Mormon Communism...

July 24, 2008 08:35 by Admin

Normally, a post like this contrary to the views of the creators of this site.  That is exactly why I'm posting this for Fidel - a Guest poster.  His opinions will spark a fresh debate about what it means to be libertarian.  Fidel was invited to be a part of this blog because his beliefs are usually so contrary to mine.  I love that we can all offer differing viewpoints without censorship.  This post is Fidel's creation and I'd love to see some responses to it.  - Lisey

MORMON COMMUNISM
But the laborer in Zion shall labor for Zion; for if they labor for money they shall perish.

—2 Nephi, 26:31
The Book of Mormon

What a god-awful hour, Dear Reader, to be gotten up to go to work on a Collective Farm!

Sure, okay, since Brother Bob had first left on his Mission to save the heathens of Denver and Dovecreek, Colorado, I had "helped" on numerous occasions with Mother's private garden plot; and, I confess, during the dreaded Fishing Season, I often roused myself up quite early in the morning when alerted by the bated breath and chatter outside my basement window of the Bird Kids, armed with flashlights and tin cans before dawn, poaching our nightcrawlers as the poor little defenseless things lay flaccid and relaxing unawares on the wet grass, basking in the moonbeams...  I would then leap out of bed and run up the stairs and courageously yell through the backdoor screen: "Leave our worms alone!" and those Early Bird Kids would then be all terrified and surprised, their flashlights running away, bobbing like giant fireflies...

So, I can do a Good Turn, even when it's very early and still dark out (such as rescuing the little worms that would then safely dive back into their darker holes) but please! don't anyone ever ask of me any pre-dawn deeds of Derring-do for the likes of some bristling Sugar Beets!  But Come To Think Of It I hadn't been asked, as I climbed into the backseat of Gene's Plymouth, clutching my Thermos Bottle and the rather Desperate Hope for some Engine Trouble that might in some way spare me from the early morning rigors of working on the Mormon Stake Collective Farm...

The Mormon Work Ethic.  Mormons are fed with it from birth.  They have it droning industriously in their ears like those swarms of frenzy you can hear from the dome-shaped helioports of their mascot Bees, their "Deserets" as they call them.  Howard Hurges and IBM both agree, there is no more loyal and profitable a chattel than a Mormon on the Block of Wage-Slavery—they'll feel positively guilty about whatever pittance they're given, these peculiar adherents to an even more peculiar religion; and they will work all day and all night for their Masters and Miss'ums.

Quickly Gene cast me such a feverish look over his shoulder over the Naugahyde-covered front seat of his Plymouth that I really can't recall anything quite so Obsessed since years before I had watched Father kill the bandy rooster that was also awake at Four A.M. in the Morning.  Father burned the midnight taper at both ends, drank coffee and letched Overtime; but then Gene's present fiendish demeanor could hardly be explained by a mere overdose of caffeine...

Contrasting with Gene's evident fever of excitement to get going and do some hoeing, the Ward Bishop, a staid insurance broker on weekdays and a pastor of the same gullible flock he had fiducialily shorn in the evenings and on weekends, sat quietly in the passenger seat, dressed in faded but impeccably clean overalls, his head nodding down on his barrel chest showing a naked expanse of bulldog neck.  I could tell he was sleeping and didn't feel sorry for him one bit.  In fact, I only wished I was big enough to cuff him.  After all, it was his Big Idea to drag me along in the first place.
Gene leered excessively, turned the key in the ignition and pumped the gas pedal and—choke! alas!—started the engine.  The stiff gears soon had us lurching away from the fire hydrant and simultaneously brought the Bishop's elbows up in a startled hoedown position.  But soon Sleepy was fast at it again, and nodding his head rhythmically against the window while his arms continued involuntarily twitching, as if he was merely rowing a boat up the River Lethe, i.e., the Bishop—of all people—should have sneaked a cup of Caffeine!

"Hey you!  Wake-up!" I refrained from saying, and instead settled back for some despondent observation of the advent of another grim dawn in Mormonland: the moon glow evaporating as quickly as the myriad stars were disappearing, and over the ragged hunchbacks of the easterly mountains, the Sun like a Gladiator was casting rosy, then increasingly fiery darts.
There was hardly any other traffic out until we began to converge on the Collective Farm, which was situated out Riverton way, where my Mother had her "roots", where Sugar beets flourished, and where senile Doc Sorenson had been recently buried by his Buxom Nurse...

Turning off the main highway, the Plymouth bumped a while down a rutted dirt road, catching up with the rearend of a Rancho station wagon, which I immediately recognized by the dents as belonging to Brother and Sister MacDonald.  Soon there appeared on our left a big painted sign before this stark little frame house and a parking lot full of other automobiles. 

The sign read:

Granite Stake Farm: A Project of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

Groups of earlier arrivals had already disembarked their vehicles and had the farmhouse surrounded like in a movie where the mob wants to burn it.  Most had short-handled hoes in their hands, while others wielded spades and pitchforks.  The Mob raised a throaty cry at our arrival, cheering on the Bishop, who was finally awake now and ready to head his Foraging Congregation.  I climbed out cautiously after Gene and the Bishop.  Smiling, the Bishop then quelled the cheering with a grandiloquent wave of his hand and the admonition: "Let us pray."  And immediately the mob became uniformly quiet and bowed their heads and Gene offered the Benediction, invoking Safety from Snakebites in the ditches, Divine Guidance in our manual labors, Preservation from the Stinging nettle, etc.  Then, in a an outburst of emotional ethusiasm that seemed equally shared by all the petitioners (All Save One) the Bishop added: "God Bless God's Sugar Beets!!!"  With that, the multitude ejaculated: "Amen!", cheered again, then disbanded, rushing for the fields. 

I stood there, A Statue With A Thermos Bottle amongst the tumultuous Scattering, but Sister LeSeur recognized me instantly and stopped to chat, dressed rather too fashionably, I thought, in pink pastel pedal-pushers and pearl button earrings—too fashionable to seriously intend to do much weeding, though she carried a hoe.

"Where's your Mother?" she asked eagerly.

"Oh, she had to take Carol to School," I answered, even somewhat wistfully.  (As a matter-of-fact, Mother that day did indeed need to freight Carol to School, for Carol was giving her first John Phillip Sousa Tuba Recital.  Like my own miseries, you see, her Musical Talents were simply escalating!)

"Too bad," commended Sister LeSeur ruefully, "You Mother was real fast in those Sugar Beets.  Well, why don't you come and help me and Kathy?"

"Kathy's here?" I asked doubtfully, having thought that Kathy, the Brigitte Bardot of the neighborhood, would be safely away at Beautician School.

"She's here somewhere," said Sister LeSeur, clutching her throat, where she had forgotten to wear her necklace, and looking about for her daughter with that nervous insecure glance that a woman often has when she thinks she's misplaced her cultured pearls.  "Oh, there she is!  Come with us!"

And there Kathy was, on the edge of the field, eyeshadow glaring violets in that early sun, a peasant girl's scarf tied over her bleached-blonde tresses, a colorful peasant girl's skirt about her slim hips and summer thongs on her bare feet with the toenails brightly painted a jungle-red.

"Mother," said Kathy, tossing down her hoe, "It's muddy out there!"

"Well, Fidel's here to help us!"

I gave them both an aggrieved look.

Then, we stood there a few minutes like The Three Graces, while all about us, from the field, you could hear happy gospel singing—along with the sucking sound of shoes being pulled out of the irrigation mud and the thud-thud-thudding of the hoes.  The rows of sugar beets needing weeding and thinning were so long from where we stood that it seemed like you could almost see the curvature of the Earth...

In Communist Cuba, I know we are making the bratty sons and daughters of the Bourgeois Classes harvest the Sugar Cane.  And it is the same if you are a Mormon in Utah!

 

 


Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Related posts

Comments

July 24. 2008 15:34

Raul

Bravo brother,

Your writings never fail to move me with their descriptive eloquence.

I will have to look further into this Mormon collective. Your description of the all for one and one for all work ethic reminds me of the glorious days of the revolution. Remember how we thinned and weeded the mafia beets out of Havana.

Raul

July 24. 2008 23:25

Fidel

Gracias, Compadre!

Vive Le United Order!!!

Fidel

July 25. 2008 02:15

Cyn

What is this, old home week in Havana??

Fidel, two nitpicking issues first: 1) An opening prayer would be an "Invocation", not a "Benediction" and 2) I believe it is "Howard Hughes" not "Howard Hurges"....but again, this is just nitpicking.

To more substantive issues: I sincerely doubt that you will find the comraderie (no pun intended) that exists on the LDS stake farms with the silent misery of those working the collective farms of Communism. That's why those farms couldn't feed the country, and the little private plots fed more people than all the collectives put together...because the individuals with the private plots had incentive to plant and harvest and grow. They received the reward for their labor. Now the LDS farms are for the poor among us--and the good will of those who do the labor should not be mocked.

I notice you stood around until one woman asked you to help the women? Obviously, you didn't want to contribute any labor in the enterprise. It is my greatest fear that those who only seek to expropriate the labor of others are the greatest and loudest proponents of communism, socialism in all its guises, and fascism.

Cyn

Cyn

July 25. 2008 02:27

Lisey

Usually, the loudest voice is never the one actually doing the work. Those who sit and complain need to get off their asses and do something about their situation. - not saying that's you Fidel, but most screaming for help from the 'people' during Katrina were not the people who prepared or did anything to help their own situation. Smile

Lisey

July 25. 2008 02:38

Cyn

Lisey...right on!

And I find it absolutely NUTTY that the welfare-ites of New Orleans now want the taxpayers to rebuild their Sodom and Gomorrah! Believe me, I've been there during Mardi Gras and the whole town should just SINK INTO THE OCEAN. The world would be a better place.

Cyn

July 25. 2008 03:29

Fidel

Dear Senora,

How many beaded necklaces did you catch there? If you get my drift... You gotta away from the Cities of the Plain and didn't turn into a pillar of salt? Wow. You're better than the Mariel boatlift!

Fidel

July 25. 2008 08:34

Cyn

Fidel,

I got NO beaded necklaces because I spent all my time proselyting with a black woman dressed all in white who was passing out "REPENT" cards to the revelers! I have to say that when I saw that angel there at the gaping mouth of hell, I ran to her like she was a lifejacket!

Cyn

July 25. 2008 08:49

Fidel

Senora,

That is weird. I guess you didn't try the jambalaya either...

You'd be a nuisance in Havana too, I afraid!

Fidel

July 26. 2008 06:23

Firebyrd

There's another key difference here from collective farms, of course, which is volunteerism. Aside from parents forcing their children to come, no one /has/ to go work on a welfare farm. This isn't even a case of something like tithing, since there are no consequences as far as the church is concerned if you don't go. You'll still be able to hold leadership positions, get a temple recommend, take the sacrament, etc., etc.

That's actually one of the big differences between the law of consecration and communism in general, actually. Everyone chooses individually whether or not to live the law of consecration. When you live in a country governed by communism, on the other hand, you don't have a choice whether to live that way or not (and often your freedom of movement is restricted so that you can't leave even if you want to). It might seem a subtle difference, but it's key given how important agency is in God's eternal plan.

Firebyrd

July 26. 2008 12:37

Lisey

Excellent point Firebyrd! charity is much the same way. As Mojo wrote, when you are 'forced' to help others, all the charity flies out the window. God never intended anyone to be 'forced' to be charitable or help others. I wish some of our more socialist bent leaders would realize that.

Lisey

July 29. 2008 03:07

Cyn

Comment to Fidel:

I hear quite a condescending and patronizing tone in your responses! "A Nuisance in Havana" indeed! And as for the jambalaya, well I did try it, but it was TOO spicey for me! Go ahead, make your generalizations from that!

Cyn

July 30. 2008 15:06

Fidel

No condescension intended. To make up for your wounded feelings, come to Havana and the Cuban people will give you free botox treatment and mango skin peel. You will look and feel like a new Senora!

Fidel

August 1. 2008 13:44

Fidel

PS: and we throw in rhinoplasty too!

Fidel

August 4. 2008 07:21

Cyn

Fidel, Botox freezes the face in a surprised and zombie-like position whereas skin peels destroy the protection of the body....I feel like I already did both during my ill-advised, and short-lived marriage....and would never do either again.

Cyn

August 7. 2008 07:50

Fidel

Who advised you? (Certainly not an attorney!)

Fidel

August 7. 2008 09:02

Cyn

You're right Fidel....if an attorney had advised me, I would have done smarter things than I did! But you know, when you are young, you do really stupid things for really stupid reasons. And I did more than my share!

But Fidel, I can truly say that although I did stupid things in my young years, I have grown in wisdom and understanding. As such, stupid mistakes are no longer part of the life experience! YIPPEE!

Cyn

August 7. 2008 10:10

Fidel

I share your joy (at growing old)...

Fidel

August 25. 2008 13:03

TQ

Okay, you get points for the OSC reference, but you should slim your allegories down substantially in the future.

TQ

Add comment


(Will show your Gravatar icon)  

  Country flag

[b][/b] - [i][/i] - [u][/u]- [quote][/quote]



Live preview

January 5. 2009 16:08