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Good Chronicles article on Utah and the Pozz

01 Jun

(Not that they use that term, but still):

one of the fastest growing states in the U.S., and its millions of newcomers are rapidly eating away at the Mormon majority. Additionally, the Beehive State is also home to a growing start-up and high-tech sector—located around the city of Lehi in the corridor between Salt Lake City and Provo known as “Silicon Slopes”—whose CEOs are often outspokenly libertarian on social issues.

Some of those CEOs are, in fact, Mormons, though their relationship with the LDS is often troubled. Some, like Jeff T. Green, CEO of The Trade Desk, have even left the church in protest. Green’s departure generated a good deal of publicity this past December, when in a letter addressed to the current LDS president, Russell Nelson, he voiced his concerns regarding the church’s record on LBGTQ rights. The letter was clearly intended to be made public and was almost immediately published by the Salt Lake Tribune; thereafter, it was given prominent coverage by all the U.S. newspapers of note. Green’s justification for resigning his LDS membership was that the Mormon church “has hindered global progress in women’s rights, civil rights, racial equality and LGBTQ+ rights.”

It should be noted that for over 10 years Green has not actually been a practicing Mormon, but he was raised in the church. According to The Washington Post in December of 2021, he now “spends his Sundays studying philanthropy” and has been especially interested in extending his philanthropical largess to the gay “community.” His official departure from the LDS coincided with a $600,000 donation to Equality Utah, the largest and most politically influential LGBTQ advocacy group in the state. Troy Williams, the group’s executive director, has characterized Green’s donation as “gay tithing.”

Half of Green’s tithe to Equality Utah is earmarked for student scholarships to aid the academic endeavors of LGBTQ students, especially those, as Green has stated, who wish to transfer out of Brigham Young University (BYU) to other, more gay-friendly institutions. BYU, of course, is a Mormon foundation and has been a flashpoint of controversy in recent years over its policies regarding LGBTQ students. In the 1970s and following, the university promoted “conversion therapy” and at times notoriously resorted to electroshock therapy—a practice that has since been abandoned—for students struggling with gay identity. Until recently, BYU’s student honor code forbade “not only sexual relations between members of the same sex, but all forms of physical intimacy that give expression to homosexual feelings.” When the code was revised in 2020, specific references to homosexuality were dropped. What remains is the exhortation to “live a chaste and virtuous life, including abstaining from any sexual relations outside a marriage between a man and a woman.”

The inclusion of “marriage between a man and a woman” is probably intended to signal a refusal to recognize same-sex marriages—a position perfectly in keeping with BYU’s moral and religious heritage. Yet we know all too well that our gender equality zealots will accept nothing short of the complete capitulation of all our religious institutions. While LDS leaders insist that the revision makes no alteration in fundamental principles and that homosexual activity is still incompatible with Mormon beliefs, it is nevertheless apparent that BYU has formulated what might be termed a strategic retreat, and not for the first time.

In 2010, under increasing pressure from national LGBTQ activists, BYU began to allow groups identifying as homosexual to form and meet on campus, though prohibitions on actual practice of gay sexual relations remained. In 2011, a “homosexual advocacy” ban was elided from the honor code, allowing BYU students to become involved in off-campus political activism for gay causes. Despite such concessions, BYU has, to its credit, stood firm on the most important principle. To grant “temple privileges” to same-sex couples would be tantamount to abandoning the most essential moral tenant in the Mormon creed, which is profoundly natalist.

Yet external pressures continue to mount. In 2016, the BYU athletics program sought to join the Big 12 football conference. Under a storm of protest by LGBTQ activists, the Big 12 refused the BYU bid. In 2019, the Geological Society of America refused to continue posting BYU faculty job openings, citing the school’s unacceptable honor code. In addition, the rapid influx of non-Mormons into the state is a serious threat to the university’s resolve to maintain its traditional moral ground. In fact, according to The Washington Post article cited earlier, Salt Lake City has a larger per capita LGBTQ population than either NYC or LA. From 2016 to 2020, Salt Lake City had an openly gay mayor, and the city council now has an LGBTQ majority.

In view of such changes, Utah begins to resemble many other states as it slides toward the default secularity that regards Biblical moral principles as both alien and oppressive. To some extent, Republican Utahns and many LDS leaders have helped to enable this development by too eagerly embracing corporate power and influence. One might think that business interests moving into Utah, especially those along the Silicon Slopes, would recognize that few locales offer a workforce as well-educated and enculturated into a traditional American work ethic. Common sense would suggest that such newcomers might tread warily and avoid alienating native Utahns. Yet it has become increasingly evident to those who have eyes to see that institutions like the LDS, driven by transcendent moral and spiritual concerns, have little or no place in the corporate vision of the American future. We can be sure that “gay tithing” will become a very lucrative source of income, and thus of influence, for those who seek to transform the Beehive State and its premier university into a genderqueer mecca.

Alas…

 

26 responses to “Good Chronicles article on Utah and the Pozz

  1. info

    June 1, 2022 at 5:20 am

    Everything not of God won’t have any resistance to the advance of Globohomo.

     
  2. fuzziewuzziebear

    June 1, 2022 at 5:40 am

    What gave Utah the reputation as a great place to live was the quality of its residents.This is a good study in how inviting migration from California is a very bad idea.

     
    • Will S.

      June 1, 2022 at 9:43 am

      Yes.

       
    • feeriker

      June 1, 2022 at 12:45 pm

      migration from California is a very bad idea.

      ABSOLUTELY.

      I’m generally very hostile toward people driving cars with California plates on them – unless they immediately do or say something to prove that they are “political refugees,” and even then they’re still suspect.

      I hate to say it, but come the reaction, there are going to be some “ethnic cleansing” type moves in the Western states that are going to see liberals either literally purged, or sent fleeing back to the western coastal libtard gives they came from.

       
      • fuzziewuzziebear

        June 1, 2022 at 6:34 pm

        I spent some time in Oregon in the seventies. It was out in the open then.

         
  3. cameron232

    June 1, 2022 at 6:11 am

    My oldest son lived there for a year and I visited him. There’s more hardcore left, rainbow flag types than in Florida. Yes, Californians but also the “jack Mormons” who leave the LDS tend to rebel strongly against the wholesome 50s Mormon culture.

    It’s weird- the contrast between antifa type leftist scum and the remaining “Leave it to Beaver” type practicing LDS. The wholesomeness of the LDS makes the leftist freaks look even freakier.

     
    • Will S.

      June 1, 2022 at 9:43 am

      Ah.

      Sad.

       
      • info

        June 1, 2022 at 9:50 am

        I have done research on the mennonites and even they aren’t exempt from female pastors and lgbt poz. So far Orthodoxy and Roman Catholics remained strong enough not to have female priests even in “conservative” denominations.

         
      • Will S.

        June 1, 2022 at 9:54 am

        Alas.

         
      • awildgoose

        June 1, 2022 at 12:48 pm

        The Mennonite chapter house a few blocks from me has BLM and alphabet flags up.

        Smh.

         
      • Will S.

        June 1, 2022 at 12:50 pm

        Ugh.

        Mennonite pacifism ended up melding with mainline Prot kumbaya-ism.

         
      • info

        June 2, 2022 at 1:53 am

        Uh oh. Looks like the Anabaptists are in trouble.

         
      • Will S.

        June 2, 2022 at 9:14 am

        Some, yes.

         
  4. Thomas Henderson

    June 1, 2022 at 6:26 am

    Robert Cousin’s second law of politics hard at work: Any organization not explicitly right-wing sooner or later becomes left-wing.

     
    • Thomas Henderson

      June 1, 2022 at 6:28 am

      correction: Robert Conquest’s second law of politics. Wrote it before I had my morning coffee.

       
      • Will S.

        June 1, 2022 at 9:43 am

        🙂

         
    • Will S.

      June 1, 2022 at 9:43 am

      Conquest, yes. 🙂

       
  5. Sanne

    June 1, 2022 at 8:09 am

    Mormons are a cult and a false religion. I really don’t understand some Christians’ fascination with them.

     
    • Will S.

      June 1, 2022 at 9:46 am

      Because they are parallel to us, though not of us, combined with the fact that they managed to create a state that, at its founding, was made up almost solely of them, and the effects this has had.

       
      • feeriker

        June 1, 2022 at 12:53 pm

        Yet they quickly capitulated to the federal government in the early 1890s, accepting (at gunpoint, or so it seemed) statehood of Utah and abandoning some of their core practices like polygyny. Not the acts of religious zealots determined to preserve their faith at all costs against the encroachment of outsiders.

        Also, note the similarities of Mormon rituals to those of the Masons. Note also the heavy presence of Mormons within the organs of the Deep State (the FBI, in particular, OVERFLOWS with them).

        Methinks we don’t know even the half of the true story of Mormonism’s origins. More and more, Joseph Smith is beginning to seem like a figurehead for some other very shadowy figures behind the scenes (Masons?) whose influence and deeds are unacknowledged. The religious aspects of Mormonism also seem like window dressing for something much darker.

         
      • Will S.

        June 1, 2022 at 12:55 pm

        Agreed.

         
  6. Dharmicreality

    June 1, 2022 at 2:14 pm

    I first heard of Mormons in Sherlock Holmes, “A Study in Scarlet.”

    My “shrewd” guess is that today’s Mormons aren’t anything like how they’re described in the book.

     
    • Will S.

      June 1, 2022 at 2:22 pm

      I haven’t read that, but I suspect you’re correct.

       

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