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Susan Estrich
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The Mormon Question

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Back in 1980, when I was working for Sen. Ted Kennedy, the Cardinal of Boston instructed priests to take to their pulpits to denounce the candidacy of Democratic Congressman Barney Frank because of his support for abortion rights. "Get me my brother's speech," the senator said to me.

Anyone who is a student of politics knows what speech that was. On Sept. 12, 1960, facing the question of whether he would take his orders from Rome as the first Catholic president, presidential candidate John Kennedy went to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association "to state once again — not what kind of church I believe in, for that should be important only to me — but what kind of America I believe in."

It is a speech that at least 20 percent of all Americans — those who responded to a Gallup poll this week saying that if their party nominated a generally well-qualified person for president who happened to be Mormon, they would not vote for him — apparently disagree with. .

John F. Kennedy: "I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic, Protestant nor Jewish; where no public official either requests or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source; where no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials, and where religious liberty is so indivisible that an act against one church is treated as an act against all."

John Kennedy recognized the lesson so perfectly expressed by German Pastor Martin Niemoller: "First they came for the communists, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak out."

And so, the future president explained in 1960: "For while this year it may be a Catholic against whom the finger of suspicion is pointed, in other years it has been, and may someday be again, a Jew — or a Quaker, or a Unitarian, or a Baptist."

Or a Mormon.

As a Democrat, I might be pleased that two of the strongest and most qualified candidates for the Republican nomination for president, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, start out so far behind because both are Mormons. But who could be pleased just because the victim is someone else? If I am pleased because they are the victims, who will stand up for me when I am?

Of course religion matters in politics. My Jewish values shape my political beliefs. Black ministers were among the architects of the civil rights movement. The list goes on.

But it is one thing to bring our religious values to politics, to find in those values our commitments to equality and decency and charity. It is quite another to believe, as one in five of us seems to, that a person's private religious beliefs and values should count more than his public positions; that our willingness to vote for a candidate properly turns on whether he worships God as we do.

Two Mormons are running for president. There will be much talk over the coming year about the Mormon question — that is, whether a Mormon can be elected. That is not, in the end, a question about Romney and Huntsman, but about the rest of us and what kind of country we really are. Or as President Kennedy recognized: "Today, I may be the victim, but tomorrow it may be you — until the whole fabric of our harmonious society is ripped apart at a time of great national peril."

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

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What happened to freedom of religion in this country? Is a person unofficially disqualified because of their religious beliefs? I don't think so; just look at Obama and his Black Liberation Theology (that he forgets when it's convenient for him). I'm not a religious person, but I'm not going to discount anybody just because of their religious beliefs. Whether I support them or not will be based purely off their policies. I may agree with some of their policies even if it's based on their religion, but it's my responsibility to make sure I vote for the person I think will do right by our country.

With that said, it is now becoming clear who the liberals want to win the GOP nomination: Huntsman. Just because he announced his candidacy he is now a front runner with Romney? I don't think so. Americans wants a candidate who will not be afraid to tell it like it is; much like Palin, Cain, and Bachmann (and Romney is jumping on that band wagon too). Liberals like Huntsman for exactly the same reasons they loved McCain; they are both moderates who think comprising conservative values for the sake of 'bipartisanship' is the most virtuous act a congressman can do. Well, RINO's and moderates have been compromising with liberals for the last 20 years and look at the state we are in!

I guarantee you Susan, Huntsman will not win the nomination.
Comment: #1
Posted by: E Ortiz
Wed Jun 22, 2011 1:03 PM
Susan, wouldn't it be more appropriate for you to question the total lack of tolerance of any kind by the left for people of any faith?

Separately, why would you write about the hilarious notion of Senator Kennedy wanting to invoke his brother's speech to justify Barney Frank being in support of abortion (particularly funny since it's hard to imagine Barney every fathering a child)? Let's see how Ted practiced his Catholicism: Thou shalt not kill ---- hmmmm, poor Mary Jo Kopechne would beg to differ; Thou shalt honor thy spouse -- let's ask Joan Kennedy how honored she felt when he came home drunk, smelling of the women he'd been intimately involved with while he was married. (This isn't heresay - I personally saw Senator Kennedy drunk and groping a woman at The Monocle while he was still married - his buddy was doing the same - Senator Dodd). Susan, you seem to be suggesting that Senator Kennedy's Catholicism didn't shape his public policies. I maintain that his practice of Catholicism was questionable at best. Given President Kennedy's personal history, I really think you put up the wrong heroes in this essay.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Lesley Barnard
Wed Jun 22, 2011 5:51 PM
During the past few years, we've been annoyed by idiots who believe President Obama is Muslim. But what bothers me even more is mainstream news sources referring to him being "accused of being Muslim", as if it were a crime.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Steven Doyle
Thu Jun 23, 2011 6:42 AM
Lesley -- a lot of us in the Left are, in fact, people of faith. Sorry you were unaware of that.

You've a genius for missing the point. Can you refute anything in Pres. Kennedy's speech?

(And the word is "hearsay". As in, hearing and saying. Were you confusing it with "heresy"?)
Comment: #4
Posted by: Steven Doyle
Thu Jun 23, 2011 6:45 AM
In our present country, an atheist would be a sure bet to be President.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Early
Thu Jun 23, 2011 6:53 AM
If you ask, "Can a Mormon be elected?" enough times you make it into an issue.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Cowboy Jay
Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:21 AM
@ Steve. Thanks for the correction on hearsay. Perhaps in your book it's heresy to speak of the public debauchery of Ted Kennedy. I am aware that there are people on the Left who are devout in their faith. Saying such would have completed my point - which was to point out to Susan that, in citing President Kennedy and Senator Kennedy, she used very poor examples of people of faith. I'm not refuting anything in President Kennedy's speech but if your personal behavior mocks your public speaking about faith, is it a faith or a sham?
Comment: #7
Posted by: Lesley Barnard
Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:34 AM
Calling Kennedy a 'Catholic', is like calling the Rockefellers 'Baptists', or the Rothchilds 'Jewish'.
One and all belong to the same capstone religion drenched in the trappings of Egypitian perfectionism
and control, and Hindu and even Babylonian notions of caste and 'right'. The 'selective' breeding, inbreeding
and Social Darwinist aspects are already well-known.
Of course the Milner-Rockefeller-Carnegie-Ford Foundations have been long, and exclusively, involved
in engineering MASS cultural subversion and EUGENICS. Also well documented and UNDENIABLE.
Mormonism is in many ways a branch of this operation. It's murky origins in the 'burnt over' district
of West New York state in the early 1800s. It was, like the Oneida bunch and many others, consumed
with 'selective breeding' and Phaoronic obsession with 'bloodline'.
The Arminian Heresy was also, very largely, introduced to America through this region and the
Freemason front Arminian tent show 'crusador' Charles Finney. Finney is 'the' prototype for the
tent show operator ---folksy----empathy dispensing----inclusion fantasy colectivizer and standardizer.
He is 'the' man everyone from Hearst set up Arminian heretic fraud Billy Graham ---to Murdoch franchise
slum operator Glenn BECK and, of course, the ever deluded, ever poisonous Joel Osteen, Dr Phil and Oprah.
Their effect, if not conscious aim, was the eradication of genuine, scriptural Christianity ---stigmatized
as 'Calvinism'.
Further, NOTE, 'the' man behind the Rockefeller and Foundations takedown of culture through the
60's sex and drug 'culture' ---was one Willis Harmon of Stanford Univ. His roots ALSO go back into
Oneida ---western New York ---and the EUGENICS crowd ----Again, western New York ---the same
turf the Rockefellers came from.
"Religion is the KEY to history"
-Lord Acton
INDEED it is!
Comment: #8
Posted by: free bee
Thu Jun 23, 2011 9:17 PM
Many, many of the so called Catholics in politics and the media (Matthews, Pelosi, etc.) support abortion, the destruction of the santity of marriage and stealing in the form of excessive taxation. They are BAD Catholics because they don't follow the teachings of the Church. They're not even good Christians.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Early
Mon Jun 27, 2011 6:38 AM
Susan,

Me thinks you make up the story about Teddy. Because by the time you showed up for "work" Teddy was on his second bottle of vodka. He never said any such thing and you know it.
Stop with the "Camelot" fantasy will ya.

Bruce
Comment: #10
Posted by: bruce
Fri Jul 1, 2011 2:56 PM
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