Mormon Church: God Told Us to Accept Jewish Political Correctness

Daily Stormer
December 12, 2013

God conveniently allowed black priests a decade after the communist run civil rights movement.
God conveniently allowed black priests in 1978, just a decade after the communist-run civil rights movement.

Mormons are one of the most widely hated, distrusted and ridiculed groups in the United States.  Mocking them is acceptable in all non-Mormon social circles and media outlets.  But despite this widespread dislike and scorn, the Mormons obstinately stick to their unpopular beliefs.  Most of them, that is.

Up until 1978, the Mormon Church did not allow Negroes to become priests.  Thanks to the Jew- and Communist-organized “Civil Rights” movement of the 50s and 60s, racial segregation had become very unpopular by this time, forcing the Mormons to change their policy.

At first glance, this might seem like a religious organization caving to worldly pressure.  However, a recent post at the official Mormon Church website assures us that the decision to allow black priests came directly from God.  Here are some personal recollections from high-ranking Church officials who were present during the “revelation”:

I was in the temple when President Spencer W. Kimball received the revelation regarding the priesthood. I was the junior member of the Quorum of the Twelve. I was there. I was there with the outpouring of the Spirit in that room so strong that none of us could speak afterwards. We just left quietly to go back to the office. No one could say anything because of the powerful outpouring of the heavenly spiritual experience.

…we joined in prayer in the most sacred of circumstances. President Kimball himself was voice in that prayer. I do not recall the exact words that he spoke. But I do recall my own feelings and the nature of the expressions of my Brethren. There was a hallowed and sanctified atmosphere in the room. For me, it felt as if a conduit opened between the heavenly throne and the kneeling, pleading prophet of God who was joined by his Brethren. The Spirit of God was there. And by the power of the Holy Ghost there came to that prophet an assurance that the thing for which he prayed was right, that the time had come, and that now the wondrous blessings of the priesthood should be extended to worthy men everywhere regardless of lineage.  Not one of us who was present on that occasion was ever quite the same after that. Nor has the Church been quite the same.

To give support to their ridiculous claim that it was God, and not the Jew-controlled secular culture, that dictated the decision, the Church included this sappy video featuring black Mormons.

Mormons never pass up an opportunity to tell us how happy they were when God gave this new revelation.  Mitt Romney famously claimed that he “cried tears of joy” when he heard the news.

Tears of joy, the typical Republican reaction when learning about advances in racial harmony.
Tears of joy, the typical Republican reaction upon learning about advances in racial harmony.

The Mormons may be ridiculed for practicing a strange religion, but their decision to allow black priests shows that there is one worldly force which they do fear: Jewish Political Correctness.