Monday, September 20, 2010

Mormon Speak Spanish with Forked Tongue

This guy is Mark H. Willis, chief exec of the Deseret News in Utah, owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

LDS, as the locals call it, has been recruiting Hispanics in its ongoing proseletyzing efforts in the U.S. and around the world. And the paper champions illegal immigrants arguing that deportation creates family terrorism.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, the largely Mormon legislature is debating a zero-tolerance immigration law like Arizona's.

Hooaah. She loves me, she loves me not. The illegals believe the church is trying to soften them up so they will remain LDS even if deported.

Mr. Willes says that like Mormons, who fled the Midwest in the mid-19th century after failing to assimilate into society, undocumented immigrants know what it is like to be outcasts.

Failing to assimilate.  White man have creative, forked tongue. Those guys never made any attempt to assimilate. Fear and loathing they spawned with their atrocious treatment of women, known as polygamy but better described as white slavery.

The Hispanics have no assimilation plans either, so maybe they are destined for each other, the Latino and the LDS. Ostensibly, the Mormons have given up multiple wives though the bishops still make jokes about it. The practice was officially abandoned in 1890 but the fundamental bigotry remains clandestine. And the resentment remains. Make a comment about Mormon Christianity and the litany begins to sound like a Palestinian lament followed by a polite invitation to move somewhere else. In fact, newcomers get this invitation in conjunction with their introduction to the community.

Think LDS is savvy to the latest form of Montezuma's revenge? At least the Shoshone were smart enough to negotiate a treaty with the White Man before being decimated by the U.S. Cavalry. When the Mexicans find out what the Mormons are all about they may storm the Temple. Or maybe the illegals will like the refuge of a macho society. Perhaps LDS will develop a finer understanding of '¿Quien Vive?'

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