Originally posted by USUC
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Church should not have been a place to discuss "prop 8" as political legislation and strategy....especially when it came to passing out sign up sheets for people to go door to door, stand on freeway overpasses or street corners with signs, or blanketing parking lots. All of these things, and more, happened at Church. I hated all of it, especially the pious pressure tactics put on people that were opposed to such antics. In retrospect, if I were one of the LA Ute types that were chosen to head up either PR or other messaging for the Church, I would feel frustrated and embarrassed for having participated in it. The social arguments being championed as "support" for Prop 8 were ridiculous even then, but downright embarrassing today.
My wife donated because we were asked to do so and she really felt a conviction to "protect marriage." She and I discussed it and decided mutually that any donation would be in her name only. When she explained to our Bishop we explained that I was abstaining and was opposed. He understood and thanked us anyway.
Several years later and my wife's stance on the issue has changed entirely. Recent comments by Church leadership about similarly thorny social issues have only reinforced our feeling that we are on the right side of the line on this matter. In the years to come, there will be lots of people that will deny their own participation in the bizarre Prop 8 antics coordinated by local and national Church leadership, much like you can't find a single person today willing to admit to supporting the priesthood ban. But I can say with a clear conscience that I was opposed and did nothing to support it. I voted against it. And I am hopeful that we wont see anymore political action campaigns at Church again.
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