Friday, January 23, 2009

Hanks' Un-Apology

Tom Hanks has a quick publicist who probably had the same reaction my seminary class did when they found out Woody put his Andy-tagged boot in his mouth "NO WAY!"
Way. Here is his well coached (and I'm sure PR proofed) "retraction:"
"Last week, I labeled members of the Mormon church who supported California’s Proposition 8 as “un-American.” I believe Proposition 8 is counter to the promise of our Constitution; it is codified discrimination. But everyone has a right to vote their conscience – nothing could be more American. To say members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who contributed to Proposition 8 are “un-American” creates more division when the time calls for respectful disagreement. No one should use “un- American” lightly or in haste. I did. I should not have.

Sincerely,
Tom Hanks.

So you won't find "sorry" or "misjudged" or "wasn't quite thinking straight" in there, so by my marks it's a qualified statement of clarification more than an apology. "I should not have" is simply not going to cut it for me--it indicates neither remorse nor humble acceptance of error. It may placate some, but I'm going to chalk this one up as "scoffing" in the "attitude of mocking and pointing their fingers" (1 Nephi 8:27-28). I'm glad he said something, but it's what he didn't say that shows what he really thinks.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Hope and New Starts


The best thing about clean starts is they are psychologically free from the baggage that might have otherwise encumbered how we think about the future. As I listened to Pres. Obama's inaugural speech this morning I felt the collective hope that he has for our nation in light of the current challenges we face. I think he genuinely wants what every president before him has wanted, a shot at making things work...his way. From what I've seen so far, his way includes persuasion, it includes consensus building, and it includes challenging people to do things they have not done before, perhaps in ways that have not been done before. He is my president, and I wholeheartedly support him in his efforts.
Pres. Obama does have challenges before him though, political and otherwise. I think the principle challenge he will face is to change the way many MANY of his supporters view the government. Whatever time he spends managing expectations with those who think big government spending and quasi-accountable leadership is going to solve the same problems it created will be time well spent. I am reminded of an interesting quote about friends and choices "You start to lose friends the minute you have to make choices." Until now the choices Pres. Obama has had to make are incomprehensibly minute compared to the choices he faces in the next four years. I hope, and I mean that in every sense of the word, that our "rock star" President, has some rocks of his own, that he is prepared to steel his back, open his ears, and use his highly effective rhetoric to help America, and Americans turn inward and ask "what can I do differently that will help America?" Repentance, a turning away from what has ailed us, and turning towards that which blesses and secures is the way ahead. That Barrack Obama can get us turning inward is the audacity of my hope.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Forrest Runs His Mouth on Un-American Mormons


Tom Hanks must have gotten some meth in his box of chocolates. The actor, film maker, and producer won't likely be invited to remake Mr. Kruger's Christmas or teach Constitutional Law anytime soon based on his latest display of anti-Mormon blather/ignorance:

“The truth is this takes place in Utah, the truth is these people are some bizarre offshoot of the Mormon Church, and the truth is a lot of Mormons gave a lot of money to the church to make Prop-8 happen,” he told Tarts. “There are a lot of people who feel that is un-American, and I am one of them. I do not like to see any discrimination codified on any piece of paper, any of the 50 states in America, but here's what happens now. A little bit of light can be shed, and people can see who's responsible, and that can motivate the next go around of our self correcting Constitution, and hopefully we can move forward instead of backwards. So let's have faith in not only the American, but Californian, constitutional process.”

The truth actually isn't that the "a lot of Mormons gave a lot of money to the church to make Prop-8 happen." The truth is a lot of Californians, and a lot of Mormons gave a lot of money to a lot of different organizations in order to participate in the American political process.

La Shawn Barber brings up a great point in his recent blog that while 70% of blacks voted for Prop-8 Hanks seems to have withheld his "un-American" status from them.
Probably a smart move Forrest.

Did Tom actually call Mormons "Un-American?" Not really, but I got the picture. I'm not sure what he actually was hoping to get across with this nonsense. Perhaps pandering to his Hollywood crowd (of course tossing a wink to Mel Gibson "you know what I'm talking about Mel") but c'mon. He's making money hand over fist on a dramatization of modern polygamy (he's a producer of Big Love on HBO) and ignorance sells. You know what doesn't sell for me though? Half baked civics lessons and "facts" celebrities regurgitate from PerezHilton. Tom, get yourself a Dr. Pepper and book a TransPacific flight on FedEx. Wilson would be ashamed.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Give Said the Little Stream--Mormon's Give it Up For Charity

I've heard and read quite a bit the last few weeks about how we're starting 2009 under a cloud blah blah blah. I just don't see it that way. Sure the economy could be better, we've got critical infrastructure older than McCain and a President elect who's biggest pressure decision was to put Sen. Clinton out of her misery or let her implode (he chose putting her out of her misery by the way). My point is SaintsandPatrtiots have never had more to be grateful for, or more reason to be optimistic. There are HUGE challenges all around us, in our homes, in our units, in our communities, and yes, especially in our nation. But we're given opposition "in all things" in order to grow--and I think the recent hullabaloo over Proposition 8 and the flack the church (and members in CA) took are opportunities to distinguish ourselves from the pack, and be seen and heard by the elect.
Two recent stories have gone, and will go underreported, even among LDS communities. First, the Economist (best source of news in print by the way) reported on the robustness of the economy in UT, compared to the rest of the west. Mormons work really hard, and value education, and it's getting noticed. Who wouldn't want to be associated with that?
Second, a recent Oxford study published a great report on how Mormon's give the most money to charity (see chart). The study suggest we give both at church and to other charities because of our structured (tithing) and unstructured (concern for others). Who wouldn't want to be associated with that?
People ask a lot of introspective questions around New Years. Be aware of this, and pay special attention to the Spirit as you interact with others you think may be looking for answers as to "what it all means." Don't give into the doom and gloom, don't even give it the air time in your mind or speech that it gets everywhere else. People will notice, and the opportunity will come to talk about how you know what you know, and why you live what you live.