For sure.
 
But there is a totally different model of polygamous life. Cosmopolitan mag 
 had a 
feature some years back about such a family in, I think, Big Spring,  Utah.
Very modern people. Breakaway Mormons with modern views of
just about everything, including personal independence of the wives.
On principle they would not consider underage women. All had
to be of legal age.
 
Otherwise, most interesting. Family business meant a small  corporation
and all kinds of economies of scale. The big plus , as in the story I  just 
sent,
are the advantages in child raising and care of the sick. This seems to  
explain
why polygamy has persisted from the beginnings of civilization, in some  
from,
to the present.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
message dated 9/19/2011 11:55:38 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected] 
 writes:

 
“What should the husband decide  ?” 
Choose mature  wives, unlike the FLDS pervert, Warren Jeffs. 
 

 
 
From:  [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]]  On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Monday, September 19, 2011  12:46 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc:  [email protected]
Subject: [RC] American  Harem

 
What is the Radical Centrist  position on polygamy ?  
How about : The wives should  reflect a variety of political viewpoints,
 
Right, Left, and Other  ?
 

 
Now, that would be an  experience.
 

 
Three of your wives want to  attend a Democratic Party rally, another
 
three want to attend a  Republican fund raiser, one wants to go to a
 
Green Party conference, and  another wants to go to Constitution Party
 
convention. What should the  husband decide ?
 

 
Billy
 

 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
 

 

 

 
Polygamous family steps out  of the closet
Gail Marchessault ("Winnipeg Free Press," September 17,  2011) 
Salt Lake City, USA - Love Times  Three 
Our True Story of a Polygamous  Marriage 
By Joe, Alina, Vicki and Valerie Darger with  Brooke Adams 
HarperOne, 304 pages, $19 
The middle-class polygamous family in the HBO TV  show Big Love might have 
struck some people as unlikely; however, it was  inspired by magazine 
articles about an actual, though unnamed, American Mormon  family. 
That family, the Dargers, have now come out of  the closet. Joe Darger and 
his three wives -- Alina, Vicki and Valerie -- live  in Salt Lake City, 
Utah, with their 23 children. 
Their book, well-written with help from Salt  Lake Tribune journalist 
Brooke Adams, comes across as a sincere effort to  explain their family life 
and 
their religious beliefs, which are at odds with  the Church of Jesus Christ 
of Latter-day Saints' official position on polygamy  or plural marriage. 
Although the Dargers claim their reality is not  much different from that 
of their monogamous neighbours, the devil is in the  details. The contrasting 
of ordinary and extraordinary makes Love Times Three  fascinating reading. 
The Dargers sometimes need a dolly to bring home  their weekly groceries. 
Sunday brunch involves five dozen eggs and 60 to 70  waffles. Joe, who claims 
to feed all these mouths as a businessman, writes  that he sometimes has 
trouble remembering whose turn it is for date  night. 
Joe has been married to Alina and Vicki for more  than 21 years. The wives, 
who are cousins, suggested Joe marry Vicki's twin,  Valerie. Val's chapter, 
explaining why her previous plural marriage failed,  balances Alina and 
Vicki's more positive experience. 
The wives suggest that sharing their husband  keeps them from taking him 
for granted and that dealing with their complicated  relationships deepens 
their spiritual growth. They express appreciation for  their sister wives and 
sharing care of their children, especially during the  teen years or when 
they are ill. 
Plural marriage, they say, is not for the faint  of heart. Vicki compares 
it to climbing Mount Everest, both challenging and  rewarding. 
Joe says there are easier and cheaper ways to  have sex with multiple 
women. His epic efforts to meet each wives' needs and  keep in touch with his 
23 
children makes this clear. 
All four Dargers relate happy memories of  growing up with several moms and 
many siblings. The twins had 39  siblings. 
Each remembers discrimination as their biggest  problem. In addition to 
painful memories of schoolyard slights, they relate  stories of fathers and 
grandfathers hiding or spending time in jail as  polygamists, which exacerbated 
their families' poverty. 
The Dargers are aware that coming out publicly  still involves personal 
risk. 
But staying silent is also risky. The Dargers  decided to tell their story 
after 439 children from the Yearning for Zion  Ranch in Eldorado, Texas, 
were placed in foster shelters in 2008. Although  they have relatives there, 
they stressed their own culture is vastly  different. 
They felt it was important to speak out against  underage marriage and 
abuse of any kind and, as the majority of Mormons are  "Independents, to 
differentiate themselves from the LDS and from the sect led  by Warren Jeffs, 
recently found guilty of sexual assault for marrying several  under-age girls. 
A somewhat poorly organized appendix sketches  the basic tenets of 
fundamentalist Mormonism and the various sects, with their  overlapping names 
and 
different principles. 
The book ends with a word from one child from  each marriage. Their stories 
echo their parents', with slightly less fear of  discrimination and more 
uncertainty about their own marriage  choices. 
The accounts seem balanced, although of course  some selectivity is 
involved. There is not much discussion about the sexist  nature of this family 
structure. There is some discussion of poverty in the  parents' early lives, 
but 
it doesn't seem to be a major issue for the  Dargers. 
If you are looking for insight into the  still-illegal polygamist 
experience, the Dargers' book is a better bet than  Big Love.




-- 
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