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Washington Post article--Where is the Mormon Church on Trump


bsjkki

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The full article is behind a pay wall for me--hit my Facebook tonight. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2017/01/28/the-mormon-church-which-prizes-religious-freedom-is-silent-on-trump/?utm_term=.8dc14deb0aab  Also the church released this statement: http://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/the-church-expresses-concern-for-those-fleeing-violence-war-and-religious-persecution  The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is concerned about the temporal and spiritual welfare of all of God's children across the earth, with special concern for those who are fleeing physical violence, war and religious persecution. The Church urges all people and governments to cooperate fully in seeking the best solutions to meet human needs and relieve suffering. 

 

 

 

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Thanks for the nifty trick, Rod. Did not know that. 

To be fair to the article, it was written about 3-4 hours before I saw the newsroom/DN article with the statement. I've been keeping close tabs on this because I'm absolutely appalled by the legislation that very much appears to be veering on unconstitutional and is an affront to religious freedom in its apparent discrimination, its drastic reduction of help to refugees, and its preference of one religious group over another. It feels as though it goes against some of our greater values based of of fear-mongering rhetoric.

I liked the Deseret news article on this Here. I can also see how people could feel underwhelmed by the response. I wasn't particularly impressed by the short statement. 

That said, I also know that's not how the Church generally works in the sense of concerns that veer political, particularly with specific leaders (I don't know if I've ever heard the Church in recent history, call out any political leader). So I'm not surprised that the focused on a positivist message of working to help refugee populations, encouraging that in all governments, and leaving it at that. It gives wiggle room, particularly members, to decide what that means for them. People already have a tendency to allign the political ideology as some how church-ordained. As much as I would love a stronger statement, I get why they don't and do not want the Church to become partisan.

 

With luv,

BD

Edited by BlueDreams
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I am still trying to get my head around why the media is calling it a "muslim ban" at all.   The NY Times (and virtually all of the media I have seen) creates the muslim thing, when the order prohibits Syrian refugees (now that ISIS is falling surely we recognize the temptation ISIS would have to encourage their fighters to go elsewhere and slip through these vetting processes) indefinitely, all refugees for a period that allows efforts to review and improve vetting, and blocks those from Iran (supports at least Hezabollah and other record of violent behaviors), Libya (pretty dysfunctional so not a good partner for figuring out who are good people and who are not, and a current home/training for ISIS), Iraq (ISIS holds territory there, but is being overtaken and may want to find a new place to go to); Somalia (chaos and lots of violent terrorist actions --- same as Sudan, Syria and Yemen).   They may be majority ISLAM, but they are more importantly countries where terrorism reigns unchecked by stable government.   And there a a whole lot of other countries with muslim majorities who are not included in the restrictions.

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President Trump’s executive order on immigration indefinitely barred Syrian refugees from entering the United States, suspended all refugee admissions for 120 days and blocked citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries, refugees or otherwise, from entering the United States for 90 days: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

I would strenuously object too to a ban based on faith.   But it seems to me that this ban is based on sound anti-terrorist, desire to protect the USofA.   And that our country's media is determined to suggest it to be a religious ban when that is not what the executive order decrees at all.   (I do recognize that those enforcing the ban who are biased against and/or afraid of Muslims might impose/infuse their personal ideas into the way they implement the Ex Order, but that can be dealt with by training and firing, when necessary.

 

ETA the full text of the Executive Order.  https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/us/politics/refugee-muslim-executive-order-trump.html  Also note the Washington Post opinion chastising the Mormon Church for not opposing Trump's action complete ignored the actual text and created its own allegation of a "Muslim ban" too.

Edited by rpn
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5 hours ago, rodheadlee said:

You get 5 free articles a month. Just dump your cookies and you should be able to view the article.

Thanks for this tip! I run into this problem every month but am much too cheap to pay. Just an FYI, the countries that are on this list were identified by the Obama White house in a 2016 Visa Waiver Program. These were the countries identified needing heightened screenings due to terrorism concerns.  More Cubans were trapped at border crossings due to Obama's Cuban policy change on Jan. 12 than were effected yesterday. Why didn't anybody care to show their despair at this surprise order by Obama and protest? I do not think it is unreasonable to temporarily ban or limit programs for 90 days or 6 months in order to make sure proper procedures and vetting are taking place. Why didn't the Washington Post wonder why Mormons were not responding to the Cuban situation? Trump did not institute a religious test to keep Muslim's out. Calling this a 'Muslim Ban' are completely false. Fifty countries are majority Muslim and only 7 are effected. Trump does provide for expediting Christian refugees who live as a minority and are being persecuted/beheaded. Is that wrong?

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In 2013, ABC News first revealed that two years earlier, the State Department had imposed a freeze over the processing of Iraqi refugees for six months. The halt was the result of the discovery of two al-Qaida members admitted as refugees from Iraq who were living in Bowling Green, Kentucky and who had admitted to targeting U.S. troops in Iraq.

http://www.breitbart.com/jerusalem/2017/01/29/flashback-obama-2011-suspended-iraq-refugee-program-six-months-terrorism-fears/

 

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So, in a nutshell, Obama restricted visa waivers for those seven Muslim-majority countries — Iran, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Somalia, Libya and Yemen — and now, Trump is looking to bar immigration and visitors from the same list of countries.

http://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2017/01/29/news-bulletin-the-list-of-muslim-nations-in-trumps-socalled-muslim-ban-are-ones-obama-choose-n2278021

 

How come the media did not call these "Muslim bans"? How come the LDS Church did not raise concern over freedom of religion then, or did they and I don't know about it?

Edited by Darren10
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3 hours ago, rpn said:

I am still trying to get my head around why the media is calling it a "muslim ban" at all.   The NY Times (and virtually all of the media I have seen) creates the muslim thing, when the order prohibits Syrian refugees (now that ISIS is falling surely we recognize the temptation ISIS would have to encourage their fighters to go elsewhere and slip through these vetting processes) indefinitely, all refugees for a period that allows efforts to review and improve vetting, and blocks those from Iran (supports at least Hezabollah and other record of violent behaviors), Libya (pretty dysfunctional so not a good partner for figuring out who are good people and who are not, and a current home/training for ISIS), Iraq (ISIS holds territory there, but is being overtaken and may want to find a new place to go to); Somalia (chaos and lots of violent terrorist actions --- same as Sudan, Syria and Yemen).   They may be majority ISLAM, but they are more importantly countries where terrorism reigns unchecked by stable government.   And there a a whole lot of other countries with muslim majorities who are not included in the restrictions.

I would strenuously object too to a ban based on faith.   But it seems to me that this ban is based on sound anti-terrorist, desire to protect the USofA.   And that our country's media is determined to suggest it to be a religious ban when that is not what the executive order decrees at all.   (I do recognize that those enforcing the ban who are biased against and/or afraid of Muslims might impose/infuse their personal ideas into the way they implement the Ex Order, but that can be dealt with by training and firing, when necessary.

 

ETA the full text of the Executive Order.  https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/us/politics/refugee-muslim-executive-order-trump.html  Also note the Washington Post opinion chastising the Mormon Church for not opposing Trump's action complete ignored the actual text and created its own allegation of a "Muslim ban" too.

I can't read Trump's mind, but he definitely talked about banning Muslim immigration while campaigning, so it seems that that is his intention. The order explains that in the banned countries, refugees from minority religions (ie Christians) may be admitted, so clearly it is targeting specifically Muslims from these countries. If it were really all about terrorism, presumably he would have put restrictions on the actual countries that have been responsible for terrorism recently like Saudi Arabia, not countries like Iran. I also wouldn't put it past him to be taking advantage of the fact that a lot of Americans not realizing that countries like Indonesia actually have more Muslims. A lot of (most?) people seem to equate Islam with Arabs. Whatever it is he's trying to do, it makes very little sense.

Edited by mapman
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3 hours ago, rpn said:

I am still trying to get my head around why the media is calling it a "muslim ban" at all.   The NY Times (and virtually all of the media I have seen) creates the muslim thing, when the order prohibits Syrian refugees...

Perhaps the article I read last night on this was wrong (random one I came across when researching something else), but if Trump did say as reported there that Syrian Christians would be given preferential treatment (his reasoning given was that they had been unfairly rejected before when the statistics are actually about equal between Muslims and Christians with the past admin according to what I read), then it certainly seems like the intent is to ban Muslims.

add-on:  missed this the first time around...

"Trump does provide for expediting Christian refugees who live as a minority and are being persecuted/beheaded. Is that wrong?"

Is there data that demonstrates deathrates of Christians are actually higher in these countries than their Muslim counterparts?

Edited by Calm
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"But here's the reality: While Christians in Iraq and Syria have been killed by ISIS, Muslims have been the group's victims far more frequently and represent the strong majority. Shiite Muslims are killed by ongoing waves of ISIS bombings of Shiite neighborhoods and Shiite members of Iraq's security forces have been victim to mass ISIS executions.

But even as ISIS claims it fights for Sunni Islam, fellow Sunni Muslims have also been killed and displaced in greater numbers than Christians. That's, in part, because ISIS operates most in Sunni areas. Hundreds of thousands of Sunnis have been displaced from ISIS areas, as Sunnis, who try to oppose the group or have ties to the Iraqi government, are targeted.

And, Muslims have fought ISIS more than anyone else. This includes Kurdish Sunnis and Arab Sunnis and Shiites, who are on the front lines and often allied with U.S. advisers in the battle against ISIS, as well as Turkmen Muslims. Some of the most horrific videos from ISIS have shown the killing of Sunni Muslims who have fought the group, like a Jordanian pilot and Turkish troops shown burned alive.

Certainly, it's the case that Christians were terrified of ISIS and fled. ISIS has desecrated churches and shrines. Some Christians have lived in ISIS-controlled areas and paid a tax to the terrorist group. And there have been Christians killed and kidnapped — 88 Eritrean Christians from Libya who were kidnapped by ISIS in 2015 two months after 28 Ethiopian Christians were executed; 262 Assyrian Christians kidnapped from the Tel Tamer area in Syria and held for ransom; 50 killed in Tel Tamer in suicide bombings.

But that pales in comparison to the mass murder of Muslims — massacres in Iraq; 1,700 Iraqi air force cadets executed or missing from Camp Speicher, a former American military base near Tikrit; the slaughter of hundreds of the al-Sheitat tribe in Syria; and the massacre of Syrian army POWs at Tabqa in 2014.

That's not to mention the hunting down of Yezidis."

http://www.npr.org/2017/01/29/512305163/fact-check-trump-tweets-on-christians-isis-and-vetting-miss-the-bigger-picture

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"Mr Trump’s claim that Isis has targeted Christians over other groups with its beheadings also appears to be untrue.

The group has released gory propaganda footage showing mass decapitations of Ethiopian Christians and Coptic Christians in Libya in 2015 but several other massacres on a similar scale have targeted Syrian soldiers and rebels, Kurdish fighters and Iraqi soldiers, all believed to be Muslims.

In the territory it controls across Iraq and Syria, Isis’ brutal interpretation of Sharia law also allows for the beheading of local residents on allegations of spying and sorcery, among others.  

Isis claims to be fighting a holy war against other Muslim sects, Yazidis, Christians and the “kuffar”, or disbelievers.

Like other Sunni jihadist groups, Isis considers Shia Muslims to be heretical and has made its followers the main target of its attacks in Iraq...

While al-Qaeda leaders considered attacks on Shia civilians too extreme and detrimental to public support – as well as a distraction from its jihad against the West – Isis has made the massacres a priority, targeting symbolic shrines, holy cities and pilgrimages as well as packed markets.

Shias were also the main victims of Isis’ deadliest ever attack in Iraq, when militants were reported to have massacred at least 1,500 air force cadets at Camp Speicher in Tikrit in June 2014.

A handful of survivors recounted jihadists separating Shias and other religious minorities, driving them into the desert and lining them up on the edge of a mass grave before opening fire.

The atrocity was one of countless massacres inflicted upon government forces and civilians in Iraq, where almost 7,000 people were killed and 12,000 injured in more than 2,400 attacks in 2015, according to the US State Department.

The Global Terrorism Index ranks it as the country worst-affected by terror, followed by Afghanistan, Nigeria, Pakistan and Syria – all Muslim-majority countries.

There are no definitive figures on the number of Muslims or other religious denominations killed by Isis but the huge number of victims in Iraq, where 95 per cent of the population is Muslim, suggests that the religion makes up by far the largest proportion of the dead.

A 2011 report by the US government’s National Counter-Terrorism Center (NCTC), said: “In cases where the religious affiliation of terrorism casualties could be determined, Muslims suffered between 82 and 97 per cent of terrorism-related fatalities over the past five years.”"

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/donald-trump-muslim-ban-immigration-visas-refugees-syria-iraq-terrorism-isis-attacks-most-victims-a7550936.html

If Trump includes Shia and other Muslim religious minority groups in his exemption, it would seem less targeted at Muslims.  If he doesn't, more targeted.

Anyone know what the process is to determine one is a Christian and how difficult it is to lie about it?

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You can make a good argument though that ISIS followers (whom american wants to be protected against) are unlikely to mask themselves as Syrian Christians, and therefore the relative risk of admitting real Syrian Christians (who are likely to die if so identified or suspected by ISIS) is acceptable.

 

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24 minutes ago, rpn said:

You can make a good argument though that ISIS followers (whom american wants to be protected against) are unlikely to mask themselves as Syrian Christians, and therefore the relative risk of admitting real Syrian Christians (who are likely to die if so identified or suspected by ISIS) is acceptable.

 

Why assume that ISIS followers who are willing to be violent and even kill others are not willing to lie about what they believe to do so?

Edited by Calm
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39 minutes ago, Calm said:

Perhaps the article I read last night on this was wrong (random one I came across when researching something else), but if Trump did say as reported there that Syrian Christians would be given preferential treatment (his reasoning given was that they had been unfairly rejected before when the statistics are actually about equal between Muslims and Christians with the past admin according to what I read), then it certainly seems like the intent is to ban Muslims.

Syrian Christians have been given anything but preferential treatment in the past and here is why.  " But the numbers tell a different story: The United States has accepted 10,801 Syrian refugees, of whom 56 are Christian. Not 56 percent; 56 total, out of 10,801. That is to say, one half of one percent. The BBC says that ten percent of all Syrians are Christian, which would mean 2.2 million Christians. It is quite obvious, and President Obama and Secretary Kerry have acknowledged it, that Middle Eastern Christians are an especially persecuted group."   Nina Shea, who is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom explains it this way:

Experts say another reason for the lack of Christians in the make-up of the refugees is the make-up of the camps. Christians in the main United Nations refugee camp in Jordan are subject to persecution, they say, and so flee the camps, meaning they are not included in the refugees referred to the U.S. by the U.N .“The Christians don’t reside in those camps because it is too dangerous,” Shea said. “They are preyed upon by other residents from the Sunni community and there is infiltration by ISIS and criminal gangs.”“They are raped, abducted into slavery and they are abducted for ransom. It is extremely dangerous, there is not a single Christian in the Jordanian camps for Syrian refugees,” Shea said.

" Sure, in that we do not and could not legally ban Christian refugees any more than we could or should bar Muslim refugees. But when you have been running a refugee program for years, and you have accepted 10,612 Sunni refugees and 56 Christians, and it is obvious why and obvious how to fix it, and nothing is done to fix it—well, the results speak more loudly than speeches, laws, intentions or excuses. In effect, we make it almost impossible for Christian refugees to get her. http://blogs.cfr.org/abrams/2016/09/09/the-united-states-bars-christian-not-muslim-refugees-from-syria/

Trump was specifically talking about Christians in the Middle East and the numbers from NPR were talking about the total number of refugees admitted world wide. There is a reason it is described as a Christian genocide in the Middle East.http://www.nationalreview.com/article/432884/isis-genocide-christians-enslaved-killed-state-department-looks-other-way

 

 

 

 

 

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:huh:It is to be said though...that after all is said and done..and no matter how anyone feels about Pres. Trump, how long has it been since a President did exactly what he said he was going to do...and fast!  Doesn't mean that what he does is all good of course.  I didn't take the "Muslim Ban" as literal against the religion..especially the peaceful muslims in our own country.  This is a quick pause until a vetting system is put into place..(my understanding).  In any case, I hope that we can bring those with their dreams and hearts desires without fear and fear for them.

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2 hours ago, mapman said:

I can't read Trump's mind, but he definitely talked about banning Muslim immigration while campaigning, so it seems that that is his intention. The order explains that in the banned countries, refugees from minority religions (ie Christians) may be admitted, so clearly it is targeting specifically Muslims from these countries. If it were really all about terrorism, presumably he would have put restrictions on the actual countries that have been responsible for terrorism recently like Saudi Arabia, not countries like Iran. I also wouldn't put it past him to be taking advantage of the fact that a lot of Americans not realizing that countries like Indonesia actually have more Muslims. A lot of (most?) people seem to equate Islam with Arabs. Whatever it is he's trying to do, it makes very little sense.

A) If this were anti-Muslim. Wouldn't Indonesia be on the list?

B) Wouldn't Syrian Kurds be included for permission to enter the US as a refugee? 

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(b) Upon the resumption of USRAP admissions, the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, is further directed to make changes, to the extent permitted by law, to prioritize refugee claims made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual’s country of nationality. Where necessary and appropriate, the Secretaries of State and Homeland Security shall recommend legislation to the President that would assist with such prioritization.

From Sec. 5.

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/us/politics/refugee-muslim-executive-order-trump.html?_r=0

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1 hour ago, bsjkki said:

Syrian Christians have been given anything but preferential treatment in the past and here is why.  " But the numbers tell a different story: The United States has accepted 10,801 Syrian refugees, of whom 56 are Christian. Not 56 percent; 56 total, out of 10,801. That is to say, one half of one percent. The BBC says that ten percent of all Syrians are Christian, which would mean 2.2 million Christians. It is quite obvious, and President Obama and Secretary Kerry have acknowledged it, that Middle Eastern Christians are an especially persecuted group."   Nina Shea, who is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom explains it this way:

Experts say another reason for the lack of Christians in the make-up of the refugees is the make-up of the camps. Christians in the main United Nations refugee camp in Jordan are subject to persecution, they say, and so flee the camps, meaning they are not included in the refugees referred to the U.S. by the U.N .“The Christians don’t reside in those camps because it is too dangerous,” Shea said. “They are preyed upon by other residents from the Sunni community and there is infiltration by ISIS and criminal gangs.”“They are raped, abducted into slavery and they are abducted for ransom. It is extremely dangerous, there is not a single Christian in the Jordanian camps for Syrian refugees,” Shea said.

" Sure, in that we do not and could not legally ban Christian refugees any more than we could or should bar Muslim refugees. But when you have been running a refugee program for years, and you have accepted 10,612 Sunni refugees and 56 Christians, and it is obvious why and obvious how to fix it, and nothing is done to fix it—well, the results speak more loudly than speeches, laws, intentions or excuses. In effect, we make it almost impossible for Christian refugees to get her. http://blogs.cfr.org/abrams/2016/09/09/the-united-states-bars-christian-not-muslim-refugees-from-syria/

Trump was specifically talking about Christians in the Middle East and the numbers from NPR were talking about the total number of refugees admitted world wide. There is a reason it is described as a Christian genocide in the Middle East.http://www.nationalreview.com/article/432884/isis-genocide-christians-enslaved-killed-state-department-looks-other-way

According to one of the articles, Christians are being more protected in Syria recently due to Assad wanting to appear a protector of minorities.

Also, Muslim areas are the ones being attacked so more likely to have refugees.

I don't know if true, but I suspect whether one believes they are more persecuted than othe minority faiths including some Muslim groups or less due to not being in the worst areas as many minority Muslims are that a straight percentage of population isn't truly reflective of who needs more protection and who is getting it.

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Anyone have numbers of percentage of Syrian applicants that are Christian as opposed to Muslim and Muslim breakdowb into minority faiths that are being targeted by ISIS?

Edited by Calm
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4 hours ago, mapman said:

I can't read Trump's mind, but he definitely talked about banning Muslim immigration while campaigning, so it seems that that is his intention. The order explains that in the banned countries, refugees from minority religions (ie Christians) may be admitted, so clearly it is targeting specifically Muslims from these countries. If it were really all about terrorism, presumably he would have put restrictions on the actual countries that have been responsible for terrorism recently like Saudi Arabia, not countries like Iran. I also wouldn't put it past him to be taking advantage of the fact that a lot of Americans not realizing that countries like Indonesia actually have more Muslims. A lot of (most?) people seem to equate Islam with Arabs. Whatever it is he's trying to do, it makes very little sense.

Use your head for something besides a hat rack.  Who is it that are the majority of the terrorists?  Hint: Muslim extremists.

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1 hour ago, Calm said:

thanks for the info.

Hopefully the order will not just apply to the Christian minority, but all minorities that are at risk.

Yes and no one discusses that the best solution for a refugee crisis is to actually stabilize home countries. I hope that ISIS can be eradicated and that the refugee  camps will empty because the region is more peaceful. The Arab Spring produced terrible results for the region.

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Why does not Saudi Arabia, among the wealthiest countries in the world, host ALL the refugees?  They have plenty of land.  They just need to transport cases of Evian water bottles.  What is the point of glutting European nations?   Some as high as 20% of the population.

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