Saturday, October 17, 2015

Mormons need more Democrats? and Democrats need more Mormons?

I'll start with a question that really shouldn't need to be asked—but that does get asked from time to time, sometimes with surprising degrees of underlying emotional intensity.

Can a good person—a good Latter-day Saint—be a Democrat? Of course. If common sense weren’t enough, the fact that Elder Marlin K. Jensen (among many faithful Latter-day Saints) identifies himself as a Democrat should make the answer obvious. And can a good person, and a good Latter-day Saint, be a Republican? Yes, of course. Again, common sense should make the answer obvious—as should the Republican affiliation of many faithful Latter-day Saints, including such prominent leaders as the late Elder Neal A. Maxwell.

I mention Elder Maxwell because it was he who encouraged Elder Jensen to take part in an interview with the Salt Lake Tribune many years ago on the very issue of whether the values of the Democratic Party are compatible with LDS values and beliefs. Elder Maxwell, like other leaders in the Church, was concerned about the public perception identifying the Church with the Republican Party and about the imbalance in Church members’ affiliation with the two major parties. Though unstated, at least one motivation behind that concern could be summed up in the words, “The Democratic Party needs more Mormons.”

Actually, the Church has been concerned that many Church members, busy with Church, family, and other responsibilities, have been relatively uninvolved in the activities of either major party. Why the concern? Besides our belief that we have a responsibility to be involved in our communities, the concern comes from evidence that both parties become more extreme and unrepresentative when only zealots are involved. If mainstream members of the LDS Church don’t attend party caucuses, where delegates and other leaders are chosen, then especially in Utah, a very large portion of the electoral—and a relatively moderate portion—goes unrepresented. In recent years, the LDS Church has strongly re-emphasized its political neutrality and has encouraged members to participate in the party of their personal preference. The Church has also set rules for local Church units intended to avoid holding activities that would interfere with attending party caucuses. As a result, both Republican and Democratic meetings have been flooded with far more participants than used to attend. For me, it was exciting to see people I knew as neighbors, local Church leaders, and temple ordinance workers at the meetings I attended.

I would reaffirm my view that the Democratic Party needs more Mormons and Mormons need more Democrats. Why? I hold with some but not all of the values of the Democratic Party. In general, I like the Democratic approach to international relations, the environment, immigration, racial tolerance and equality, concern with the poor and needy, and the dangers of increasing income inequality. I do not share the predominant Democratic Party position on abortion and same-sex marriage. On some of the issues I've listed, the Democratic and Republican positions are not really polar opposites; it's more a matter of emphasis and approach. And there are other issues on which both Democrats and Republicans agree (more or less), some of which I think Democrats have a better handle on, others of which I think Republicans would be better at dealing with. Depending on the day, I think I might be found to be about 60-80% in agreement with Democratic Party positions and 20-40% in favor on Republican Party positions. In any case, I think having more faithful Mormons involved in the Democratic Party would help that party be more moderate, more diverse, more genuinely tolerant, and more pragmatic.

I think Mormons need more Democrats for a number of reasons. One is to improve the image of the Church. I know some good people who have had a very distorted image of the Church in part because they associated it with the most extreme elements in the Republican Party. What changed their view of the Church was partly coming to know real Mormons and learning that, for the most part, we are kind, respectful, and sane, even reasonably intelligent, people. Something else that changed their view was learning that we share many of their concerns and attitudes—that many Latter-day Saints have a genuine appreciation of racial and cultural diversity, that we not only have compassion for but work actively to help those in need, that we favor peace over war, that we care for the environment and are well-informed on scientific issues. You don’t have to be a Democrat to make a good impression on such people. But it can be helpful if the Church is not so strongly identified with one party as it is often perceived to be.

Also, I think it would help many Church members to have a deeper and more balanced understanding of the gospel if they didn’t confuse it so much with political conservatism or the current attitudes of the Republican Party. There are some social issues where that confusion is understandable. But some views held by many members of the Church seem to me incompatible with, or at least in some degree of discord with, the gospel of Jesus Christ. I’m thinking of issues having to do with war and peace, race, and the environment, among others. And while many of these are complex issues to which the gospel doesn’t offer a simplistic solutions, to identify the gospel with the predominant Republic view on these issues (or the predominant Democratic view, for that matter) seems to me to prevent a deeper, truer understanding of the gospel.

Among these complex issues is the role of the community in caring for the poor and needy. The Church teaches that we need to seek to apply principles of work and self-reliance in our own lives, help others learn and practice those principles, and also care for those in need. Those principles, used with intelligence, discernment, and compassion, could lead to a variety of practical solutions on such matters as health care, education, and tax policy. The complaint that government programs are imperfect and sometimes ineffective is probably valid. But that doesn’t mean government has no role to play in these matters. The idea that people should be left to fend for themselves, that people bring their financial difficulties on themselves, or that people deserve the wealth and privileges they have because they have “earned” everything they have—and therefore should have complete freedom in doing whatever they want with what belongs to them—seems to me clearly antithetical to gospel teachings. (I've written elsewhere on these issues.)

I have heard Latter-day Saints say things that sounded to me troublingly like the teachings of Korihor, an “anti-Christ,” whose teaching are condemned in the Book of Mormon: that “every man fare[s] in this life according to the management of the creature; therefore every man prosper[s] according to his genius, and that every man conquer[s] according to his strength” (Alma 30:17). In contrast, the gospel teaches that we are interdependent and that nothing we have really belongs to us—we are stewards with a responsibility to use what we have to serve God and to benefit those around us. Failure to care for those in need is one of the most serious sins we can commit—and even attributing their problems to their inferiority or lack of effort puts us seriously out of harmony with God. (See Mosiah chapters 2 and 4, among other sources.)

As a side note: At a practical level, it seems obvious to me that there is no clear correlation between how hard a person works and how much money they make. Family background, location, timing, and chance have a lot to do with success (as Malcolm Gladwell has beautifully illustrated). Even if intelligence and talents play a role, as they certainly do, those gifts are in fact gifts—they may be developed or neglected, but they were never in a fundamental sense earned. They were given, and along with their being given came the responsibility to use them to benefit others.

Having said all of that, I should add that, while identifying as a Democrat, I do not see being a Democratic as part of my essential identity. I identify as a Democrat partly because I live in Utah and feel that somebody needs to belong to the minority party and that that somebody should include faithful Latter-day Saints. Excessive political imbalance is not good for a community. It is not good even for the majority party. I also identify as a Democrat because I’m more comfortable with the Democratic Party’s positions on many issues that matter to me, and in general I prefer the tone and attitude of the Democratic Party, especially the very moderate Democratic Party of Utah.

But I know and respect many, many Republicans and know that for the most part we value the same things. I even love and respect some people whose views I find appalling—because their views have little (I’m happy to say) with the goodness of their characters and lives. I am as unhappy with the intolerance and disrespect shown by some Democrats and liberals as I am with that shown by some Republicans and conservatives. Republicans and conservatives too often demonize their opponents; Democrats and liberals often do the same to their opponents and perhaps more often engage in condescending mockery and misrepresentation. None of that, on either side, is good.

I’ve mentioned liberal and conservative. I like to think of myself as moderately liberal. That self-perception would probably be borne out by a survey of my opinions on most current political issues. But I recognize that liberalism and conservatism are slippery and unstable concepts. Different people have different views of what they mean. They have certainly changed over time and will continue to do so. If I were to leave my feelings aside and look at them objectively, I would have to say that both encompass positive values and principles that I would endorse. An ideal understanding of life and an ideal program for practical governance would have to include elements of both. One of the oddest realities of our political life is that the constant combat between liberal and conservative ideologies seems to prevent the combining of elements from both that might offer the best solution to many problems.

In any case, my deepest sense of who I am and what life is all about has very little to do with political ideology or party affiliation. I agree with something Elder Dallin H. Oaks said many years ago: “Those who govern their thoughts and actions solely by the principles of liberalism or conservatism or intellectualism cannot be expected to agree with all of the teachings of the gospel of Jesus Christ. As for me, I find some wisdom in liberalism, some wisdom in conservatism, and much truth in intellectualism—but I find no salvation in any of them” (“Criticism,” Ensign, Feb 1987, 68ff.). If I am sure of anything, it is that the gospel of Jesus Christ is far more profound, more intellectually satisfying, and more transcendently true and truly empowering than any human ideology.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

HEART OF AFRICA: New film to be set in the Democratic Republic of the Congo


A new film titled Heart of Africa is in development.  Based on real events taking place in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, it will be directed by Sterling Van Wagenen, co-founder of the Sundance Film Festival and producer of Academy-Award winning film Trip to Bountiful,  The film's script has been written by novelist and documentary-maker Margaret Blair Young.  With some B-roll shot, funds for the next stage of production are currently be raised through Kickstarter.  According to the film's Kickstarter page:

"Heart of Africa" is a feature film set in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country consistently misrepresented. We will show it in its dignity and beauty.  The film is based on experiences of  missionaries there, both African and Anglo. One of the missionaries is a Congolese former revolutionary and another a young man from Idaho who has heretofore not seen black people. Aime Mbuyi, who was a revolutionary before he became a missionary, has provided the screenwriter with full descriptions of the revolutionary meetings, including the songs sung at the boarding school where the revolutionaries lived.
The film will be bi-continental, much of it filmed in South Africa using the "Out of Africa" production team, with portions shot in Kinshasa, DR-Congo.
For more information on Heart of Africa, see https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/868807300/heart-of-africa and https://www.facebook.com/HeartOfAfricaFilm.


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If you are interested in supporting the project, you can go to the Kickstarter page here:


(Note: Fundraising on Kickstarter ends on March 16.  For details, see http://secret-memo.blogspot.com/2015/02/heart-of-africa-kickstarter-campaign.html.)


For background on the events represented in the film, see the following series on Meridian Magazine:


The film is also discussed in a blog post by renowned biologist Steve Peck reporting on his travels in Africa:



More information on the director, Sterling Van Wagenen:

In  addition to co-founding the Sundance Film Festival, Van Wagenen was the founding executive director of the Sundance Institute in association with Robert Redford, He has directed four feature films as well as several documentaries and television episodes, and has produced over fourteen feature films, documentaries, and television series, including The Trip to Bountiful, co-produced with playwright Horton Foote and starring Geraldine Page and John Heard. He collaborated again with Foote on Convicts, starring Robert Duvall and James Earl Jones. In 1986 he and Foote were nominated for an Independent Spirit Award as producers of The Trip to Bountiful, and in 1987 they won a Wise Owl Award for the film. In 1992 he won a Crystal Heart Award as director of Alan and Naomi.



HEART OF AFRICA: Co-founder of Sundance Film Festival (Sterling Van Wagenen) to direct new film set in the Congo


Sterling Van Wagenen, co-founder of the Sundance Film Festival and producer of Academy-Award winning film Trip to Bountiful, is scheduled to direct a new independent film titled Heart of Africa.  The film, with a script written by novelist and documentary-maker Margaret Blair Young, is set in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is based on real events.  With some B-roll shot, funds for the next stage of production are currently be raised through Kickstarter.  According to the film's Kickstarter page:

"Heart of Africa" is a feature film set in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country consistently misrepresented. We will show it in its dignity and beauty.  The film is based on experiences of  missionaries there, both African and Anglo. One of the missionaries is a Congolese former revolutionary and another a young man from Idaho who has heretofore not seen black people. Aime Mbuyi, who was a revolutionary before he became a missionary, has provided the screenwriter with full descriptions of the revolutionary meetings, including the songs sung at the boarding school where the revolutionaries lived.
The film will be bi-continental, much of it filmed in South Africa using the "Out of Africa" production team, with portions shot in Kinshasa, DR-Congo.


In  addition to co-founding the Sundance Film Festival, Van Wagenen was the founding executive director of the Sundance Institute in association with Robert Redford, He has directed four feature films as well as several documentaries and television episodes, and has produced over fourteen feature films, documentaries, and television series, including The Trip to Bountiful, co-produced with playwright Horton Foote and starring Geraldine Page and John Heard. He collaborated again with Foote on Convicts, starring Robert Duvall and James Earl Jones. In 1986 he and Foote were nominated for an Independent Spirit Award as producers of The Trip to Bountiful, and in 1987 they won a Wise Owl Award for the film. In 1992 he won a Crystal Heart Award as director of Alan and Naomi.

For more information on Heart of Africa, see https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/868807300/heart-of-africa and https://www.facebook.com/HeartOfAfricaFilm.


Saturday, February 14, 2015

Heart of Africa: The Kickstarter campaign (February 7 to March 17, 2015)

Margaret Blair Young (my brilliant and beautiful wife) is working on a feature film titled Heart of Africa, focusing on struggles to overcome prejudice and build relationships across racial and cultural lines. The film's director will be Sterling Van Wagenen--one of the industry's best. (See https://www.kickstarter.com/profiles/868807300/biohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterling_Van_Wagenen, and IMDB.com.)

Margaret Blair Young and Bruce Young

Margaret is currently raising funds through a Kickstarter campaign that ends on March 17--meaning midnight at the end of the day on March 16.  The goal is $30,000, which will allow filming to begin.  But far more is needed to complete the filming.  She is also seeking funding from foundation grants and is hoping either that the Kickstarter campaign will lead to two or three (or more) times the goal she has set, or that she will secure investors after the end of the Kickstarter campaign.

Either way, a successful Kickstarter campaign is critical.  As you may know, the way Kickstarter works is that we must reach our goal or else we'll get nothing.  In other words, none of the contributions end up being charged to those who have contributed unless the goal of $30,000 is reached by midnight on March 16.  Then on March 17, the contributions are charged to the contributors' accounts.  If the goal isn't reached, nothing happens.

We are currently on track but must sustain this activity for another couple of weeks in order to attain the goal.  (When I first wrote this post--on February 14--we had a little over a month left.  We're now down to a little over two weeks.)  Of the many who are interested in what Margaret is doing, we need a couple of hundred more to contribute for the Kickstarter campaign to be successful.  In a nutshell, we need--and deeply appreciate--your help and support.

Margaret's Kickstarter page-- https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/868807300/heart-of-africa --includes a brief video and a description that will tell you more about the project.  You'll also find a list of rewards for contributions at various levels.  Here I want to share some thoughts about what it will take to attain the goal.  I'll also provide links to other material related to the project.


How much should you contribute?

The short answer, of course, is however much you'd like. Any amount is helpful and is appreciated. We understand that people's circumstances vary. And besides people's ability to contribute, their excitement about and commitment to the project may motivate them to stretch further than they would otherwise.  (As you become familiar with the project, I believe you will in fact be excited about it and want to help support it.)

Given all the variables, I thought it might be helpful for you to know where we're at right now and how much it will take for the campaign to be successful.

As of this moment1--early morning on Friday, February 27--279 people have contributed, and the total contributed is $22,582.  The average contribution is about $81, but contributions range from several at $5 to six $1000 contributions.  17 days remain to reach the goal of $30,000.  (As I noted above, if the goal is not reached, we get nothing.)

We hope for additional contributions at the $1000 level or even higher.  But obviously the bulk of contributions will be smaller than that.  If we can sustain an average contribution of $75 to $100, we are very likely to make our goal.  If the average drops below that, we will simply need more people to contribute.

Here's what the math says.  To attain the remaining $7418, we would need one of the following:
*1484 people contributing $5 each
*297 people contributing $25 each
*149 people contributing $50 each
*99 contributing $75 each
or
*75 people contributing $100 each

I'm sure there are another 100 people or more out there willing to contribute, so if we average $75 for each contribution, I think we're safe.  But to really be safe, I think we're going to need to increase the average contribution or persuade a couple of hundred people or more to contribute.  So consider this an invitation to contribute.

Here's what I recommend:

If you can only give a little, I hope you can contribute at least $25--though een less than that will help, and will be appreciated.  If you have the means to do so, I would recommend contributing $50 or $100 or more, depending on how strongly you feel about Margaret's project.

For those of you who genuinely have enough and to spare in abundance, contributions of several hundred dollars or even a thousand or more would be greatly appreciated and would not only help guarantee the campaign's success but would help ensure adequate funding for the beginning stages of the project.  (And if you've looked at the list of reward, you'll know that a contribution of $5000 means you'll be invited to the premiere in Africa or the later premiere in the U.S.)


Aimé and Steffy Mbuyi
 just after their sealing in the Accra Ghana Temple
 (
Aimé is the former Congolese revolutionary on whose experiences Margaret's film is based)

Why contribute?

I realize that even those of you who are blessed with great abundance have many competing projects to which you might lend your support.  All I can say is that Margaret's film is among the projects worthy of your support.  This is more than just your everyday feature film.  The plan is for it to premiere in Africa and help launch an almost non-existent film industry in the Congo.  The film will help change perceptions of Africa--especially central Africa, about which many terribly inaccurate misconceptions remain.  Margaret has visited the Congo and spent time with families there.  We knows that these are beautiful, gifted, intelligent, peace-loving people with the potential to accomplish wonderful things.

The film also will convey a powerful message about building relationships and understanding across cultural and racial divides.  It is based on real experiences of Mormon missionaries in central Africa and helps portray the struggles and miracles experienced by people we have come to know and love.

Other items of interest

I'll be adding more material here over time.  But I'll start will a link to the "teaser" or more accurately a sort of mock up trailer for the film.  This was intended to give some idea of what the film would be about--but not necessarily using the actors or locations that will end up in the finished film.  (For one thing, I have my screen debut here--but I don't plan to be in the finished film.)

HEART OF AFRICA trailer: https://www.dropbox.com/s/3sanbsefr5btx16/Heart%20of%20Africa%206-22.mp4

(See additional links below.)

The filming of the trailer was directed by Mallory Everton (well known as a member of BYU Television's Studio C).  Here are some photos of the filming:





ADDITIONAL LINKS:

Heart of Africa Q&A (at "Wheat & Tares")

"Coming Soon: Heart of Africa (and more!)" (at LDS Cinema Online) 

"Mormon Woman, Artist, Filmmaker on Heart of Africa" (Margaret's Interview with Lisa Torcasso Downing)

"Will Mormon missionaries lead the way out of racism?" (Margaret's guest post on Jana Riess's "Flunking Sainthood")

"Heart of Africa with Margaret Blair Young" (podcast with Brian Kissell at "Rational Faiths")

"Studio C and Heart of Africa" (the story of the involvement two Studio C members--Mallory Everton and Stacey Harkey--have had with the project)

The provisional trailer (directed by Mallory Everton)

also a series of articles at Meridian Magazine:
(1) http://ldsmag.com/the-revolutionary-takes-a-bride/
(2) http://ldsmag.com/the-problem-with-an-eight-cow-wife/
(3) http://ldsmag.com/divine-orchestration-in-africa/
(4) http://ldsmag.com/monuments-to-a-dark-past-and-a-bright-future-in-africa/


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1What I originally wrote when I published this post was this: "As of this moment--Saturday morning, February 14--76 people have contributed, and the total contributed is $7601.  The average contribution is about $100, but contributions range from several at $5 to three $1000 contributions.  30 days remain to reach the goal of $30,000.  (As I noted above, if the goal is not reached, we get nothing.)"  Obviously, we have continued doing well since then.  My next revision of the post read: "As of Wednesday, February 18, at 3:30 p.m.--168 people have contributed, and the total contributed is $12, 858." The average contribution had dropped to a little over $75.  My estimate of what remained to do on February 14 was this:
   "To attain the remaining $22,400, we would need one of the following:
    *4480 people contributing $5 each
    *896 people contributing $25 each
    *448 people contributing $50 each
    or
    *224 people contributing $100 each"
The revised version of the post (above) gives my current estimate.