About rameumptom

Gerald (Rameumptom) Smith is a student of the gospel. Joining the Church of Jesus Christ when he was 16, he served a mission in Santa Cruz Bolivia (1978=1980). He is married to Ramona, has 3 stepchildren and 7 grandchildren. Retired Air Force (Aim High!). He has been on the Internet since 1986 when only colleges and military were online. Gerald has defended the gospel since the 1980s, and was on the first Latter-Day Saint email lists, including the late Bill Hamblin's Morm-Ant. Gerald has worked with FairMormon, More Good Foundation, LDS.Net and other pro-LDS online groups. He has blogged on the scriptures for over a decade at his site: Joel's Monastery (joelsmonastery.blogspot.com). He has the following degrees: AAS Computer Management, BS Resource Mgmt, MA Teaching/History. Gerald was the leader for the Tuskegee Alabama group, prior to it becoming a branch. He opened the door for missionary work to African Americans in Montgomery Alabama in the 1980s. He's served in two bishoprics, stake clerk, high council, HP group leader and several other callings over the years. While on his mission, he served as a counselor in a branch Relief Society presidency.

Kirtland Temple – Sunstone Symposium review

Sunstone Kirtland Symposium – a review

I figured I would put down some vary basic notes and thoughts on the Kirtland Symposium. It was a joint venture between Sunstone, John Whitmer Historical Association, and the Community of Christ.  The CoC provided the rooms in their visitor’s center, adjacent to the temple.  Their center is a nice, warm and inviting place, strengthened by some wonderful people like Ron Romig.  They are doing a wonderful job maintaining the Kirtland Temple and providing such access to it as a sacred space in the Kirtland area.

About 40 people attended, not bad considering it was the first symposium in the area of its kind, and Sunstone is not exactly appreciated or perhaps even trusted by mainstream Mormons, being that they tend to lean left.  That said, the group had a great experience, with seminars going from the left to at least the center of the Mormon realm.
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Corporate Welfare with a bedroom twist…

Can’t get enough free meds for the bedroom?  The Health and Human Services Dept is mandating that all insurances and employers provide entirely free contraceptives to their employees (and families).

While some are crying that this is a violation of the First Amendment (which it is), there are other serious issues involved that the Daily Beast is uncovering.

This becomes a giant boon for the Pharmaceutical companies.  HHS did not require generics, but whatever the patient desires in regards to contraceptives.  Suddenly, there will be millions more people getting free brand name meds from the Pharmas.  Since there is no co-pay or deductible (HHS mandate), the money is passed directly through the insurance company to the Pharmas, and of course, paid for by taxpayers. IOW, there will be no one screaming that their meds are too expensive, since they are “free!”

This is what Texas governor Perry did with Gardasil, ensuring the $360 injections were given to all young girls in Texas.  It was a boon to Merck.  For this reason, the Pharmas have promoted Obamacare, to the tune of $600+ million in lobbying.

Can you figure out who the Pharmas supported in the past election between Obama and McCain, and will do again this election year?

Can you say this is a serious, serious danger to have companies bribing politicians in order to get billions in mandated kickbacks and returns?

Can we see how the prophets Isaiah and Nephi warned us about the rich taking from the poor, and making themselves richer? Can we see how some Gadianton Robbers enriched themselves by working inside the government, where the wicked rich (not all rich are wicked) sought gain and were obliged by the bribed in government?  Guess what? We’re here again.  The Book of Helaman can explain a lot of this stuff.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/03/02/peter-schweizer-big-pharma-s-role-in-the-contraception-debate.html

Black History Month

Growing up in Western Montana, seeing a black person was a novelty.  Concepts like discrimination, Civil Rights, racism, were all distant concepts that just were not discussed nor understood in my little area of the world.

Thankfully, the Air Force landed me for almost 17 years in the navel of slavery and Civil Rights, Montgomery Alabama.  I’d like to share some of the things I learned while there.

Much of my church work was focused in the poorer sections of the city. In visiting with many in their homes, from small cottages to housing projects, I saw special strengths and needs in the blacks I came to know.  I remember one sister we baptized telling me that in her previous church they would teach her to love her neighbor. For her, it meant loving other blacks, and still disliking whites, but she had learned to also love whites in the LDS Church.

Sadly, that attitude was not always reciprocated. As we baptized many blacks into the church, there was a backlash by various white members. Some refused to home/visit teach in black neighborhoods. Some complained about black sisters teaching in Primary. It took years for such racist attitudes to diminish in Montgomery, and even longer in the outlying branches.

In 1987 we started a group in Tuskegee Alabama, and it became a branch a year later. As the Group leader, I had the blessing to call the first Relief Society President, Eva Oryang. She is a wonderful lady, who escaped her homeland of Uganda during a very dangerous war and settled in Tuskegee. After only a few days, she wasn’t sure why she came to the United States, and prayed all night long for the answer. That morning, the missionaries showed up, and she was soon baptized. It wasn’t long afterward that the Group was started, so that these wonderful new members would not have to drive 40 miles each way to church in Montgomery. She would later serve a mission in Mississippi.

Her son would later be baptized and would serve for 8 years as the branch president.  Through his efforts as a researcher at Tuskegee University, several students from Shanghai China were introduced to the gospel and baptized. They became some of the very first members in Shanghai when they returned.

Outside of Church, I attended Troy University in Montgomery. Going to class meant stepping across the street corner where Rosa Parks got on board a city bus, which started the memorable bus boycott. A good friend of mine, Bill Kline, who just passed away this month at 94, drove blacks around town to work, etc., during the bus boycott.  He recalled having a cross burnt on his front yard for helping.

Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president on the front steps of the state capitol. This is also where George Wallace promised “segregation forever.” In stark contrast to such racism, we find across the parking lot sits the chapel where Martin Luther King jr preached.

Just 40 miles west is the famous bridge at Selma, where police officers and dogs set about hurting peaceful marchers.  90 miles north of Montgomery is the little Baptist Church that was blown up, killing 3 small girls, including Condoleeza Rice’s best friend.

One of the most important people I considered a friend and hero is Johnnie Carr. She was one of Rosa Parks’ best friends and was a key player in the bus boycott. She was the third president of the Montgomery Improvement Association (Martin Luther King was the first president). While most of the early Civil Rights leaders moved to other places, she stayed in her home next to the park where she used to take white children to play as their caretaker (blacks were not allowed in the park, otherwise). In her last days, she worked to help young people get away from gangs and drugs, and work towards college and making a difference.

Sadly, as I look at today’s “Civil Rights” movement, it seems to have forgotten the freedoms Martin Luther King jr hoped for all people, and become a movement to see who can get the most from the government.  Still, as we focus on those black leaders of previous years, perhaps we can learn from them and the great examples they have given us.  Examples of courage under fire, peaceful protest under violent threats, faith that God would bless their efforts, patience that someday we could all be free, and all would have equal opportunity to make the best out of their lives.

Let’s stop for a moment and remember these great people, and hope we can follow such example ourselves.