Your home for discussing politics, the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, and the principles of liberty.
lundbaek wrote:I finally managed, during a dialog with a friend, to set down in writing a brief explanation of the main objective of all my political activity.
I have for a few years now felt driven, or constrained as Nephi would put it, to bring to the attention of LDS voters in America our failure to follow instructions given by prophets and apostles to "learn the principles of the US Constitution in the tradition of the Founding Fathers", to learn "what the prophets have said about the Constitution and the threats to it", to "become involved in civic affairs to see that we are properly represented", to "make our influence felt by our vote, our letters, our teaching, and our advice", and to become accurately informed and then let others know how we feel". (Quotes from an October 1987 General Conference address by President Benson)
I'm not sure how this fits in with the topic at hand. But from that 11 October 1941 letter from the First presidency to the US Treasury, the statement "There are numbers of the Mormon people who have not fully responded to the teachings of the Church nor to be [sic] tenets of its organizations, and who are, therefore, lukewarm in the support of the Church, its policies, principles, and doctrines."
Also stated in that letter is "But we do reserve to ourselves the right to tell our people what we think is right regarding politics as affecting the fundamentals of our government system, to warn them of the dangers that lie under the present course, and to try to persuade them that their peace, their happiness, and their security do not lie along the path of the present trends of government......"We confess to you that it has not been possible for us to unify our own people even upon the necessity of such a turning about, and therefore we cannot, unfortunately, and we say it regretfully, make any practical suggestion to you as to how the nation can be turned about. But the President of the United States could do it in good part if he were willing to exert his effort along that line, but this he appears not to be willing to do."
I cannot prove it, of course, but I cannot help but think that if the American LDS voters had in unison, even as late as 1987, heeded the above mentioned instructions to "learn the principles of the US Constitution in the tradition of the Founding Fathers", to learn "what the prophets have said about the Constitution and the threats to it", to "become involved in civic affairs to see that we are properly represented", to "make our influence felt by our vote, our letters, our teaching, and our advice", and to become accurately informed and then let others know how we feel", the Lord would have interveened to help in turning our nation about.
blakwatch wrote:It's easy to philosophize about this stuff and over-generalize with statements like we just need to repent, etc., and that Jesus Christ is the bedrock, so if everyone would see the light, repent and joint the LDS church, that would fix everything.
-- As if having faith in Jesus Christ, the restored gospel in its fullness, repentance, baptism, a living prophet, etc., has fixed everything -- even for most members of the Church.
But over and above all the philosophy and pontification -- in terms of action -- actually DOING something -- I'm wondering what specific, concrete steps can be taken, which should be the first step(s), and in what order.
Or, should we just stand back, wait for it all to collapse and let those who are still around to talk about it discuss what ought to be done -- and what could have been done -- once all the smoke clears and the dust settles.
Original_Intent wrote:blakwatch wrote:It's easy to philosophize about this stuff and over-generalize with statements like we just need to repent, etc., and that Jesus Christ is the bedrock, so if everyone would see the light, repent and joint the LDS church, that would fix everything.
-- As if having faith in Jesus Christ, the restored gospel in its fullness, repentance, baptism, a living prophet, etc., has fixed everything -- even for most members of the Church.
But over and above all the philosophy and pontification -- in terms of action -- actually DOING something -- I'm wondering what specific, concrete steps can be taken, which should be the first step(s), and in what order.
Or, should we just stand back, wait for it all to collapse and let those who are still around to talk about it discuss what ought to be done -- and what could have been done -- once all the smoke clears and the dust settles.
The first steps have got to be educational, because otherwise any steps we take are likely to be mis-steps that we will need to correct. However, much of this stuff literally cannot be taught, it must be learned and the hunger and desire for it has to come from the individual. And if you figure out the secret of awakening that spirit in someone else, please share the secret!
Original_Intent wrote:Jason - good questions.
I think probably the biggest thing we have going against us is we just don't know how many of us there are. Most of us are so paranoid about the government or being put on some government list of malcontents to be rounded up for FEMA camps that it is almsot impossible to get people to openly disclose themselves once they are awake. That was one of the great things about the Ron Paul campaign - it really brought a lot of divergent people together, and let us see how many of us there really were. Of course, it brought some nutcases out of the woodwork as well.
It took less than 100 men who were well educated on the truth and were willing to lay everything on the line - life liberty and treasure - to put their name on the dotted line and say to a tyrant "enough!". A problem we face is we feel so impotent against the powers that are arrayed against us, and we see what has happened in recent history to those who make such a statement (Branch Davidians, Ruby Ridge, etc).
It seems that for now the best we can do is to try to educate others, try to take back the nation one precinct at a time. Too many people jsut want to get involved in the big races, such as president, we need to be working all the time, and especially non-presidential election years like 2010 provide us a good opportunity for a rlatively few voices to truly shake the LDG's to their foundation! But even among the awake, too many people do not feel like precinct meetings are important enough or a big enough deal. It's where we have to start though. (JBS has been preaching that Congress, not the presidency, is the key for a long time, and they are right on the federal level.)
I do feel like if we really knew how many of us are awake, and how many would wake up if we were a visible political presence, we would be encouraged. But the MSM does a good job of playing down our numbers even when we do show up to protests, political activities and etc.
threepercentite wrote:wouldn't it be great if we had one common cause to rally around....
blakwatch wrote:In terms of purely political issues, what is the single biggest issue/obstacle to making important fundamental changes in this country?
serenitylala wrote:blakwatch wrote:In terms of purely political issues, what is the single biggest issue/obstacle to making important fundamental changes in this country?
Did anyone say Obama yet?
There are many facets to the Gospel. And most active members are too busy living the gospel to consider all of them.
Jason wrote:serenitylala wrote:blakwatch wrote:In terms of purely political issues, what is the single biggest issue/obstacle to making important fundamental changes in this country?
Did anyone say Obama yet?
Obama is just a puppet......a symptom.
While I agree with Lundbaek that the Constitution is of the utmost importance......because it is in alignment with Natural Law or God's Law.....you just can't say OK now guys we really need to uphold the Constitution. Many have been saying that for years. We need to elect people that will actually do it. How do you get them elected in our current entrenched two party system?
See my point? Where's the weakest link? Where's an effective starting point to focus our efforts on that will make a difference....rock the apple cart?
We must have representatives that truly represent the people.....not career politicians that represent special interests......so how do you get those folks in office?
We've got to move from philosophy (and mumble grumble)....and then strategy....to tactics on the ground. How do we win some battles.....so we have a shot at the war.....at least staying alive and not just conceding to the enemy in fear and frustration.
wouldn't it be great if we had one common cause to rally around
clarkkent14 wrote:"Constitutional government, as designed by the framers, will survive only with a righteous people. “Our Constitution,” said John Adams, first vice-president and second president, “was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” (John R. Howe, Jr., The Changing Political Thought of John Adams, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1966, p. 189.)" - Ezra Taft Benson
That's why the cleansing is coming... to an America near you. The Lord has clearly warned America. Are they repenting and heeding the words of the Book of Mormon? Nope.
Repentance. My final answer.
blakwatch wrote:wouldn't it be great if we had one common cause to rally around
That is really kind of getting to the heart of the issue that I have been trying to explore.
What one common cause could a wide variety of people -- members, non-members, blacks, whites, liberals, conservatives, independents, etc. -- agree on and rally around that could make a meaningful difference in our country today?
Is there any such issue? Is there any such cause?
I'm leaning hard towards the two party system.....if in fact we could disrupt....not necessarily even change....but just disrupt the status quo two party system....change the focus from personalities and party politics to principles....I think we could have an impact!
(No More) Mr. Nice Guy here looks for opportunity to awaken our fellow LDSs to their political inastuteness (if there is such a word) and their failure to follow instructions given by prophets and apostles to "learn the principles of the US Constitution in the tradition of the Foundig Fathers", to learn "what the prophets have said about the Constitution and the threats to it", to "become involved in civic affairs to see that we are properly represented", to "make our influence felt by our vote, our letters, our teaching, and our advice", and to become accurately informed and then let others know how we feel".
blakwatch wrote:I'm leaning hard towards the two party system.....if in fact we could disrupt....not necessarily even change....but just disrupt the status quo two party system....change the focus from personalities and party politics to principles....I think we could have an impact!
First question: how/why could that make such an impact?
Second question: how could it be done?
threepercentite wrote:wouldn't it be great if we had one common cause to rally around....
When I last reported on Sunlight Before Signing—President Obama’s promise to post bills online for five days before signing them—the administration had begun to rack up the wins. Of the 13 bills he signed in December, five had received the Sunlight Before Signing treatment.
Alas, since January, only one of the 18 bills subject to the promise has gotten the online exposure the president promised. (That was H.R. 1377/P.L. 111-137, a bill dealing with reimbursement of veterans for services they receive at non-V.A. facilities.)
It’s an unfortunate slow-down from the heady days when the president’s SBS batting average rocketed from a dismal .009 to .048. The president’s current Sunlight Before Signing average is only slightly improved at .049 (7 for 142).
LDSConservative wrote:blakwatch wrote:In terms of purely political issues, what is the single biggest issue/obstacle to making important fundamental changes in this country?
Repentance. (righteousness exalteth a nation)
blakwatch wrote:How/why would it be easier or better to take over the GOP one precinct at a time than it would be to build a new party from scratch?
What part of the GOP Agenda do you find particularly compelling at this point? How is it really different, in practice, from the Democratic Agenda?
Focusing effort on taking over the GOP would obviously be intended to continue to preserve the two party system. Why is a two party system better than a three party or more pluralistic system?
From what I understand, according to recent polls, 60% of the population of this country now identify themselves as independents. How is taking over the GOP going to give that 60% a better voice?
In a diverse nation of 300 million people, how can we realistically think that two parties can reasonable represent the full spectrum? What am I missing?
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