Bottom line, the building coordinators were saying "no" to a fellow faithful and active member, not a Protestant. You're just scrambling for excuses now that your fish story about holding the wedding in a Mormon chapel has been shown to be unlikely.
why me wrote:Third, you expect the LDS ward to get volunteers to move the chairs, set up tables, organize the electrical equipment for your wedding reception.
Um, no. My own people did all of the setting up and take-down at my reception, and they made sure to leave the room cleaner than they found it. I expected nothing from the ward that hosted us except the keys to the building, which were promptly returned after we were finished.
why me wrote: And was your wedding reception alcohol free and could that be assured to the satisfaction of the Mormon bishop? Probably not. And what about smoking? Do any of your wide range of friends smoke? And where would they be smoking?
Of course it was alcohol-free and smoke-free, bigot. I was a BYU student and the wedding was attended by at least a dozen professors.
why me wrote:who is basically antimormon who is married to a seemlngly inactive husband
I'm not an anti-Mormon and my husband was not and is not inactive. He holds a temple recommend, pays his tithing, and kept the "law of chastity" prior to marriage. Things about life as a Mormon that you know nothing about.
why me wrote:No, Jack, The wards were right to refuse you. Much better to pay for the protestant cultural hall or go to a local organization that has premises for such events. No sponging on the Mormons.
It's a good thing my pastor didn't demonstrate the same bigotry against Mormons as you've demonstrated against Protestants here on this thread. I would have been appalled if he had told me that he didn't trust my husband because he was a Mormon and I should go use Mormon facilities for the wedding ceremony and stop "sponging" on the Assemblies of God.