#mormon #anarchism #socialism #mutualism
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"None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free."
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832)
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https://themormonworkerdotnet.wordpress.com/about/
"The Mormon Worker is an independent newspaper/journal devoted to Mormonism and radical politics. It is published by members of the LDS Church."
I AM NEITHER A REPRESENTATIVE OR MEMBER OF MORMON WORKER, I ONLY SEEK TO CRITICALLY REVIEW AND PROMOTE THEIR WORK.
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Cooperation: A Common Principle of Mormonism and Anarchism
"In the late 1800’s, the Mormon pioneers, exiled to the Utah territory, implemented one of the largest experiments in cooperative living that the United States has ever known. They wanted to create a society with no rich and no poor. This society would be built, among other things, on the principle of cooperativism. Cooperation is the simple notion that when people work together as opposed to competing with one another, they can achieve economic and political goals without backbreaking work, or the stratification of society that the capitalist system requires."
https://themormonworkerdotnet.wordpress.com/past-issues/mw-issue-2/cooperation-a-common-principle-of-mormonism-and-anarchism/
How Socialism Helped Save the Mormon Church By William Van Wagenen
Liberation Theology in the Book of Mormon By Dennis Potter
https://themormonworkerdotnet.wordpress.com/past-issues/mw-issue-10/liberation-theology-in-the-book-of-mormon/
An Introduction to Mormon Anarchism By William Van Wagenen
https://themormonworkerdotnet.wordpress.com/past-issues/archive/an-introduction-to-mormon-anarchism/
Saints of the Fourth International: Remembering Joe and Reba Hansen
https://themormonworkerdotnet.wordpress.com/past-issues/mw-issue-6/saints-of-the-fourth-international-remembering-joe-and-reba-hansen/
# Ecotopia: The Notebooks and Reports of William Weston is a utopian novel by Ernest Callenbach published in 1975. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecotopia)
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"A man always has two reasons for doing anything: a good reason and the real reason."
- J.P. Morgan
"Morgan was a lifelong member of the Episcopal Church, and by 1890 was one of its most influential leaders. He was a founding member of the Church Club of New York, an Episcopal private member's club in Manhattan. In 1910, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church established a commission, proposed by Bishop Charles Brent, to implement a world conference of churches to address their differences in their “faith and order.” Morgan was so impressed by the proposal for such a conference that he contributed $100,000 to finance the commission's work."
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._P._Morgan)
Episcopalianism: What We Believe
https://www.episcopalchurch.org/what-we-believe/
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