Not only do May and Meldrum's followers buy into their nonsense, but accept the guidance of a convicted Nazi molester. Frank Collins was a prominent American Nazi who terrorized the Jewish population of Skokie before changing his name to Frank Joseph (and carrying the torch for the racist fraud also known as the Book of Mormon) as editor of May's Ancient American magazine. Looks inspired to me.
I remember getting so excited when I first came across Ancient American magazine and thought I had found a genuine source of support for the Book of Mormon, but it didn't take long to sense the unsettling agenda behind it all. There are still white supremacists and closet white supremicists, inside of the church and out, sticking to the notion that the Indians are an inferior/cursed people who couldn't have possibly built the mounds or created the civilizations of ancient America. Surely it had to be white people.
The apologetic bandaid of claiming that the Book of Mormon actually means "darkened countenance" when it says "skin of blackness" only scratches the surface of the underlying racism that was raging when the book was written, the kind of thinking that soothed the conscience of the European transplants as they marched the beaten-down original inhabitants of the land off to the reservations.
But it's not just the skin color references that are the problem. It's turtles all the way down.
You can spot these types a mile away. They love to point out that the skulls of ancient American skeletons have been described as "Caucasian" (not actually accurate, the outdated Caucasoid descriptor includes a wide range people once found in Siberia, Japan & Polynesia) but they brush off all of the subsequent science that firmly establishes those same individuals as thoroughly Native American.
So, I'm not surprised at this kind of connection. The underlying concept of the Book of Mormon story has a definite appeal for these kinds of folks.
"Be excellent to each other." - Bill and Ted “The easy confidence with which I know another man's religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also.” - Mark Twain
Hagoth wrote:You can spot these types a mile away. They love to point out that the skulls of ancient American skeletons have been described as "Caucasian" (not actually accurate, the outdated Caucasoid descriptor includes a wide range people once found in Siberia, Japan & Polynesia) but they brush off all of the subsequent science that firmly establishes those same individuals as thoroughly Native American.
So, I'm not surprised at this kind of connection. The underlying concept of the Book of Mormon story has a definite appeal for these kinds of folks.
+1
Nothing annoys me more in the Book of Mormon than the implicit idea that Native Americans could not have created great structures like Cahokia and Chaco Canyon.
Racism at it's worst.
This, or any other post that I have made or will make in the future, is strictly my own opinion and consequently of little or no value.
"Faith is believing something you know ain't true" Twain.
Hagoth wrote:You can spot these types a mile away. They love to point out that the skulls of ancient American skeletons have been described as "Caucasian" (not actually accurate, the outdated Caucasoid descriptor includes a wide range people once found in Siberia, Japan & Polynesia) but they brush off all of the subsequent science that firmly establishes those same individuals as thoroughly Native American.
So, I'm not surprised at this kind of connection. The underlying concept of the Book of Mormon story has a definite appeal for these kinds of folks.
+1
Nothing annoys me more in the Book of Mormon than the implicit idea that Native Americans could not have created great structures like Cahokia and Chaco Canyon.
Racism at it's worst.
It's also common in some groups of ancient astronaut believers and for the same reasons.
Maksutov wrote:It's also common in some groups of ancient astronaut believers and for the same reasons.
I think they are Jack-Mormons looking for something to believe in. I watch that show for its entertainment value.
Problems with auto-correct: In Helaman 6:39, we see the Badmintons, so similar to Skousenite Mormons, taking over the government and abusing the rights of many.
Ouch. Well, this is a dark corner. I had no idea the racist aspect of Meldrum was so deliberate and substantive. I though it was more on the level of susceptible to racist interpretation than actively racist.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
Kishkumen wrote:Ouch. Well, this is a dark corner. I had no idea the racist aspect of Meldrum was so deliberate and substantive. I though it was more on the level of susceptible to racist interpretation than actively racist.
The original intent of the authors of the Book of Mormon was egregiously racist. And many LDS naturally followed in that footprint. As for Meldrum, I refuse to judge. Would he be racist if someone were to point out how racist it is?
Problems with auto-correct: In Helaman 6:39, we see the Badmintons, so similar to Skousenite Mormons, taking over the government and abusing the rights of many.