Hate

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Salt Lake City No on Prop 8 Rally from Reid on Vimeo.

I came across this video tonight after a protest they called a “hate rally” in downtown Salt Lake in front of the headquarters of my Church. You can see the temple, one of the places we worship, and the place my wife and I were married in the background. It’s normally a peaceful, tranquil place to be - I enjoy visiting, and feeling the spirit that is there. This video was not like that. From an outside standpoint, I see a lot of anger, a lot of hate, a lot of people mad at my religion, and frankly that has an affect me because this religion brought me up to be the person I am. It hurts a lot to see so many people hating something that has brought me so much joy.

Then, I see stories like this one of people wanting to boycott Utah because “Mormons are in Utah” and “Mormons supported Proposition 8″. Tracking Utah and SLC on Twitter I’ve seen a lot of Tweets, some from people I talk to regularly and would consider friends doing the same thing. And at the same time I’m thinking for the most part I’m on their side - I don’t know what I would have voted for if I were in California, but I do know I don’t fully understand why my faith thought this proposition was important enough to publicly announce support. Frankly I don’t care and I don’t think it should matter. Do those in other states not realize that there are people in Utah on their side?

After all, the “No on 8″ campaign did raise more than the “Yes on 8″ campaign so surely they can’t be blaming this election on the campaign contributions of the “Yes on 8″ campaign. After all, regardless of the Mormon Church’s involvement it was its members who contributed as a whole, and many members who contributed to the “No on 8″ campaign as well. What happened to Democracy and the choice of the people being the reason elections are won? Campaign contributions weren’t the cause of this proposition going through. Frankly, if the Mormon church had not stepped in, the pro-campaign wouldn’t have had anywhere near as much money as the anti-8 and the vote would have been unfair. I’m not saying I’m pro-8, but I think the pro-8 campaign won this fair and square.

Then there’s these “lists” I keep seeing passed around showing members of the Mormon church who donated for Prop 8. Ironically, many of those were put together by members of the Mormon faith, living in Utah!. Where’s the “list” of those Mormons who voted against the campaign’s contributions? Where are the “lists” of Catholics who contributed, or Evangelicals or Jews who contributed to the “Yes on 8″ campaign? What about Gay people who contributed? The bias in this campaign, especially after the fact seems as though the Mormons were the only ones fighting for the campaign, when in reality, the Mormons were actually in the minority when it came to total voters voting for the proposition. Add to that the Mormon-targeted videos like this, see why I feel hated?

Yesterday, I saw article after article of protesters protesting my faith’s religious places of worship, yelling at passers-by, and much of the same things you’re seeing in the video above. Yet, I see no one protesting at Catholic places of worship, Jewish synagogues, or Evangelical ministries.

This hate hits at the very cause these people are fighting for. Bigotry, equal rights, and freedom for all. As a Mormon, I don’t feel very free right now. I feel really hated. We need to all stand up for freedom, equal rights, and liberty for all - attacking a single faith for sticking up for their own rights to worship accomplishes nothing.

Freedom is accomplished peacefully, without hate or guile, with equality for all. Hate, and even anger, gets us nowhere.

I’m closing the comments on this post for the first time on my blog - if you guys want to discuss this on FriendFeed, so be it, but I’m writing this simply to get my feelings out on this subject. Those of you on FriendFeed know my position on this. I think the approach these protesters are taking is wrong.

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  • November 8, 2008 at 12:06 pm Ontario Emperor
    Jesse, I agree with your points. I don't know if my church (Lutheran Church Missouri Synod) took a position on Prop 8, but we did object to California's Supreme Court decision, so we certainly warrant a hate protest or hate commercial or something. It should be noted, though, that both sides are targeting opponents (AFA-led boycotts and the like), so No on 8 actions toward "enemies" aren't unique.
  • November 8, 2008 at 12:10 pm Ontario Emperor
    My theory about why Mormons and Catholics are treated differently is because people know that Catholics often disagree with their church's official position, while people assume that Mormons all march in lockstep, Osmonds 8 track tapes in hand. Yet No on 8 lists at least one group of Mormons as supporting their cause.
  • November 8, 2008 at 12:21 pm Jesse Stay
    Funnily enough, one of the interesting things I learned from some conversation on Facebook is that the largest pro-8 contributer was actually a Catholic, not Mormon. Also interesting, the largest non-supporting contributor, Bruce Bastien, was also from Utah.
  • November 8, 2008 at 2:39 pm Ontario Emperor
    One of the hazards of scattershot boycotts; you can't only limit the damage to your opponents.
  • November 8, 2008 at 8:09 pm Sally Robinson
    I've been learning a lot about LDS through you, Louis, some of the Tweeps I follow and our upstairs neighbors. I like to think I'm open-minded and have learned that I had a LOT of misconceptions about Mormons and the tenets of the religion. Unfortunately, not too many of the haters will take the time to learn about what it is they are protesting and move toward educated dialogue.

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