Is your argument that those priests and cannibals did not intend to kill their victims? I find that less than credible, to put it mildly.
These people are quite sure of their moral absolutes also:
Violence under banner of religion
Author probes extreme fringe outside modern Mormonism Watch the 'Dateline' report.
NBC NEWS July 15 — Her story gripped the nation for the better part of a year, but after Utah teenager Elizabeth Smart was found in March, relief quickly gave way to disturbing questions about her alleged kidnappers. Who are Brian David Mitchell and his wife, Wanda Barzee? And what might their motives have been for taking Elizabeth? The answers, it turns out, may lie in a dark chapter of Utah’s unique history, in a strange place where religion can sometimes give way to fanaticism. According to an explosive new book, it’s a place where, in the name of God, some have felt the compulsion to commit the most ungodly acts.
WHEN ELIZABETH SMART was suddenly rescued after an absence of nine months, there was great relief. But when word came that Smart’s accused kidnapper was once a Mormon, a former member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, one prison inmate says he knew instantly the motivation for the crime. Dan Lafferty: “I immediately said to myself, polygamy is involved. I just saw the scenario that actually unfolded in the next few days.” How could Lafferty so quickly guess details that would only later be revealed to the public? Because Lafferty, like accused kidnapper Brian David Mitchell, is an excommunicated Mormon. Like Mitchell, Lafferty believes in polygamy, and that he receives revelations from God. Only, the message that Lafferty and his brother Ron acted on almost 20 years ago led not to a kidnapping —but to a double murder. Tom Brokaw: “You freely admit that you killed, in cold-blooded fashion, your sister-in-law and her infant child, Brenda and Erica.” Lafferty: [nods] Brokaw: “You still feel no remorse for that crime?” Lafferty: “I don’t think that I would. I wouldn’t want to offend God by being remorseful.”
Read an excerpt: 'Under the Banner of Heaven'
The claim of the Lafferty brothers that they were directed by God’s will to commit these heinous murders is a special problem in Utah. One of the fundamental tenets of the Mormon church is that God does speak directly to individual members of the faith. A disturbing number of crimes in Utah have been committed using that claim — that it was “God’s will.” Jon Krakauer: “Common sense is no match for the voice of God.” Best-selling author Jon Krakauer has written a book called “Under the Banner of Heaven: a Story of Violent Faith.” Krakauer has spent more than four years researching the roots of the Mormon faith, and the beliefs of those former Mormons known as Fundamentalists, who advocate a return to polygamy as a true teaching of the Church, and are willing to commit violence. Brokaw: “You’ve been working on this story for a long time. What got you interested in it in the first place?” Krakauer: “I grew up in a small town in Oregon among Mormons. They were my playmates, my teachers. And my own family was for all intents and purposes, atheists, but I was baffled by their certainty, I mean the strength of their belief. Nothing could shake it. And once I started investigating Mormonism I came across something that I knew nothing about, that out in the West there’s maybe as many as 100,000 of these polygamists whom the Mormons don’t consider Mormons at all. So I started looking into it, and one thing led to another, and before long I crossed paths with Dan Lafferty. Dan Lafferty and his brother are among the unsettling number of former Mormons, fundamentalists whose crimes have made headlines. In the 1970s, Ervil LeBaron, who believed that he was a prophet sent by God, directed his followers to murder rival polygamists, eventually killing more than 20 people. In 1979, polygamist John Singer refused to send his children to public school.
Singer was killed in a shootout with police. And a decade later, Singer’s son-in-law claimed God directed him to blow up a Mormon church building. Addam Swapp did just that, and held off police for 13 days. The standoff ended in a burst of gunfire that left Swapp wounded and a law enforcement officer dead. Krakauer: “This violent tradition this culture of violence pervades the movement. You see it time and time again, these eruptions of fundamentalists, spilling blood in some very dramatic and upsetting ways.” But few of these “violent believers” have ever spoken so openly about their faith or their crimes as Dan Lafferty. In the early 1980s, he was a respected chiropractor who ran for county sheriff. His brother was once a star athlete, and city councilman. Then they began to read and believe in the early teachings of Mormonism, which included polygamy. The Mormon Church, which officially renounced polygamy more than 100 ago, expelled the Laffertys. Lafferty: “I was excommunicated from the church basically, the wording that was used, conduct unbecoming a member of the church.” Brokaw: “What did your parents say to you during that time?” Lafferty: “Well, my father thought I’d gone insane.”
The change in the brothers was too much for some family members. Divorce and disputes followed. One sister-in-law particularly enraged the brothers. That was 24-year-old Brenda Lafferty, an aspiring television journalist who led a mainstream Mormon life. Dan’s brother claimed the Lord commanded that Brenda and her 15-month-old daughter Erica needed to be “removed from the earth” because they stood in the way of God’s work. Krakauer: “They pondered this intensely. And Dan decided it was true and it must be carried out. because when God tells you to do something, if you’re a true believer, you don’t ignore that lightly. I mean, you do what God says.” Lafferty: “I didn’t want to offend God by being afraid. The day of the 24th of July we went to my brothers apartment with the intention of fulfilling the revelation.” July 24th, 1984, was Pioneer Day, which commemorates the arrival of the Mormons in Utah. On that day, one of Utah’s most significant holidays, the Lafferty brothers drove to the town of American Fork to confront Brenda. Lafferty: “I got out of the car, I went to the door, and the first knock the door opened.” Inside, as his brother Ron watched, Dan Lafferty says he cut the throat of Brenda as well as his young niece. Two weeks later the Lafferty brothers were captured. Convicted of murder, Dan received a prison sentence of life. But Ron was sentenced to die. He remains on death row for two murders many have struggled to understand. Brokaw: “Do you think it’s possible that you were driven to kill her because she stood up to you and your brother? Because she was articulate and intelligent and would not succumb to what was going on within the family and other members of the family?” Lafferty: “In my heart and mind, no. Since I’ve been in prison I was willing to consider with God that I may have been wrong. And if God would let me know that I was wrong I would be happy to do anything I could to try to make things right with God.” Brokaw: “But in your judgement you have received no sign from God that you could have been wrong?” Lafferty: “That’s correct. That’s correct.” After 19 years in prison, Dan Lafferty believes that he is the prophet Elijah, who will herald the second coming of Christ. But has it occurred to Lafferty that he has a great deal in common with a well known Islamic fundamentalist? Brokaw: “What about Osama bin Laden? What separates him from you?” Lafferty: “Him from me? Well, for the observer probably little or nothing.” Krakauer: “Dan Lafferty and Osama bin Laden are cut from the same cloth. They’re both these fanatical believers who let nothing get in the way of carrying out what they believe is God’s will. Nothing. Not human life, common sense — it all goes out the window.” And among Dan Lafferty’s most disturbing beliefs today is this: that there are many more groups of excommunicated Mormons in Utah and elsewhere, ready to commit violence in the name of God.
Lafferty: “I know of a half a dozen different groups who, I think, wouldn’t probably hesitate to take lives in their cause.” Brokaw: “You think there are other true believers out there who may take lives?” Lafferty: “I’m confident it will probably happen.” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints tells “Dateline” that Fundamentalists who share the Laffertys beliefs have no connection whatsoever to the church. In a statement, the church said the vast majority of Saints are “peace-loving people who” ... “practice their religion in a spirit of non-violence.” The church also calls Krakauer an “agnostic” who has written a book that is a “condemnation of religion,” and a “decidedly one-sided and negative view of Mormon history.” Brokaw: “As you know, mainstream Mormons are going to be watching all this and they’re going to be furious.” Krakauer: “In some sense I’m kind of surprised. Because in my book I make a very clear distinction between mainstream Mormons and Fundamentalists.” But Krakauer believes that another violent chapter in the book of the excommunicated Mormons, the Fundamentalists, is inevitable, although church and state authorities may try to move heaven and earth to stop it. Brokaw: “It’s likely that Ron Lafferty will be executed, Dan Lafferty will spend the rest of his days in prison. Does that send any kind of a message to the Fundamentalists out there about consequences for their behavior? Do you think it’ll discourage them in any way?” Krakauer: “I think it’s quite the opposite. They’re not afraid of death. Their glory is in the afterlife. When people start listening to God and ignoring common sense the world becomes a much more dangerous place because you can’t argue with the voice of God. There’s no talking sense to someone who says God told me to do it, so that’s it, I have to do it.” msnbc.com |