Mitt Romney
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I'll be the first to admit that I don't know a lot about the Mormon religion, but from what I do know, they are quite evangelical and why not? As religions go, they're new and that's how new religions grow, through recruitment. But when I read this story, I couldn't help but feel, well...creeped out.

From Gawker:
Ann Romney's Welsh-born father (Mitt's father-in-law who Mitt mentioned in last night's debate to shore up his pro-immigrant bona fides) was an engineer, inventor, and resolute atheist who disdained all organized religion and raised his children accordingly. Davies, his son Roderick told the Boston Globe in 2007, regarded the faithful as "weak in the knees." But when Mitt began seeing Davies' daughter Ann, the Romney family launched a concerted effort to convert not only Ann but her entire family to Mormonism. And they were wildly successful: Within a year of meeting Ann, Mitt and his father had converted all three of Edward Davies' children. Days before she died in 1993, Ann Romney's mother asked to be converted as well. Edward Davies was the only member of his clan whose soul the Romneys never claimed for their church.
Edward Davies was an atheist. He spent his life hating religion. He died hating religion. That apparently wasn't good enough for the Romney family. A bit over a year after he died, Davies was sealed to his Mormon spouse in the Salt Lake Temple.

One of Gawker's Mormon readers described the ceremony as:
[A] canonical series of rituals that Mormons undergo (in life or death) in order to qualify for admission to heaven, including baptism, confirmation, "washings and anointings," endowment, and, in the case of men, ordination to two levels of priesthood. The description seems to indicate that certain family members were present for all these rituals, in which a living male would have stood in "for and in behalf of" the late Mr. Davies.
For those of us who call ourselves agnostic or atheist, we know that this sort of ceremony is for the living...that the dead don't care. But it would be hard to argue that the practice isn't disrespectful to the deceased, as well as just simply creepy.

For those who didn't live their lives as non-believers, the practice is far worse. The Mormon church found itself in some hot water when they posthumously baptized Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

Even more recently, they mistakenly baptized Stanley Ann Dunham, the mother of President Obama.

In and of itself, this disturbing practice might not be enough to disqualify Romney for the Presidency, but it does point to a kind of arrogance that we see time and time again on the campaign trail. Mitt Romney, the Presidential candidate seems so removed from what people actually care about. Statements like, "Corporations are people, my friend," "I'll tell you what, ten-thousand bucks? $10,000 bet," and "I should tell my story. I'm also unemployed" are statements made by a person who simply cannot see outside his narrow world view. So is it a surprise that Mitt Romney, the Mormon Bishop, would have trouble respecting that someone would have religious views that differ from his?