• Aileen Clyde - Mormon Women for Ethical Government
    Events

    MWEG Fireside Chat with Aileen Clyde

    What: MWEG Fireside chat with Aileen Clyde When: Sunday, August 27 at 7:00 PM MDT Where: Livestreamed onto MWEG’s Discussion Group page Sister Aileen Clyde has been a hero and a role model to millions of women for many years. She served in the General Relief Society Presidency from 1990-1997 along with Sister Elaine Jack and Sister Chieko Okasaki and has spent her entire life in public service. At the invitation of the Utah Judicial Council, she chaired the Utah Task Force on Gender and Justice which studied the possible effect of gender bias in Utah Courts. For five years she was the citizen chair of the Utah Commission on…

  • Charlottesville - Mormon Women for Ethical Government
    Official Statements

    Official Statement from Mormon Women for Ethical Government in Response to the White Supremacist Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia

    Mormon Women for Ethical Government decries racism wherever its ugly tentacles reach. As devout followers of Jesus Christ, we believe our path is clear — to love and respect one another as fellow sons and daughters of God. In daily practice, in civil discourse, in policy, our goals are to love, honor, and defend the rights of all our brothers and sisters throughout the world. We stand with the good citizens of Charlottesville, Virginia, who are being singled out because of skin color or religion by gangs of cowardly white supremacists. We believe in the inherent dignity of every human being. Our beloved nation was inspired by the ideal of…

  • Voices of MWEG

    Intersections

    We’ve become unaccustomed to dialing down the intake of information in anything but rapid fire succession and bite-sized chunks. In an attempt to slow down and reflect about what I am taking in, I dissected this piece about racism with a group of friends this week. The goal was to reflect before reacting. To listen with no intention of immediately responding. We spent a day on each subsection (there are breaks in the text) and considered slowly. For instance, reading these two paragraphs multiple times allowed me to really hear what the author was saying: “This emotional disconnect is the conclusion of living a life oblivious to the fact that their…

  • muslims - Mormon Women for Ethical Government
    Voices of MWEG

    Making Connections

    Show of hands from everyone reading this: How many of you identify as being an introvert? For those of you who half-heartedly raised your hands (but only because you’re alone in the privacy of your own home — there’s no way you’d randomly raise your hand out in public and draw unwanted attention to yourself), I get it. I was the kid who would bring a book to church dances. The best way to strike fear into my otherwise confident adolescent heart was a forced get-to-know-you session at girls’ camp. Not much has changed with adulthood. The last thing I want to do when I’m out in public is make small…

  • Voices of MWEG

    Protect Our Care :: From a Woman with Cystic Fibrosis

    I was born with a life-shortening genetic disease called cystic fibrosis. When I was diagnosed in 1988, my parents were told I wouldn’t live to turn 20. This year, I’ll turn 29. I’m grateful for the medical miracles that have enabled me to have a long, full life, complete with marriage and parenthood. But those miracles have come at great cost. Each year, my prescriptions alone total at least $460,000. Adding in specialist visits and inpatient hospital stays, that number gets exponentially higher. Without the medications, specialist visits, and treatments that price tag buys, I will die in short order. Without one medication, my cells will lose the degree of…

  • Voices of MWEG

    Protect Our Care :: From a Mother of a Child With Cancer

    As a mother of a child with cancer, I am deeply grateful for the options and protections the ACA affords my son and other children like him. I am also deeply concerned about possible replacements or changes to the ACA that could affect my son. While I realize the ACA has flaws that should be addressed, and I acknowledge that healthcare reform is a complicated and multifaceted issue, all I can do is speak from our family’s experience. When abstract political ideas become law, these laws affect the lives of real people. This is the story of how the ACA has benefitted our family, and how possible changes to the…