The Most Corrosive Claim in American Politics: “Everything You’ve Been Told Is Wrong”
FEATURES
- “Crawling Over, Under, or Around Section 132”: The Debate Over Joseph Smith and Polygamy by Daniel C. Peterson
- The Trojan Horse of AI by Marianna Richardson
- An Open Letter to the Mayor of Fairview, Texas by C.D. Cunningham
- The Command to Forgive When Your Heart Is Wounded by Roger Connors
- Looking Upon the Serpent by Paul Bishop
- Stepping into Moses’ Shoes: Joshua’s Divine Commission by Daniel C. Peterson
- Fooling the Supercomputer (Part 1) by Daris Howard
- Your Grand Connections Are Both Powerful and Tender by Mary Bell
- Food Storage on a Tight Budget: You Are Not Too Broke to Prepare food by Carolyn Nicolaysen
- New Video Offers Rare View Into Missionary Training Center by Meridian Church Newswire
















Comments | Return to Story
Corey D.January 14, 2026
Excellent, well written, well explained and needed during a time of polarization.
David PreeceJanuary 13, 2026
You've made some excellent points here. It is disheartening to see fellow Latter-day Saints succumb to the conspiracy trap. As an example, surveys found that approximately 18–21% of Latter-day Saints endorsed at least one core QAnon belief—higher than the national average of 15%. There are several factors at play here, some historical, some cultural, and some structural. Persecution memory, moral absolutism, distrust of external authority, and subjective truth-validation can combine in ways that endorse modern conspiracy theories. This unique susceptibility is driven by the impact of these factors than by LDS theology itself. Diverse news sources and objective and rational (sometimes skeptical) analysis combined with a sound scriptural foundation, attention to Apostles and faithful introspection is the conspiracy-avoidance formula.
Danny MarlowJanuary 13, 2026
I thought we could keep politics out of religion
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