Mitt Romney Sent Millions to Mormon Church

Baptism_of_Obama_coL.jpg
 
Quote from AK Forty Seven:

Millions to an organization that has a history of polygamy and ...,is seen as non christian and a cult and wears magic underwear to fend off evil :cool:
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Good points. God bless you and all capitalists:D

Well look @ bright side[Bright being good name];
one morman out[John Huntsman, out,]
1''socialized med/vulture'' Morman to go.:D

And while Mormans are not Christians[repeat NOT Christians];
Dr Jerry Falwell did include them in his political org so called ''Moral Majority'':cool:

And frankly John Moses Browning was a morman;
they still make good guns.:cool:
 
Quote from murray t turtle:

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Good points. God bless you and all capitalists:D

Well look @ bright side[Bright being good name];
one morman out[John Huntsman, out,]
1''socialized med/vulture'' Morman to go.:D

And while Mormans are not Christians[repeat NOT Christians];
Dr Jerry Falwell did include them in his political org so called ''Moral Majority'':cool:

And frankly John Moses Browning was a morman;
they still make good guns.:cool:
Unless I'm mistaken the Mormons are Christians. As long as they believe Christ is the way and the only way to the Father, we can let the, "Jesus showed up at a watering hole (the natural kind) in the Utah desert some time back" bit go.
 
Quote from Ricter:

Unless I'm mistaken the Mormons are Christians. As long as they believe Christ is the way and the only way to the Father, we can let the, "Jesus showed up at a watering hole (the natural kind) in the Utah desert some time back" bit go.

Considering that the actual name of the church is "The Church of Jesus Christ", it would seem that any debate on that issue would be pointless.

Also, given what I know regarding the core beliefs of Protestant Christians, Mormons, and Catholics, I would tend to assume that the Protestant Christians would have a larger objection to a Catholic (both Gingrich and Santorum) in the White House. It seems that Mormon beliefs are actually closer to Protestant beliefs than Catholicism is to Protestant.

Strangely, Protestants seem to prefer the two Catholics over the Mormon. Seems a bit odd to me.
 
Quote from Epic:

Considering that the actual name of the church is "The Church of Jesus Christ", it would seem that any debate on that issue would be pointless.
Think so, smart guy? How many Jesuses do you think could dance on the point of a pin?


; )
 
Quote from Ricter:

Think so, smart guy? How many Jesuses do you think could dance on the point of a pin?


; )

Not trying to be a smart guy. Just kind of pointing out the obvious.

Not sure I understand your riddle. Maybe I'm just not religious enough.
 
Quote from Ricter:

Think so, smart guy? How many Jesuses do you think could dance on the point of a pin?


; )

lol.

Look, I cross swords with AK (well, a plastic spoon in his case) over the right of someone to contribute money to their church of choice and I respect that we have a "freedom of religion thing" here in the USA but...

...Mormanism is a seriously weird cult. They *do* wear magic underwear and they *do* believe Jesus Christ came to Ohio or some such thing. They did incorporate polygamy into their *early* lifestyle and most of the Mormans I've met have been judgemental pricks.

Aside from those small details I have no problem with people tithing or whatever it is called.

To a Protestant the Catholic Church is at least something recognizable as Christianity. Even Judaism is far more recognizable and understood than Mormanism. If we're going to elect someone wearing odd underwear it ought to be a Jew because they are as American as apple pie. :D
 
Quote from AK Forty Seven:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-seery/the-bush-cocaine-chronicl_b_37786.html


The Bush Cocaine Chronicles: Complicity and Cover-up



Fox News Reporter Kirian Chetry blurted out what she assumed was common knowledge among the media cognoscenti: that George W. Bush had used cocaine in his past and yet had politically survived the exposure of that (criminal) indiscretion. Her on-air colleagues scrambled to "correct" the record: no, no, no, the cocaine accusations against Bush have never been proven beyond a doubt--so let's quickly shift the conversation away from Bush's drug past and instead bring up, for one more go around, Bill Clinton's admitted marijuana use alongside the recent revelation about Barack Obama's possible cocaine use. Let's blow some smoke in Bill's direction, he never inhaled, ha, ha, ha.

Whew, that was a close one! Fox News surely didn't want to open that door into Bush's creepy closet, and they tried to slam it shut. Maybe the stress of the Iraq War, compounded by the growing abundance of Afghani poppy plants, is triggering memory flashbacks. Whatever the reason, the "cocaine issue" is back in the news--it just won't go away.

What amazes me is that here we are, six years into Bush's presidency, and the press still refuses to treat the longstanding stories about Bush's cocaine use with the severity and scrutiny that such charges surely deserve, given the high level stakes involved. The issue is no longer simply how and why Bush has successfully dodged the topic for his entire political career. The story now should be why the press has treated him with kid gloves for so long.

On one part of this story, Bush's record is perfectly clear: in every political campaign he has ever waged, he has skillfully evaded "the cocaine question," probably in much the same way that he avoided appearing for his drug test while serving in the National Guard. We've seen this character defect of his more recently: namely, all the lies and evasions and slipperiness that have contributed to, and culminated in the calamity that is the Iraq War. But Bush's character defect was there all along to see for anyone who wanted to take a good look at it. The U.S. press corps evidently decided, however, simply to look the other way.

I speak from first hand experience, an insider's vantage, on this particular issue. Several weeks before the 2000 election, I submitted to the Los Angeles Times an op-ed piece about the charges swirling around Bush's alleged cocaine use. The next day the Times Opinion Section editors left lengthy telephone messages on both my home and office message machines: Yes, they wanted this piece very much. Yes, they were going to publish it in the next Monday edition. It was a definite go, not just an acceptance for the "queue." Come Sunday, however, I received another call: It turns out, er, we won't be using it now, not at all. No explanation beyond that. Gads, I thought. That was a dramatic 180-degree turnaround. I've never received a personal call at my home for a rejection. Someone clearly had put the kibosh on the story, overruling or prevailing upon those who once had been very keen about and committed to the piece.

Read it for yourself--I reproduce it below. Jonathan Singer, now with myDD.com, reprised the piece on his own blog in September of 2004, at a time when the cocaine issue had once again become current with the publication of Kitty Kelley's The Family, which included the shocking charge that George W. Bush had used cocaine at Camp David during his father's presidential term, i.e., past George W. Bush's 40th birthday. Did the press (let alone the Justice Department) investigate these allegations as diligently and as tenaciously as they probed into Whitewater or Monica-gate?

In hindsight, knowing what we now know, imagine if the media had given the Bush cocaine issue its due in the fall of 2000. What if our national press editors and media pundits had insisted that Bush give a clear and candid answer to the cocaine issue before the 2000 presidential election? You know what I'm getting at. It doesn't take a leap of brilliance to fill in the blanks. To wit: Our nation would be much better off today if members of the mainstream media had simply done their job on that score, rather than abdicating their vigilance for the sake of decorum. How much responsibility should they bear today for our current state of affairs? You decide--I'd like to hear your responses.
politicians,they are all dirt,if a rep or dem ,top of the heap
 
Quote from 377OHMS:

lol.

Look, I cross swords with AK (well, a plastic spoon in his case) over the right of someone to contribute money to their church of choice and I respect that we have a "freedom of religion thing" here in the USA but...

...Mormanism is a seriously weird cult. They *do* wear magic underwear and they *do* believe Jesus Christ came to Ohio or some such thing. They did incorporate polygamy into their *early* lifestyle and most of the Mormans I've met have been judgemental pricks.

Aside from those small details I have no problem with people tithing or whatever it is called. :D
Ahh, it was Ohio, my mistake. Polygamy? Good for them! I've made (serial) polygamy a part of my life as well. Tithing? It's made their church freakin' rich. But, I'm just funnin' around. I really don't want to hear about Mormonism all year.

Edit: "To a Protestant the Catholic Church is at least something recognizable as Christianity. Even Judaism is far more recognizable and understood than Mormanism. If we're going to elect someone wearing odd underwear it ought to be a Jew because they are as American as apple pie."

Remember that old joke, about the guy who squeaks like a girl, and the doctor who checks him over for that finds that his nuts are pressed so hard against his pelvis that they'll have to be removed?
 
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