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John Cronin

McCain and Romney, Now That’s the Ticket

August 21st, 2008 | 20 Comments | Posted in John McCain, Mitt Romney, Mormons

I haven’t been aware of any of her articles until now, but Mitt Romney has got a big fan in Marie Jon. Check out her excellent article at RENEWAMERICA.US.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/jon/080820

By: Marie Jon
RenewAmerica.US

We will soon know who the Democrat and Republican vice-presidential candidates will be. Who will Sen. John McCain pick to stand beside him? Although to some it is doubtful, will Mitt Romney be his choice?

Common sense almost dictates that “the candidate Republicans should be clamoring for is the one liberals are most feverishly denouncing. That is Mitt Romney by a landslide.” — Ann Coulter

Evangelical Christians have been aware of the dirge sung by those who, for whatever reason, wish to exclude Romney from consideration for the VP post on the Republican ticket. Very well-crafted words are being used to try to induce Evangelicals to withhold their votes from this very qualified man because of his (Mormon) faith.

Political pundits have broken down some of these misconceptions. Romney’s conservatism is accepted among Evangelicals. His experiences as a businessman are appealing in today’s weak economy. His years of successfully working within the global economy demonstrate his knowledge of how markets work. He would strengthen the ticket in light of McCain’s perceived weakness on economic issues.

“I’d Pick Romney’ as McCain’s Running Mate.” — Karl Rove

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John Cronin

Layton Book Rips National GOP For Anti-Mormon Bias

August 18th, 2008 | 36 Comments | Posted in Evangelicals, LDS, Mitt Romney, Mormons

I don’t know enough about the subject to even hazard a guess as to whether Mr. Foster’s book is accurate or not. I have posted this article as a FYI service to our readers.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.standard.net/live/news/140695/

LAYTON — Frustrated by the treatment former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney received from the “religious right” in his run for U.S. president, a Layton historian has written a book documenting the anti-Mormon bias amidst the national GOP party.

The 244-page, softcover book, “A Different God? Mitt Romney, The Religious Right and the Mormon Question” by Craig L. Foster, lists for $24.95 and is now available online at Amazon.com and Barnes&Noble.com and is expected to reach book stores by Aug. 21.

The book was published by Greg Kofford Books, a Salt Lake City publishing company.

Foster, a 30-year GOP member and former Davis County party chairman, said his intent is to demonstrate there was an anti-Mormon bias by the “religious right” within the national party against Romney, a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

That bias was a significant factor in Romney’s failed attempt at the presidency, the 48-year-old Foster said.

Romney, who made Utah’s 2002 Olympic Winter Games a success, received about 90 percent of Utah’s Republican vote in the Feb. 5 presidential western primary, well outdistancing the field.

What frustrates Foster, an LDS Church genealogist and historian, is Utah Republicans are conservative party members who have been devoted to GOP candidates, including giving President George W. Bush his largest margin of victory in his 2004 re-election bid.

We all remember the South voting as a bloc for Huckabee. Mitt was strong in most of the early primary states, won Michigan going away and won most of the Western states in landslides, but the string of losses in the South was impossible to overcome, especially with the later narrow losses in Missouri and California.

The Bountiful Republican does admit Romney’s downfall in his campaign may have stemmed from opposition he received within the national party from segments in the South, where some view Mormons as being members of a cult.”When you get right down to it, it was a slap in the face of Utah Republicans,” Foster said, who, in the book, refers to the Mormon bias in boxing terms as “a low blow.”

While Foster and Christensen remain doubtful Romney will be named to McCain’s ticket, the state’s leading Republican remains optimistic.

State Republican Party Chairman Stan Lockhart said, based on everything he has read and heard from those within the party, Romney remains on McCain’s “short list” of potential running mates.

Before dropping out of the race for president, Romney had won 11 states, Lockhart said, and seemed to be receiving good response from GOP members across the nation.

Foster has authored two books and co-authored a book with Newell G. Bringhurst, “The Mormon Quest for the Presidency.”

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John Cronin

Snarky……Salon.Com Alert

July 28th, 2008 | 3 Comments | Posted in Catholics, Mitt Romney, Mormon, Mormons

I stumbled across a snippet of an article from our friends over at Salon.Com who are the polar opposite of everything we stand for here at CTR. The denizens of Salon are nothing if not tedious in their attempts to shame those of us who live in fly over country, you know, bitter, clinging to our faith and our guns, over our general unhipness, mind-numbed allegiance to Luddite conservatism and above all, our tiresome affection for Mitt Romney.

There are, generally speaking, only two denominations that can be attacked with glee and abandon and with no retribution and those two are Catholicism and Mormonism. The hack that produced this little article, where he enthusiastically recommends another post by one his condescending buddies, drops the bucket down into the same well that was used by the Left throughout the primaries and lo and behold he comes up with the same stuff……Romney’s hair, did we mention he’s a Mormon, he’s a rich guy….sigh.

This kind of stereotypical thinking and school boy level taunting is why we will eventually take back the Congress and hopefully keep the White House. The Left does not have a clue about what makes us tick. This kind of pandering to their base where they use a candidate’s religion to frame the debate, rather than have an intelligent debate over real issues, is roughly the equivalent of waving a red cape at a bull. All it accomplishes is to further enrage the bull. But unlike the bull, we are not going to let our anger at our treatment lure us into doing something self-defeating. We are going to use that energy to continue to push hard for victory at the polls this November.

I am tired of the LDS bashing. I am tired of the Catholic bashing. You know, there is just something about being pro life and patriotic that really rubs the Left the wrong way. So, let Salon be Salon and we will continue to be anachronistic throw backs to another age and, unless I miss my bet, I can’t help but think that a majority of Americans feel more comfortable with our values.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/snarky

snarky
One entry found.
snarky

Main Entry:
snarky
Pronunciation:
\ˈsnär-kē\
Function:
adjective
Etymology:
dialect snark to annoy, perhaps alteration of nark to irritate
Date:
1906
1 : crotchety, snappish 2 : sarcastic, impertinent, or irreverent in tone or manner
— snark•i•ly \-kə-lē\ adverb

http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2008/07/28/mitt_moneymachine/index.html?source=rss&aim=/politics/war_room

Mitt Romney: Republican ATM machine

Take a look at this great post from data-mensch Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com.

It tracks the potential fundraising windfall that John McCain stands to benefit from should he tap Mitt Romney as his running mate. Given the obvious distaste McCain showed for Romney during the Republican primaries — in Iowa, McCain’s campaign ran a tough but sarcastic push poll about Romney’s shifting social issue positions in order to help Mike Huckabee defeat Romney — there are two and only two reasons McCain would put him on the ticket, neither of which has to do with Romney’s gorgeous hair.

The first is that Mormon-based ATM cash card for which Romney holds the four-digit pass code. And the other is Michigan.

― Thomas Schaller

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John Cronin

IRS Investigating Internet Evangelist

Bill Keller, who really hit the Media’s radar screen during the primaries with his infamous quote about Mitt Romney is being investigated by the IRS according to EarnedMedia.Org in a story referencing the original article in the NEW YORK TIMES.

I thought his remark was way off base and apparently the IRS does as well. It will be very interesting to see how the case develops.

~~John Cronin~~


http://www.earnedmedia.org/wdc0624.htm

MEDIA ADVISORY, June 24 /Christian Newswire/ –

The New York Times has broken the story that Bill Keller, founder of Liveprayer.com with over 2.4 million subscribers to his Daily Devotional and host of the Liveprayer TV program, is under investigation for possibly violating his tax exempt status in speaking out last year against former Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s Mormon beliefs. Keller, who was the first Christian leader to speak out nationally against Romney’s beliefs coined the now infamous phrase, “A vote for Romney is a vote for Satan.”

Keller maintains that he has done nothing to violate his tax exemption status and says his attorneys are confident the ministry will be cleared of any wrongdoing. Keller stated, “I have every right to educate people on spiritual matters and deal with the pressing spiritual issues of our day, even those that transcend into the political arena. Unlike many Christian leaders, I have never, or ever will endorse any candidate for public office and have never told people who to or not to vote for.” He has recently been in the national news making the case that the Democratic nominee for President, Senator Barack Obama is not a Christian.

New York Times story from Tuesday, June 24, 2008: http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/23/challenging-the-irs/

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John Cronin

Drumbeat for Romney for VP Grows Louder

Brief article over at HOT AIR touts Mitt Romney for the vice presidential slot.
The article talks about the strength that Romney would bring to the ticket because of his mastery of business and economics. If Mitt is not picked for VP, I think this is what needs to happen.

The McCain campaign needs to send a message to conservatives, IMHO, in two areas of vital importance, or they will not be pleased with the results they get at at the ballot box in November.

1. We need an iron-clad promise to secure our borders and to enforce the existing laws on immigration.

2. We need a comprehensive economic policy that includes making the Bush tax cuts permanent, killing the death tax, balancing the budget and moving to reform the bloated entitlement spending that threatens to bankrupt this country.

Failing to accomplish this, the feckless leadership we have been getting from the Republican Party at the national level, will usher in eight bleak years of Democratic rule.

I know I am repeating myself, but I will say it again. Unless grassroots Republicans rise up and retake this party in order to guide it back toward the conservative principles that made the Party and the country great, we are going to lose this election. If there isn’t two cents worth of difference between the Democrat’s platform and the Republican’s platform, who cares which party wins? Obviously the career politicians do, but I am talking about the voters who have to pay for all of this.

We are not getting our money’s worth!

~~John Cronin~~

http://hotair.com/archives/2008/05/01/pew-mccain-gaining-at-the-center/

The economy will present a critical test for McCain. He has worked on building economic chops, and his campaign has notable assistance in this area from Steve Forbes and even Mitt Romney. Obama’s stumble on capital-gains tax increases could help narrow this gap, but thus far the McCain campaign hasn’t offered any focus on that gaffe from the April 16th debate.
McCain could use a well-recognized hand on economics as a running mate. I’ve suggested that Romney could fill that role, although Allahpundit has been less enthusiastic. Romney did a great job with fundraising in 2007 and could help fill a critical gap there as well. Now that Jeremiah Wright has managed to splatter himself all over Obama, not too many people would worry about Mormons in the general election. Mormons aren’t known for asking that God damn America or promulgating weird conspiracy theories about HIV and government-sponsored genocides. Wright’s demagoguery has taken the Mormon issue off the table, if Obama wins the nomination.

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John Cronin

Ecumenical Meeting Marks First Time Mormons Join In Papal Gathering

April 20th, 2008 | 19 Comments | Posted in Charitable Giving, LDS, Mitt Romney, Mormons

http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0802159.htm

By: Beth Griffin

Catholic News Service

In an important ecumenical milestone, Father James Massa, Executive Director of the U.S. Bishop’s Secretariat of Ecumenical and Inter-religious Affairs has announced that two members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints have attended a Papal prayer service at St. Joseph’s Church in New York.

On April 18, two members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Elders M. Russell Ballard and Quentin L. Cook took part in the historic meeting.

It’s my understanding from the article that the Catholic Church and the LDS Church have also been co-operating with Catholic Relief Services (CRS) in helping the victims of natural disasters.

Kudos to both Churches for their generous service to those in need.

Click on over and read a very fine article on this ground breaking event.

~~John Cronin~~

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Mike Laub

The Reverend Cecil “Chip” Murray: Romney faces more prejudice than Obama

Posted by: Lowell Brown at 02:35 pm, February 1st 2008      &mdash      2 Comments »

chipmurray.jpg

Chip Murray is a Senior Fellow in the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the University of Southern California, where he holds the Tanzy Chair in Christian Ethics. For 27 years he has been nationally known as the leader and Senior Pastor of the influential Los Angeles First African Methodist Episcopal Church (FAME). Murray’s leadership increased church membership from several hundred to more than 18,000. He is also credited with helping to build FAME Renaissance, the church’s economic-development nonprofit arm, which brings corporate interests, jobs-training programs, affordable-housing development, homeowner loans and small-business incubation into the church’s low-income neighborhood.

“In 2008 whose candidacy will face the most opposition, Barack Obama or Mitt Romney? Who do you think will face the most opposition or the most prejudice today?”
Reverend Murray: “The Mormon. Because America is still growing.”

Sonja Eddings Brown interviewed Dr. Murray on November 6, 2007, and made the video available to Article VI Blog. Excerpts from the video are posted at the upper right of our home page, and are available here.

_________________________

A6: In the past year or so, several polls have been conducted suggesting that as many as 37% of Americans might not consider a member of the Mormon Church to be fit for the office of President. What is your view of the possibility of a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints being elected to the presidency?

Reverend Murray: To me this seems an antiquated question. Would a Mormon be fit to serve as President? It was really antiquated when we asked the question about John Kennedy and whether a Catholic would be fit to serve as president. About Barack Obama and whether a Black would be fit to serve as president. About Hilary Clinton, whether a woman would be fit to serve as president.

If you want to, you can categorize anyone who is running. You could ask whether a White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant, male is fit to run for president when that’s all we’ve ever had. It’s time to change. There can be arguments if you go by labels, but if you see that this is a country in pursuit of liberty and justice for all, if you perceive that in a democracy as opposed to a fascist form of government we must have liberty and equity in the process. If you can see that we are in the 21st Century, where people will soon be crossing the country in 30 minutes, where we will be vacationing on Mars, if you can see the new world then you accommodate yourself to it and stop living in the past.

People’s labels, as long as they are not labeled as a criminal mentality, or defined as someone not FOR the people, then you can judge the merits of that platform and what they stand for, not where they are standing.

A6: But there are some in your own Christian community that fundamentally reject the theology of the Mormon Church and fear validating it by supporting Mitt Romney. They in essence, reject him, because they reject his beliefs.

Reverend Murray: If a candidate says my belief system is this…and someone who says, “Well my belief system is this…and we do not accept you because of your belief system.” Anyone who is fair would look at this and say “Who appointed you judge?” I say, “When did God die and appoint you judge?” There’s a constant challenge to grow and few churches can point the finger at another. Few people of one belief system can point a finger at another … particularly when you look at how the Mormons were treated in their trek West. They were coming West to escape the brutality of Christian people who were opposed to their way of thinking.

And now, if you would find a church as socially conscious as the Mormon Church, you would have done well. The outreach, the worldwide missionary outreach, young adults, youth, volunteering their time, everyone is a minister in a ministry of outreach, that would be a wonderful model for all of our churches to adopt.

A6: As a respected long-time member of the Christian ministry, how do you feel we are doing as a country when it comes to the actual separation of Church and State?

Reverend Murray: I think the separation of Church and State is a basic policy that we simply must follow. Not to follow that separation, that line in the sand separating church and state is to flirt with danger. Now of course when you separate church and state that doesn’t mean that you weed religion out of those who are in politics, not that you weed politics out of those in religion, but you can’t customize it, you can’t structure it, so that you have the bully pulpit dictating to Congress. You can’t give God a stick and you be God’s agent and you are whipping people into line in your religious context.

You have your religion, your religion is personal. And even though religion is personal but never private, it cannot be public to the extent that it’s “my way or the highway.”

It isn’t American and it isn’t sensible to make the bully pulpit the bully. The bully pulpit at best deals with conscience and conscientiousness. Not consensus and not control. People have the right to believe as they believe. The Pure Charity Trust says that 87% of Americans believe in God but now when we look at how these Americans look at God, you have the Abrahamic faiths. Judaism, Christianity and Islam. You have the faith that comes out of the Mormon Church, you have Bhuddist and Daoist. These people have the right to their individual beliefs, but no one has the right to a collective belief that sweeps and demands and says you believe as we believe … or you get hurt.

A6: One of the most commonly-heard criticisms of the LDS Church is that Mormons are not considered to be authentically “Christian.” Reverend, what is your definition of a Christian?

Reverend Murray: The definition of Christian would start with the definition of religion from French Latin: “religare.” It means the pieces fit. Just as with Shalom, the Jewish term, it means “the pieces fit.” As long as the pieces collide, you probably have some struggles with your authenticity in religion. But once the pieces fit, “I love God, I love my neighbor, I have an ear for my neighbor as well as a tongue, I have patience with my neighbor as he has patience with me, I have dialogue with my neighbor who will have dialogue with me. I have differences with my neighbor and he has differences with me,” then the pieces fit. Our greatest challenge? Different folks with differences … not allowing their differences to matter.

A6: In 2008 whose candidacy will face the most opposition, Barack Obama ? Who do you think will face the most opposition or the most prejudice today?

Reverend Murray: The Mormon. Because America is still growing. The question, “Do we want a Mormon?” The ultra conservatives will start reaching into history and try to paint them as a radical sect, try to show that their belief system is alien to what perhaps a majority of Americans believe. Because that’s where we are now. Prayerfully, that’s not where we’ll be in 20, 30 or 40 years. We don’t know. I would say Barack would have the advantage. And anytime you say a black candidate would have an advantage running for President of the United States of America, great day in the morning! After four centuries of bad thinking about Blacks, then you know we still have LONG way to go.

I think Governor Romney must see himself as a symbol. Symbol of the underdog, who must run a good race, fight a good fight, and if and when he loses, walk with his head high because the victory was not in the victory, but in the struggle.

A6: It is not unusual, it is customary even, to see intermingling of church and politics in this present campaign. We have seen Jesse Jackson in the past, or today Barack Obama going into churches with his messages, or even a declared minister like Mike Huckabee campaigning as a man of faith and in places of faith. Are these candidates walking a thin line?

Reverend Murray: Jesse Jackson is a good example of what we’re talking about, because he comes out of the Black community, also out of black ministry. The black ministry knows that if the church is not involved in politics, the black people will get lost. The voting rights movement there in the Black church, getting the black vote out, the church must be involved. But you walk a chalk line interpreting involvement. You are free to endorse a candidate, because much can ride on your endorsement. But if you were to talk to any gathering of 10 blacks, I think nine out of ten, nine and a half out of ten, would say “Jesse is free to say who he wants to endorse, but I endorse who I want.”

Because we are living in a century or better of understanding … that you don’t boss the church with politics.

A6: Considering the questions that continue to follow Governor’s Romney campaign, what do you see as the biggest challenge facing Mitt Romney in his bid for the presidency?

Reverend Murray: I think Governor Romney must see himself as a symbol. Symbol of the underdog, who must run a good race, fight a good fight, and if and when he loses, walk with his head high because the victory was not in the victory, but in the struggle. He must hold America to its highest, he must have an agenda with bullet points that are clear to understand so that people can see what he stands for even as some will see as what he stand on … Mormonism. And thus be led to make choices. He may see himself as a door opener, because 4 years from now he might run again and find a whole new chemistry. Or forty years from now another Mormon will run, and they will see, just as Jesse ran for President and Al Sharpton ran for president. There was not a chance that they would win. Blacks knew it very well. They themselves knew it. But they were door openers for such as Barack Obama.

A6: And as a member of the clergy, how do you view the scrutiny that the Mormon Church as a whole is facing this year?

Reverend Murray: It isn’t that Americans are ignorant of the Mormon Church, it is that they want to be ignorant of the Mormon Church because they are different, and we think different “from” means different “bad.” So what is our hope? I think we have a chauffeur when it comes to fairness. We will be driven towards fairness by necessity. You cannot live in this country putting down people of this Church. Of that faith. Of people who are different. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has done miracles of transformation. So the mentality of those who behave ignorant of it, and ignorance is bliss for them, they will take some educating. But it can be done and it must be done. So the Mormon Church has to continue to hold tight to high principles, market its product and its people continue to serve beyond themselves, knowing occasionally they’re going to take the hit. But within whatever period of time, people will come to see that the pieces fit.

Some people might say, “Is that a black man over there telling us that it just takes time?”

That’s just common reasoning. It takes time.

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