February 2008

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Former Az Gov. Evan Mecham dies at age 83

A former aide says Evan Mecham, a millionaire automobile dealer who briefly served as Arizona’s governor before being removed from office by impeachment conviction in 1988, died Thursday. He was 83 . . .

Gov. Mecham’s brief tenure was marred by a quick series of PR gaffes, ethical problems, and a long fostering of political enemies.

“I don’t think [impeachment] should have happened,” [succeeding governor] Mofford says now, remembering Mecham as a “wonderful” if misunderstood man who treated her with dignity at the most difficult time in both their lives.

Some members of the state’s political tribes remain less forgiving, though time and the former governor’s long illness have softened views of the man denounced in 1986 as “an ethical pygmy” by fellow Mormon and onetime state Senate President Stan Turley, who took exception to Mecham’s rough-and-tumble campaign style.

Even some leaders of the impeachment effort now say they harbored reservations about unseating Mecham but were powerless to stop it as his own combative nature and his unwillingness to make peace with political rivals fanned the flames. But one of his chief prosecutors in the 1988 Senate impeachment trial is resolute in his estimation that the historic act was necessary.

He was probably best known nationally for temporarily revoking the MLK holiday in Arizona.

Then Mecham rescinded the state holiday honoring the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., saying his predecessor, Democrat Bruce Babbitt, had illegally enacted it and that the issue deserved a public vote. The King holiday imbroglio prompted public protests and, eventually, a national convention boycott. By March 1987, a recall campaign began taking shape against Mecham.

I had not heard of this:

Republic editorial cartoonist Steve Benson’s gibes so angered Mecham and his supporters that some local Mormons sought the intervention of Benson’s grandfather, then the president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The cartoonist eventually left the church, in part over differences he’d had with it over Mecham’s coverage.

Rest in peace.

22 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | 2 comments

Mormon Magz
Highlights and insights from LDS Church magazines

It’s a Ladybug Life . . .
An average American wife, mom, student, with lots and lots to talk about! Politics, current events, family life, values, letters to the editor, and even some LDS history research papers!

The 9th Ward
A humorously offbeat glimpse into the LDS world; Mormon life unplugged.
New LDS themed comic stips and gags created by Rick and Ryan Goldsberry. Updated with new jokes weekly.

The J-Viewpoint
A blog of my viewpoints I wish I could tell the world.
Viewpoint on the mormon teen life

A Band of Christians
We are three Mormon brothers answering questions we have received about Mormon doctrine and practice. We also are following news stories from across the world and posting comments from small college newspapers to the major media outlets.

Mormon Miscellaneous Worldwide Talk Show
Episodes of Mormon Miscellaneous, a talk show on Mormon history, scripture, doctrine and many controversial topics, by LDS host, Van Hale, now in its 28th year. All points of view are welcomed.


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I don’t know if I missed the announcement, but MormonTimes.com is live after having been announced last month.  It looks nice.  

22 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | 1 comment

Welcome Deseret News readers in search of new Mormon blogs.  

Just to explain why there is the (unseemly) mix of new blogs here with LDS politics and other items:  I manage two blogs.  A Soft Answer is my personal blog where I mostly focus on politics and related items from a Mormon perspective.   

On most weekdays, I also post links here on ASA to blogs that I have just added on my other site, LDS and Mormon Blogs.  There I try to list all the LDS-themed blogs that are out in the blogosphere as well as any Mormon bloggers I can find, regardless of their subject matter.  

Unlike blog aggregators, like Mormon Archipelago, LDSelect, and Mormon Blogs which post the latest updates to selected blogs, LDS & Mormon Blogs merely lists links to any blog that has submitted a link. The blogospehere of Mormon blogs is affectionately known as the Bloggernacle.

If you have a link you would like to submit, please fill out this form.

You can subscribe to all updates of news blogs via email or through a RSS feed with this LDS and Mormon Blogs link.

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Congress scores another one for religious (tv-watching) freedom. Sen. Hatch gets the NFL to let churches show the Super Bowl.

The commissioner sent Hatch a response on Tuesday that said the league would have no problem with “live showings - regardless of screen size - of the Super Bowl” so long as the event was free and held in a building normally used by the religious organization.

“I am grateful that this accommodation was made to allow the NFL to protect its copyrighted material, while respecting the interests of churches,” Hatch said in a statement. “Although the practice is uncommon in Utah, Super Bowl parties can be very beneficial for all involved.”

21 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | 6 comments

Beeswax (not yours)
My reviews: ” If you read just one Molly Mormon Mommy blog tonight, make it this one!” and “Her sharp tongue and active inner life belie the tedium of her housewife existence in that brain-baking suburban kitty litter.” Yeah, I don’t get it either.

Pixels in a Dark Room
Inside the Camera of a Mormon Photoblogger

Circle Cube Studio
Digital Media Artist Blog, features portfolio of works and tutorials. Mainly new media topics in design and technology (actionscript, flash, css, javascript, html…

The Mullins Family

Defining Faith as a Latter-day Saint
This blog is intended for the gathering of personal definitions of faith based on life as a Latter-day Saint, framed in the context of ever-increasing dialogue about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

BecomingOne
The Multiple Meditations of a Mormon Mum of Many.

A Soldier Finds Faith
A Soldier on his way to Iraq, finds faith in Jesus Christ!


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My Photos
A day in the life

My Food Blog
My attempt at trying to cook haha :D

The New England Advocate
Some general thoughts about life’s idiosyncracies, as well as trying to be a defender of the faith

Understanding Light
How my religion effects my life, and discussion of scriptures and gospel themes.

The Beckman Blog

McGhie Meanderings
Here’s a great chance to learn how not to parent from some of the best poor parents there are — us.


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Mo’ Boy Blog has a very useful compilation of Mormon new media resources

20 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

CoolestFamilyEver on “Outsourcing The Family“:

We have to be careful how much we delegate to others, however. It seems that these days, we expect others to take care of far too many things that were once the domain of the family. We send our children to schools expecting them to learn without our help. We send them to church to learn positive morals and good social behavior without reinforcing those values at home. Some families even unnecessarily delegate the basic task of spending time with our children to daycare centers and caretakers.

20 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | 2 comments

Avoid a “fast-mood mentality” with exercise.

20 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

To Run and not be Weary
One “mormon” girl’s journey to lose weight and be able to “run and not be weary, walk and not faint.”

A Liberal Mormon
Advocacy of modern political liberalism from the perspective of an active Mormon.

The Life and Times of Della Hill
The potporri of my life.
Pics, jokes, puzzles, inspirational thoughts, and my daily life.

Foods!
I cook it. You drool.

Sandra’s Little Thoughts
“Let love abound and find expression in our actions. I extend my love to every one of you.” Gordon B. Hinckley Ensign November 2000

Success in Business and Family
Success in Business and in Family from a Work at Home Mom of Eight. Focusing on the things that matter, with tips for business success, online business success without the spirit of gambling, and absolute integrity in all your work. Even a Frumpy Haus Frau can get it right!


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Another one of society’s great institutions is coming to an end.  Snelgrove Ice Cream closing in March.

[A] research and development team will determine whether any Snelgrove flavors will be transferred to the Dreyer’s line.

My grandma always had Burnt Almond Fudge.  Please keep it.

19 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Evangelical backlash for not embracing Romney?

This is commonly known as being hoisted by one’s own petard. The problem the Religious Right had in this primary was the hang-up over religion, which their movement had avoided for most of its period of influence. In the end, their leaders couldn’t see past religion to policy, and that left Romney twisting in the wind . . .

When they finally engaged with Romney, they liked his agenda and his ability to organize. Pat Robertson endorsed Rudy Giuliani, but most evangelical leaders lined up behind Romney, but refused to support Romney rather than just attack everyone else. They could not bring themselves to explain why Romney’s Mormonism shouldn’t matter, and indeed emphasized their analysis of it as a non-Christian religion, something Mormons hotly dispute. They lost sight of the political agenda and instead got tripped by their doctrinal agenda.

Depending on how the McCain campaign goes, it will be interesting to see if resentment towards Evangelicals builds.

19 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Mormons can dance.  Who knew? I didn’t.  Maybe it’s a Utah thing. 

Mormons have already won “So You Think You Can Dance” and “Dancing With the Stars,” and two of the front runners on ABC’s current hit “Dance War” are, yes, Mormon. “Some of the greatest dancing on TV is coming out of this community,” says Kenny Ortega, director of the “High School Musical” movies, both of which were filmed in Utah to capitalize on a hotbed of dance talent that Ortega noticed while choreographing the opening ceremony for the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City. “Dance is part of our culture,” says Lee Wakefield, chair of Brigham Young University’s dance department. “Mormons danced when they crossed the plains to Utah, and one of the first buildings they built was a dance hall.”

19 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

On March 4, the California Supreme Court will hear a challenge to state law that upholds traditional marriage between a man and a woman. The Church has joined with other churches in filing a friend of the court brief asking the court to uphold the current law

On one side are the Mormon church, the California Catholic Conference, the National Association of Evangelicals and the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations. They describe marriage between a man and a woman as “the lifeblood of community, society and the state” and say any attempt by the courts to change that would create “deep tensions between civil and religious understandings of that institution.”

On the other side are the Unitarians, the United Church of Christ, the Union for Reform Judaism, the Soka Gakkai branch of Buddhism, and dissident groups of Mormons, Catholics and Muslims. Saying their faiths and a wide range of historical traditions honor same-sex unions, they argue that the current law puts the state’s stamp of approval on “the religious orthodoxy of some sects concerning who may marry.”

The brief on behalf of the Church and its allies was written by Kenneth Starr (of Clinton impeachment fame) and argues that, regardless of religion, traditional marriage is essential for a healthy society.

“We have seen at close range the enormous benefits that traditional male-female marriage imparts,” he wrote. “We have also witnessed the substantial adverse consequences for children that often flow from alternative household arrangements.”

The “inescapable truth,” Starr said, is that “children need their mothers and fathers, and that society needs mothers and fathers to raise their children.”

His clients’ argument is not based on their religious beliefs, he said, but on “historical and sociological facts about what marriage has always been across time and cultures,” and on the doctrine that courts must let the people and their representatives decide such fundamental questions.

The brief can be found at the court’s website here [PDF]. It’s nice to see that although there were 50 some briefs files, the Church was joined by like-minded Catholics, Evangelicals, and Jews.

Also, Evergreen International, an LDS-supportive group for dealing with same-sex attraction filed a separate brief with similar organizations affiliated with other denominations [PDF]. 

Opponents of the California law claim that same-sex marriage has been around much longer than believed and that the law violates religious freedom.  The brief for religious organizations joined in opposing the law can be found here [PDF].  Despite the SF Chronicle’s highlighting that “dissident groups of Mormons” signed on to the opposing brief, I only recognized one Mormon-affiliated group (Affirmation) among the long list of religious organizations.

The CA Supreme Court has a special page for the case, In re Marriage Cases, with all the briefs and filings.

[edited for clarity, I hope]


WSJ.com: “GOP Flake Out” House Republicans deny Rep. Jeff Flake’s bid for a seat on the powerful Appropriation’s Committee:

Mr. Flake is the scourge of earmarks and the last person Members of either party want on Congress’s main spending committee. He would have been a whistle-blower for taxpayers, in particular against the powerful Democrats who get the most earmarks now that they are in the majority, such as Pennsylvania’s Jack Murtha. But Republican spenders couldn’t tolerate someone who would call out their pork too.

19 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Worldwide Mormonism
Revealing the truth behind one of the world’s fastest growing and most complex religions.
Analyzing arguments in the news and blogs given by anti-mormons.

The Adventures of Nate and Wendy

Robison Family Ramblings

Vera Sequor
A blog about religion, politics, and world events.

Joe & Jean’s Meanderings
Five humans, two dogs, a cat, a lizard, a hamster and a fish.
We’re just making the case for Mormonism, one quiet family life at a time.

Battling Change - And Embracing It
Running story of an LDS cadet at the United States Military Academy, West Point, NY. This blog exists mainly as a place for my thoughts to get some air, as well as a treatment for ongoing depression.


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Kathleen Flake on Mormons and Free Speech

In short, among the Mormons, one is not free to promote disbelief in the church and remain a member of the church. Again, obviously, this has a chilling effect on free speech, but who says speech within religious communities is necessarily or even properly free? Freedom of speech is highly valued in democracies because they depend upon the free flow of information and ideas. But most churches are not democracies. And, no church that depends upon the free flow of right ideas — doctrine and theology — values the free of wrong ideas.

18 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Online materials are now available for last week’s Worldwide Leadership Training broadcast on “Building Up a Righteous Posterity.”

15 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Ask an OC Mormon
Get Real Answers about the LDS Church in Orange County, Calif.

Mommiverse
Stay at home mom of three writing about my life

Hope for a Better World
Thoughts on latter-day saint religion and culture, greater Christianity, literature, western civilization, education, and interfaith dialogue.

The Book of Nate

The Bucket
An online edition of the Food Storage Newsletter

CougarTex
BYU undergrad, Texas Aggie grad: CougarTex


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Are typically “true [red], through and through” Mormons going to go blue because their man Mitt was shunned by the GOP?

That’s the wishful thinking that has traveled parts of the Bloggernacle since Mitt Romney ended his campaign last week. And as Sen. Obama has been gaining momentum as the candidate of unity and change, it appears that his personal charm is winning over a lot of unconventional supporters (heck, this former Romney campaigner and Reaganite is now making a case that Catholics should go for Obama)

The Mormon argument for Obama seems to be that since the Republican primaries “rejected” a Mormon candidate, Mormon GOP voters should vent their anger and seek revenge by supporting the Democratic candidate of hope and optimism. 

This Beehive Standard article suggests that if Obama only changed ever so slightly to the right he would be attractive to mainstream conservative Mormons and Utah - the state that gave President Bush the greatest margin of victory in 2000 and 2004 - would swing Democrat in 2008.

That will be hard for the Senator who has the most liberal voting record of 2007. As Jettboy explains very well, traditionally Republican Mormons may like Obama personally but will find his policies unpalatable.

Sen. McCain definitely lacks Obama’s charisma and appeal. He hasn’t reached out to Mormons as Obama has. But Republican Mormons are more savvy than to vote Democrat just because they feel the Republican party is dominated by anti-Mormons (which isn’t true).  Wouldn’t that be the ugliest form of identity politics?

Unless McCain picks up Huckabee as his VP pick, Utah won’t go blue in November.  If McCain does, then let’s talk.


Mormon Insights
A personal view of Mormon theology from a life-long member of the LDS Church…

Mormon Philosophy Blog
PHILOSOPHICAL TREATISES IN MORMON PRAGMATISM AND THEOLOGY.
A prominent evangelical professor, Carl Mosser, wrote an essay several years ago in which he pointed out that the LDS community has made significant advancement in theology and apologetics and that we have a strong philosophical position that isn’t to be taken lightly. Mormon philosopher Sterling McMurrin also said that we don’t realize the strength of our position, theologically. I propose to demonstrate, from my own understanding, how both of these statements are absolutely true.

Mormon Faith and Facts
This blog is an opportunity for me to share personal thoughts, experiences, doctrine, and facts about my faith.

ColletteFiles
A colaboration of ideas and thoughts in an effort to better understand principles that make this life rich

This Guy’s A Mormon
A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with the credentials of an ordinary human being attempts to present some musings and thoughts on Mormon-related topics while hoping to inspire a little.

Holdinator
Watch as two miniature Holdinators wreak the havoc Holdinators wreak, and sometimes other stuff too

True to the Faith
The life and times of young LDS. A blog about young Mormons and their experiences with faith and testimony. It includes thoughts about being a Latter-Day Saint in today’s world. Comments and questions are welcome. It’s main purpose is to let the world see what a Mormon really is.

Mormon Heretic
I talk about stuff that can get you into trouble at Sunday School, and try to ask thought provoking questions, which are probably not “orthodox” points of view. However I am very strong in the church, and enjoy being an active member.


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Shifting the Church’s focus to retention:

In the early days, the church had to keep moving or die. The Saints kept an eye single to Zion as they trudged across the plains. If they stopped to mourn or weep, the weather and wilderness would do them in. Dozens were buried in shallow graves. . .

The dangers are different now. Mortal lives are no longer so much at risk, but spiritual lives are. And that means less “pushing” and more “lifting.” The word “active” today is not so much about “action” — teaching, attending, contributing. It’s more about being “active” the way electric wires are active. It’s about the spark, the current within. It’s about the inner — not outer — life. It’s about what’s in the heart, not what’s on the list of things to do today. It’s how we should look at all people.

14 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | No comments

Mitt Romney to endorse McCain

Mitt Romney will endorse John McCain in a press conference at Romney’s Boston headquarters, according to an ABC report. He will release his delegates and ask them to support McCain at the convention. That would put McCain within reach of the nomination now, and almost certainly clinch it for him in March.

Turning the other cheek in politics: Your opponent lies about your record and openly hates you as he beats you. Then to appear gracious, you have to come around and give him your support.

14 February 2008 by David H. Sundwall | 2 comments

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