sock puppet wrote:I do think it is going to far. Mormonism has racist teachings, that's clear. However, that does not mean every 'devout' Mormon ascribes to those racist views.
Romney, and his parents, have a long history of having taken rather liberal views vis-à-vis Mormonism's teachings. So I think that it is a non sequitur to say that because Romney is a Mormon he is therefore a racist.
Whether Romney is or is not a racist is a question that does not follow necessarily from his religious affiliation, even if he is affiliated with COJCOLDS and its has racists teachings, not only in its past but in its current, correlated materials now available on the LDS.org website.
I agree. I don't think it's fair to call someone a "racist" because they belong to an organization that maintains or used to maintain racist policies. Even if they enforce those policies as part of a leadership position within the church and don't verbally denounce them.
I think that the Romneys did exactly what they needed to do to bring about change in the LDS church. Over at LDS & Evangelical Conversations, my friend Eric (who is LDS) explained it better than I could:
Eric @ LDS & Evangelical Conversations wrote:My reaction: Romney has nothing to apologize for, or to be more precise, I’m not aware of anything in the public record that suggests he has anything to apologize for in this area. (For what it’s worth, I say this as someone who has no intent of supporting Romney for president, and also as someone who believes that the policy developed as a result of the racist culture at the time.)
It’s easy with 20/20 hindsight to say that Romney should have done this before 1978, or he should have done that, that it’s not enough that before 1978 he hoped for a change in church policy and rejoiced when it happens. But I see nothing in the record to suggest he was in a position to bring change in the church policy, nor that he didn’t act in accordance with his stated beliefs that blacks are God’s children as much as white persons are. We all have to choose our battles, and I see no need to fault Romney for living out his faith as he did and not choose institutional racism as his battle.
It makes sense to assume that Mitt’s views on race were shaped by his father, George, who, we’ve been told, openly welcomed the 1978 revelation. If I had been in a position in the 1960s and ’70s to advise George Romney on how he could change the church’s policy, I would have advised him do to exactly what he did: He was an outspoken supporter of civil rights at a time where being so wasn’t universally accepted in the Republican Party, and he was criticized for his role by politicians in his own party as well as by some in the LDS church hierarchy. Any objective observer would say that changing public perspectives on race are ultimately what led to the 1978 revision/revelation, and George Romney played a small part in that. I know of nothing that indicates Mitt Romney didn’t share his father’s values against racial prejudice.
I think it would be wise for Romney to put some distance between himself and his religion's racial history by stating unambiguously that he thinks the policy/doctrine on blacks was wrong (as Huntsman did). But I don't think it's fair to call him a racist. That he was a 30 year-old in the LDS church at the time is hardly evidence enough of that.