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Category Archives: Radio Commentaries
Law and Morality
This week I want to talk about law and morality. Is the United States Declaration of Independence illegal? This was the question before a panel of British and American lawyers at a recent debate in Philadelphia just a few blocks from where the document was originally drafted.
The American lawyers argued that “The English had used their own Declaration of Rights to depose King James II and these acts were deemed completely lawful and justified.” The British barristers responded that secession isn’t legal and what the English did centuries ago was different than what the American colonists had done. They asked, “What if Texas decided today it wanted to secede from the Union?”
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Mortgage Foreclosures
Utah has been one of the four states most flattened by the mortgage crunch, exceeded on a proportional basis only by California, Florida, and Nevada. It is true that in recent months the pace of foreclosures has slowed, although this seems due mainly to legal and accounting delays in the foreclosure process. Ten percent of Utah’s households – some 50,000 – are still either at least 30 days late on their payments or in some stage of foreclosure.
How would George Bailey, the fictional saint of the old mortgage industry, view the ongoing crisis and governmental response? Do you remember this movie dialogue?
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Mormons and Politics
In Mormon-heavy Utah, is there only one way to think about politics? Now that Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman, Jr. are running for president of the United States, I think it’s fair to discuss the circumstances surrounding Mormons and politics ideas. I’d like to know if there’s such as thing as Mormon political philosophy? Is there one true way for the one true religion to express itself philosophically and politically?
Of course, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is both clear and adamant that it does not endorse political candidates and that every member of the LDS Church is free to exercise their civic franchise how they see fit. But such reminders seem desperate when the obvious so often dangles in front of the spoken word. What’s obvious is that the LDS Church is value-driven; its doctrines have temporal as well as spiritual meanings, and it can get pretty confusing after a while.
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MLMs II
Utah seems to be the multi-level marketing capital of the world and I wonder why. A story the other day in the Salt Lake Tribune caught my eye. The picture with the story had a confident-looking, middle-aged, man standing by a beautiful Rolls-Royce with the name of his company on its side. That struck me as peculiar – a Rolls-Royce with a commercial logo on it. The only other thing I can compare it to are those pink Cadillacs that Mary Kay cosmetics hands out to its top performers.
The fellow in the picture says that he’s made $600,000 a month – yes, a month – working for his MLM. The product, made here in Utah, is another one of those miracle fruit juices that seems to fix whatever ails you.
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Legislative Rankings
This week I want to talk about legislative rankings. In recent years, after each legislative session has concluded, The Salt Lake Tribune releases a scorecard ranking state legislators on how conservative or liberal they are. These rankings are based on a composite of other measurements established by several special interest groups, such as the Sierra Club, Parents for Choice in Education, the Utah Education Association, and the Utah Taxpayers Association.
But perhaps there’s a better way to determine who in our state legislature is really conservative or liberal? A professor down at Brigham Young University thinks there is a better way.
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Bullies and Discipline
It seems as if the problem of bullies runs deeper than we think. I’m Paul Mero. I’ll be right back.
Within the past week there have been two incidents, both at the fast-food restaurant McDonald’s for some reason, where a group of kids assaulted another kid. In one case, an adult, who tried to intervene, was shot dead. These stories are being attributed to bullies and, I suppose each case, and others like them, could be seen as bullying. My guess is that both of these extreme cases are actually gang related. Even the youngest kids, now, are becoming dragged into gangs.
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Mormons and the ACLU
This week I want to talk about Mormons and the ACLU. University of Utah President Michael Young, a descendant of Brigham Young, spoke at rival Brigham Young University about the importance of religious freedom and suggested that all Latter-day Saints should be members of the American Civil Liberties Union. For the left-leaning editors at the Salt Lake Tribune that pronouncement was front-page news. At the Deseret News, it was at the very end of a broader story.
It’s incredible news that anyone of President Young’s stature would believe, let alone say publicly, that Mormons should join the ACLU. If we lined up 100 legal issues that the ACLU has worked on I could assure you that very few would support any official position taken by the LDS Church.
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Limited Government
Are Utahns dedicated to limited government? I’m Paul Mero. I’ll be right back.
According to information from the governor’s office, between 1990 and 2009 the state’s total budget grew 120 percent, and that is after adjusting for inflation. Without the inflation adjustment, state spending growth was a whopping 261 percent. By comparison, Utah’s population over that same period grew by only 62 percent, and our median household income – a key consideration for government spending since every dollar the state spends starts out in taxpayers’ pockets – grew only 17 percent after adjusting for inflation. Even California’s state budget, adjusted for inflation, grew by a relatively modest 78 percent over the same period.
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McAdams Neglect Legislation
This week I have more thoughts on nanny state nonsense. State Senator Ben McAdams from Salt Lake City has announced that he’ll sponsor a bill making it a crime to leave a child alone in a car. His bill would make a parent criminally negligent for endangerment of a child.
While you’re soaking that in, let’s go over his motive. Last year, in 2010, 49 children died as a result of being left unattended in a car. We can presume that those deaths occurred on hot summer days. That number of children – 49 – was a nationwide number. Forty-nine kids, out of over 100 million of them, died. Of course, just one death is sad. But I’m wondering if 49 deaths out of a possible 100 million, none of those deaths in Utah last year, is the sort of compelling reason to move a new law?
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Utah’s two-party system of politics
Over the weekend, Richard Davis, chairman of the Utah County Democratic Party, wrote an op-ed bemoaning why Democrats get so little support in the state. He begins by drawing an analogy to shopping in Russia where consumers only get one choice of product, and then says that Utah politics is like that – that we only get one choice.
He blames the convention system, in part, for this dilemma. He wonders why the few get to select the few while hundreds of thousands of Utahns are left in the lurch. He then grumbles that voters shouldn’t vote straight party tickets and that voters should take a good look at Democratic candidates.
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