about this issue earlier in the campaign, but how does he respond to what those women with the long skirts and weird hairdos said on the Today Show this morning? . . . Maybe a little black liberation theology would have looked tame next to the FLDS.
Harris-Lacewell claims that her own mother is a lapsed Mormon, which, if true, makes the professor's ignorance rather stunning. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints did originally sanction polygamy, but you have to get up pretty early in the Mormon for that. As LDS Church Web site notes, the church banned polygamy in 1890, "and any member adopting this practice is subject to losing his or her membership in the Church."
The FLDS, to which Harris-Lacewell refers, is the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a group that split with the Mormons precisely because of the latter's rejection of polygamy. Were Romney the nominee, his foes might well try to suggest that his LDS membership somehow puts him in league with the FLDS. But they would be arguing in bad faith.
Since Harris-Lacewell brought up the comparison of Mormonism to "black liberation theology," it's worth noting that early Mormons suffered persecution at the hands of their neighbors in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Missouri and Illinois. They ultimately settled in Utah in 1847, and their abandonment of polygamy 43 years later was a price they paid for integration into American society.
It was just about as long ago--44 years this summer--that America took its most definitive step in ensuring equality for blacks, the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Progress toward integration has been uneven since then, and the antagonistic attitude toward America of black leaders like Jeremiah Wright is arguably the greatest remaining hindrance.
Aptly put.
-Smac
Hmmm. Very interesting. Smac, apparently, is placing all the blame for "lack of integration" on Black people. I wonder why that is? Certainly, part of it must have to do with sensitivity over Romney's defeat in the election. Check out this posting from "Obiwan"
obiwan wrote:What's further different is that Romney never sat in a pue with a Bishop for 20 years who spued anti-American and bigoted statements the entire time.
Indeed, the Force is not so strong with him.
jaybear wrote:Not so fast.
Romney didn't just sit in the pews, Romney spent two years of his life recruiting members into a religion organization with overt racist practices, when he could have been serving his country at a time of war.
Obama denounced Wright's statements. Has Mitt ever denounced any of the racist statements made by men he considers God's prophets, including Brigham Young who said that slavery was a divine institution. Well he did say that polygamy was just awful. But did he denounce Smith for introducing this vile practice to teenage girls.
See, its easy to slam people by association, instead of attacking what they actually say and believe.
D'oh! Later, kawikadave, who has expressed interest in sodomy in the past, pops in with this post:
I heard an interesting comparison last night. The speaker said that "FLDS are to Mormons what Rev. Wright is to black churches", implying that the Trinity Baptist church where Rev. Wright preached was extremely radical, home to "black liberation theology" and not representative of black churches in general - a fringe group with fringe sermons and preaching.
I thought Jaybear's comment was interesting...
"Obama denounced Wright's statements."
Obama said he was offended, but offended by what? Wright was saying the same stuff for 20 years? What did Obama say in his famous speech? "I can no more disown Rev. Wright than I can disown the black community."
Interesting, interesting, interesting...
Gee, what's so "interesting" about that, Dave?
Later, DCP rather stupidly inserts himself into the fray:
The Good Professor wrote:It's one thing to ask that Obama distance himself from the political opinions of a radical pastor, but quite another to demand that Romney effectively distance himself from his faith altogether. The prophethood of Brigham Young and Joseph Smith is central to Mitt Romney's religious beliefs in a way that, I presume (or, at least, hope), the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's opinions about 9/11, the Arab/Israeli conflict, the origin and spread of AIDS, and the criminality of the United States government, etc., are not central to the faith of Barack Obama. Moreover, Joseph Smith's and Brigham Young's attitudes toward race and, even, in very major ways, toward women, were not nearly so far from the American mainstream of their time as Reverend Wright's political opinions seem to be from mainstream American opinions in the twenty-first century.
Wha? No one, so far as I am aware, has ever suggested that Romney "distance himself from his faith altogether." Rather, the request was made concerning certain now-defunct doctrines, such as the ban on Blacks holding the priesthood, or polygamy.
Anyways, DCP carries on in this (apparent) smear campaign against Obama:
There appears to be nothing in Governor Romney's extensive record in business, the Olympics, and politics, to suggest that he favors either discrimination against blacks or sexual relations with teenage girls, and, consequently, there appear to be no relevant implications of his Mormonism for public policy in these regards. (If you have any evidence indicating that he would favor imposing an American apartheid, or polygynous marriages for early adolescent girls, perhaps you can share it.)
By contrast, Senator Obama's public record is strikingly thin and his oratory, though grand, is decidedly vague (e.g., "Change you can believe in," and "We are the change we've been hoping for"). Consequently, a nation that contemplates elevating him from obscurity to the presidency in one fell swoop has to search for possible clues as to what he believes and what he would likely do. if Senator Obama shares Reverend Wright's views about 9/11, policy toward Israel and Hamas, the criminality of U.S. foreign policy, the racism of the "US of KKK A," the deliberate and official American invention of the HIV virus "as a means of genocide against people of color," and etc., those views will have definite implications for his policy decisions. And if he doesn't share them, it's legitimate to wonder why he continued to sit in the pews listening to Reverend Wright express them for twenty years.
Again: Why is it that Romney should be given a free pass, while Obama's feet ought to be held to the fire?
Daniel Peterson wrote: It would have been an easy thing for Senator Obama to quietly move from the Trinity United Church of Christ (sometimes described as the most radical major black church in America) to some other church. He would not have been obliged to surrender his Christianity or his Protestantism to have done so. For Mitt Romney to have surrendered his Mormonism, however, would have been a much more fundamental shift.
Wow! Just change his entire religion? And that's supposed to be "no big deal"? The hypocrisy here is staggering. Later, DCP begins to spiral completely out of control:
In suggesting that Mitt Romney was both a racist and a coward, you are tarring tens of thousands of roughly contemporary Mormon missionaries with the same brush, including me. I'm somewhat younger than Governor Romney, but not sufficiently so to escape your proposed slander. I flatly deny it. You are also suggesting that millions of contemporary Mormons were racists. In that, you include most of my family, my friends, and the families of my friends. There is, however, no evidence that the Mormons of that period were more racist than contemporary non-Mormons of comparable socio-economic status, educational level, and region. In fact, as Armand Mauss has demonstrated, there is considerable evidence to the contrary.
Here's a question: Has Obama ever advised any young people to avoid interracial marriage, as DCP and countless other TBMs have done?
Later, the critic called Bach shows up to offer this trenchant observation:
Bach wrote:DCP wrote:It's one thing to ask that Obama distance himself from the political opinions of a radical pastor, but quite another to demand that Romney effectively distance himself from his faith altogether. The prophethood of Brigham Young and Joseph Smith is central to Mitt Romney's religious beliefs in a way that, I presume (or, at least, hope), the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's opinions about 9/11, the Arab/Israeli conflict, the origin and spread of AIDS, and the criminality of the United States government, etc., are not central to the faith of Barack Obama.
I agree, but I see different implications for this than you. I think it's more troubling, that it reflects more poorly on Romney's inner psychology, that the worrisome aspects of his church are fundamental to his faith, and not merely happenstantially related, as is the case with Obama.
(For the record, Obama has been pretty clear about his (centrist) views on 9/11, Hamas, and the history of race relations in America, so there's no apparent need to deduce it from his personal associations.)
In other words: DCP, smac, kawikadave and others on the thread are quite guilty of engaging in smear tactics. They are all so hypersensitive to the connections which are endlessly drawn between polygamy and the LDS Church (among other things), that they cannot help but tar others when the opportunity arises. Indeed, the wounds inflicted on them in the wake of Romney's defeat are still raw.
In any case, it is perhaps best to reflect upon these questions, offered up by former scoutmaster kawikadave:
Thinking people, like yourself, should ask themselves questions like these:
- Would I willingly attend a church where statements like these are EVER preached from the pulpit?
- Would I ask a man who believes and preaches these things to officiate at my wedding and baptize my children?
- Would I consider the man who believes and preaches these things to be my spiritual mentor?
Those seem like reasonable questions.
I wonder: Has good ol' Dave asked himself these questions?