Saturday, July 14, 2012

Thou shalt not laugh




Is it bigotry?  Or shouldn't the greater question be: "is it true?"  It's no secret to anyone who has read my blog posts that I don't hold religious belief to be any more unassailable, any further off limits than any other opinions and beliefs people hold and since nearly every nasty thing humanity has done has employed some sort of belief to justify it, I think it's dangerous to refuse to question the influence of any particular religion or creed that presents itself to the public, whether it's personal or institutional.



Yes, our founding document does guarantee that the government not interfere with the "free exercise" of religion but that such non interference does not convey license to ignore the law doesn't need to be restated every time some group decides it's exempt from restraint ( or subject to taxes.)



Certainly I am not opposed to the right to build churches or attend them and I am very much opposed to a government suggesting or forcing anyone to attend or not to attend or to worship or to recite allegiances to belief systems or gods -- and I suppose I'm not in a minority in that respect, unless we're discussing Islam.  In fact I've frequently irritated people by defending Muslims from unfair criticism and bigotry. I've also irritated many by insisting that my freedom of speech and my freedom of belief trumps their efforts to keep me from criticizing their saints and deities and highly criticism worthy personages like Joseph Smith and Elron Hubbard.



It's often be explained to me that Islam is a "transcendental" religion, attempting to convert the world and so is dangerous, while religions like Christianity are not of that sort and so "Christian" or more ludicrously, "Judeo-Christian" law is the basis of our constitution and perhaps takes precedence.  Sharia law alone is a clear and present danger say so many Americans.  Can we really say that the enormous efforts Mormons make to convert the planet are different than other Christian efforts? 



So why are there accusations of bigotry against Businessweek and Caroline Winter's article  How the Mormons Make Money,  which examines the finances and enterprises of the LDS?  It's an


"in-depth look into the business side of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, with much attention given to the tax
benefits the church enjoys and the extent of its holdings of property
and stock in multinational corporations"  


says Dan Merica at CNN Belief Blog. And why is that off limits?  Why is the anger more justified than the anger against pictures of Mohammad with a bomb in his turban?  Of course a spokesman for the Church of Later Day Saints was quick to tell us the article was in poor taste and intended to insult Mormans, but then I haven't noticed the same attitude as concerns the Book of Mormon and its vile insults against American Indians and people of color nor the same sort of thing as concerns Jews in the Gospels. Unfair and often vicious criticism isn't exactly uncommon in religion or religious texts.



The LDS is a Church, but also in fact, a huge international business enterprise claiming special treatment and  special exemption from inquiry or criticism as a religion.  It's not unique in that respect but I don't think any church is off limits when it comes to business interests and the obligations that obtain. Is freedom from taxes on income and capital gains and the right to secret dealings really part of the protection of free exercise?  No more than the freedom to traffic in underage girls. We have the right to criticize, to contradict, and yes to laugh.  As an old friend of mine used to say  "one man's religion is another man's belly laugh."



As the Businessweek article says,


"A recent study by Ryan Cragun, a sociology
professor at the University of Tampa, estimates the church receives
around $8 billion in tithing from members each years and is worth around
 $40 billion."  



They don't have to report it or disclose it and they do get to spend it on influencing Congress to make our laws more in line with their sometimes abhorrent moral doctrines.  To me that puts them in the same category, only with more money behind them, than those American Muslims, a few of whom would like to see our laws more in line with Sharia. 



Was our bill of rights intended to protect the right of belief, of worship or was it intended to allow organizations to operate as separate countries within our own, free to tamper with our laws, but exempt from taxes and from criticism?  I don't think so and I'm far more offended by money they earn at the taxpayer's expense being used to deny freedom to others then I am by a cynical magazine cover.

6 comments:

  1. What's not to ridicule about a religion that wears "magical underwear", declaring it to be the "most sacred of all things in the world"?

    ReplyDelete
  2. OKAY, I'm not laughing. But I can't help but to crack a grin.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I would laugh harder if the Bible didn't forbid cheeseburgers or shrimp or sewing up your linen shirt with cotton thread. And yet people do take this stuff as being the sacred word of God - to the point where they kill each other over the most ridiculously tiny disputes over these things.

    So how many people do I have to threaten with hellfire before I get tax-free status?

    ReplyDelete
  4. "So how many people do I have to threaten with hellfire before I get tax-free status?"

    Hell, I'd settle for Mitt's 15% tax rate.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Believe it or not, this dinosaur comes of Mormon stock through the paternal line -- one of my foredinos was apparently an early supporter of the Prophet. (Which makes said foredino a backslider with respect to the one absolutely and undeniably true religion, that of the Dinosaur Gods, upwards to whom he ought to have turned his grateful infant snout like Milton's Adam in Paradise Lost scans the sky to seek his maker.) Truth is stranger than fiction.

    Anyhow, just thought I might recommend a fine book by Fawn Brodie Smith -- No Man Knows My History. It's an excellent biographical study of Joseph Smith and the early development of Mormonism.

    ReplyDelete
  6. If there are latter day saints, why not a latter day dinosaur? I've read a bit about Mr. Smith and although it's a close contest, I think he gets the prize for the most fraudulent story to found a religion. I once asked a Mormon whether the obvious deception involved in passing off the Egyptian Book of the Dead as "The Testament of Abraham" didn't "test" his faith and he said, no it didn't.

    But you know what I think about faith.

    I think it's terrible that Mitt has to pay 15% and I'm sure he agrees and does everything he can to avoid paying it.

    ReplyDelete

We welcome civil discourse from all people but express no obligation to allow contributors and readers to be trolled. Any comment that sinks to the level of bigotry, defamation, personal insults, off-topic rants, and profanity will be deleted without notice.