Epic adventures often begin with the words, “Your party walks into a tavern…” and this one is no different. While there might not be a suspicious, cloaked figure sitting in a dimly lit corner, the Thieves Guild Cidery has its own fantasy-inspired charm: “We’re calling it ‘chaotic wizard maximalism.’” That’s how co-owners Jordy Kirkman and Max Knudsen describe their soon-to-be taproom, which is taking over the former Alphagraphics building in the Central Ninth neighborhood (530 W. 900 South). Combining a preoccupation with role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons and theatrical, high-concept lounges, the new Salt Lake bar will be dubbed Thieves Guild, in honor of the secret organization of rogues, cutpurses and knaves found in classic fantasy realms.
Fit for an adventurer, the bar’s menu focuses on experimental ciders and micro-mead and includes everything from lemon-basil ciders to a Baja Blast Mead (all made in-house). Thieves Guild also invites its honored guests to interact with the tavern itself. After a treacherous session of dungeon-crawling and Mimic-slaying, here the weary traveler can unwind, rest easy and celebrate accomplishing their latest quest (and perchance start a new one) with an evening at Thieves Guild.
Co-owner Max Knudsen harvesting apples at Kirkman’s family orchard.Co-owner and apple bandit Jordy Kirkman harvesting apples.
Jordy didn’t always dream of being a barkeep, but he’s always had a love for cider—and mischief. Who could have predicted that his two loves would take him on the quest that would lead him to form Thieves Guild? Formerly in the tech industry, Jordy has been home brewing cider for years with apples recovered from abandoned orchards and family-owned trees. “Eventually I couldn’t be satiated with just a few apples here and there,” he says. So he started looking to level up with bigger trees. During one apple-scouting trip, he came upon an ancient patch of trees that had seemingly been left to flourish in the wild. There was just one problem—they were on state-owned property. Jordy couldn’t leave the neglected apples to the buzzards, “We thought we’d do the state a favor of coming in the night and relieving them of some of this burden.” Like thieves in the night, Jordy and his team of apple raiders gathered the goods and fled the scene. They’ve jokingly referred to themselves as the apple bandits ever since, and thus began the idea for the Thieves Guild taproom.
The vision truly took shape when Jordy joined forces with Max, a Salt Lake native who has worked as a chef in both New York and Hawaii. The duo bonded over their shared interest in fantasy tropes and spent hours together during lockdown experimenting like alchemists with home-brewed beer and cider. “At one point we had made several hundred gallons in a year and thought, ‘Hey, we’re pretty good at this aren’t we?’” Jordy recalls. After deciding to pursue their hobby as a full-time endeavor, they received a tip about a building in the Central Ninth neighborhood that was going up for sale and jumped at the opportunity to bring Salt Lake a new and unique experience.
So, how will Thieves Guild distinguish themselves in C9’s already thriving bar community? “Salt Lake has a lot of cool high-concept bars,” answers Max. “But we don’t have a nerdy one.” Leaning into their eclectic tastes, Thieves Guild will be a full-throttle experience bar, complete with fantastical decor and interactive spell books.
Guests will be able to enjoy a range of off-the-cuff ciders brewed in-house. Image courtesy of Thieves Guild.
Although they’re wary of crossing the line into Disney territory, “The whole tavern will feel theatrical, but you won’t be getting your drinks served by a wizard.” Max promises. “It will probably look like a Park City lodge mixed with a gothic German Pub—cozy during the day and a great place to spend lunch hour.” And when the sun sets, expect Thieves Guild to come alive with fantasy adventure. Jordy’s background in tech comes in handy this way, “The lighting system is unique, everything from candles to lanterns to fog machines can be programmed based on what we want,” he says. The bar’s high-tech interiors are specifically designed to invite guest interaction with tokens called thieves coins, which are earned by purchasing certain items or participating in events. Guests can trade these in for loot like stickers or T-shirts or use them to cast “spells.” Yes. Spells. Max explains: “So say you cast ‘chain lighting’ and suddenly the sights and sounds of a storm rumble throughout the whole bar.”
Thieves Coins can be used to cast ‘spells’ inside the cider bar. Image courtesy of Thieves Guild.
For guests, Thieves Guild promises adventure and escape, and for Jordy, it’s a chance to flex his innovation in cider-making. “In the same way you see craft cocktail bars doing crazy stuff with chemistry to create different profiles, I’m pushing boundaries of how to make mead and cider with certain flavors,” he says. With his connection to local orchards, Jordy aims to highlight the terroir aspects of Utah-grown apples while experimenting with unique flavor combinations. Everything from herbaceous ciders to funky micro-meads will be available on a rotating set of taps. The wizards at Thieves Guild are also looking forward to collaborating with the other cider-crazed folks just up the road at Scion, whose head cider maker Rio Connelly has been an instrumental mentor to both Jordy and Max. “We’re excited to be in the same neighborhood, it’s going to be really convenient when we can walk over to Rio and be like, ‘yo, you wanna do some crazy stuff together?” And when asked if two cider-focused bars can share the block, Jordy is quick to respond: “No one bats an eye at two micro-breweries opening down the street from each other. There is so much space in the cider market right now and people have yet to see just how much there is to explore in this world.”
As of this writing, Thieves Guild isn’t making any promises on opening dates, although Jordy and Max are warming up to the idea of a late-spring date. Until then, follow their journey on Instagram @thievesguildcidery where the team frequently drops subtle hints at what adventures are to come. And remember, true adventurers always tip their bards and barkeeps!
I don’t fall in love easily.But I develop crushes all the time. Food crushes, that is. I’ll find a dish I love and crush on it for years. Unabated. So, I’m sharing my go-to food crushes around town, hoping you’ll fall in love too. My favorite breakfast/brunch obsession is Hub & Spoke’s Shrimp and Grits.
I am a secret Southern girl at heart. Not by birth. I was grafted into Southern Foodways through my defacto grandfather, who grew up in North Carolina. I have fuzzy but fond memories of getting up early in the morning with him to “go shrimpin’” in central Florida. I don’t remember ever catching anything, but mornings on the waterways with the woosh of the net echoing over the misty still water stuck in my mind. Spanish moss and fog and salt were in the air.
I don’t remember the first time I tried shrimp and grits. But surely, it was at a diner after coming off the water with a hunger that only came from hours of unsuccessful fishing. It is one of my default comfort meals. If shrimp and grits are on the menu, you can put money on what I will order. But, truth be told, it is a risky choice. Shrimp are easily overcooked. Grits may be undercooked or show up at the table congealed. Sometimes, the bacon, chorizo or pork overshadows the sweetness of the shrimp. Or there is too much cheese in the grits, overpowering everything else. I have to confess, for someone who always orders shrimp and grits, I’m happy with my compulsive choice only about 10% of the time. Apparently, I’m a glutton for the shrimp and grits roulette.
Hub & Spoke’s shrimp and grits satisfy 100% of the time. Served piping hot in a cast iron skillet, the grits are properly creamy and have cheddar-y undertones, but still, each grit is distinct. They serve as an appropriately neutral foundation for the well-sauced shrimp. Saucy is also the word I’d use to describe the sauce. With a rich tomato base and sauteed leeks, it isn’t shy about coating the whole pan edge to edge. You’re guaranteed a scoop of sauce with every bite of grits.
The secret at Hub & Spoke is the house-smoked Cajun-style Andouille sausage. The smokiness permeates the shrimp and gives a nice red tint to everything in the bowl. Pickled peppers add a hit of acid at the end, just enough to ensure the dish isn’t too rich or heavy. I’ve had this dish at Hub & Spoke at least ten times over the years, and it is remarkably consistent, which is remarkably hard to do. Not once was the shrimp overcooked. That deserves a prize and a nod to the kitchen’s quality training and skills.
It comes with a generous portion of shrimp. I’m always disappointed when I order a dish called shrimp and grits and get four shrimp clustered together in the center of the bowl, looking lonely. It is not called “grits and shrimp.”
Whenever KRCL and The State Room join forces, the end result is usually an unforgettable Salt Lake City concert. We had such a memorable evening on Friday, March 8, 2024 when Margo Cilker and her band delivered an amazing 16-song set. Touring in support of her flawless new album, Valley of Heart’s Delight, Cilker opened with the record’s first track “Lowland Trail,” a catchy country-folk tune with a fresh West Coast vibe.
Cilker delighted the crowd with a generous portion of new material from her latest critically- acclaimed record. “Keep It On A Burner” and “Beggar For Your Love,” and many other tunes, stayed in my head all week. A master songwriter, she took us on an emotional road trip to a diner in “Santa Rosa” New Mexico, and on to “Tehachapi,” then to “That River,” a song inspired by a long journey across the Great Basin.
Despite only two full-length albums to her credit, Cilker’s built a significant catalog. She’s filled both records with so many great tunes that you forget she’s a relative newcomer. I really enjoyed “Mother Told Her Mother Told Me,” “Crazy or Died,” “Sound and Fury,” and “Steelhead Trout.” Her style is country-folk with a western edge. It’s outdoorsy, pack-the-Subaru-and-head to-the-hills kind of music.
As a bonus, she went old-school with “Delta Dawn,” a song famously recorded by some of the great artists of the 70s, including Bette Midler, Tanya Tucker, and Helen Ready. Cilker’s version was certainly a hit with me. To close out her set she reached further back with a cover of Ian Tyson’s obscure country waltz, “Road To Las Cruces,” a place my wife and I know well.
As a West Coast incarnation of Lucinda Williams, Cilker and her band create a big sound with just four instruments (I’m sure it would be hard to fit more players in their van). I would love to see her with a full orchestra, especially keyboards, fiddle and banjo.
Jeremy Ferrara opened the evening (and did double duty as guitarist in Cilker’s band) with mellow, somewhat psychedelic folk. He started off with “Come and Go,” a song from his soon-to-be released album Darkness is A Bright Sound. The Salt Lake City audience got a preview of his new material, “Reason,” “Morning Light,” and the album’s title track. He entertained the audience with his upbeat fingerpicking in “Sing Until I Die,” played his most popular song “Fictional,” and ended his quick, nine-song set with the catchy “Paint Me Blue,” a great new single he released in January.
Thank you KRCL and The State Room for bringing great new artists like Margo Cilker to Salt Lake City’s concert community. You make our city a cool place to live.
On the grand stage of national politics, Utah is a bit player. We are one of the least densely populated, most reliably conservative states with middling voter participation rates and are currently embroiled in a gerrymandering lawsuit. However, Utah’s seeming political insignificance is something of a smokescreen, and the monolithic nature of Utah’s long-held political beliefs is an illusion. Utah politicians have amassed power and influence that penetrated state borders and directed the country to where it is today. We are taking a look at the Utah men throughout history who made it into “the room where it happens,” as Hamilton so succinctly put it, and what they did when they got there.
Political Ideology With Parallels Today
On June 17, 1930, President Herbert Hoover signed The Smoot-Hawley Tariff in the wake of Black Tuesday, the stock market crash that marks the impetus of the Great Depression. Utah Senator Reed Smoot lent his name to the Tariff, as the chair of the Senate Finance Committee during the months of odious debates, amendment votes, reversals, in-fighting, backroom-dealing and special interest lobbying that preceded the bill’s passage. (Sound familiar?) At best, the act failed at what its authors initially set out to do—help the struggling agriculture sector. At worst, the Tariff takes the blame for exacerbating the Great Depression.
If the act sounds familiar, it might be because Smoot’s namesake was invoked in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) and again in 2017. A Washington Post columnist who declared “The ghost of Smoot-Hawley seems to haunt President Trump” was not the only one who compared President Trump’s tariffs and protectionism to the 1930 bill.
In 1929, when the tariff negotiations began, Smoot had a reputation as an “exceptionally capable and indefatigable legislator,” according to Douglas A. Irwin of the National Bureau of Economic Research. By 1932, Smoot had lost reelection, but he defended his tariff with the zeal of a religious crusade. “Even if one disagrees with Smoot’s strict protectionist doctrine, one can understand and admire the tenacity with which he pursued his goal,” concludes James B. Allen, former LDS Church historian and BYU professor of history. “He had one great characteristic that some will admire and others scoff at…his overwhelming confidence in his own wisdom and ability.”
This clip, retrieved from El Paso Herald, December 16, 1929 illustrates how unpopular the Smoot-Hawley tariffs were on a national scale. Courtesy of Newspapers.com
That confidence allowed Smoot to lead “Utah’s march into the national mainstream,” as Utah Historic Quarterly put it, and to be “successful in placing many Utahns in positions of national prominence,” as stated in Smoot’s failed reelection campaign. Outside of the impact of his policies (soon undone after he left the Senate), Smoot’s legacy is forging a path to power for future representatives of the frontier West.
Elbert D. Thomas, the Utah senator who replaced Smoot, took office during worst economic crisis the country had ever seen. Thomas worked to create a New Deal work-relief program that employed millions of young men in environmental projects and national parks, as chair of the Senate Committee on Education and Labor, and the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, establishing the 40-hour work week, overtime pay, a minimum wage and a legal working age.
Thomas’s secretary, Elaine F. Hatch, said of her “beloved” senator’s legacy, “This Nation may have totally collapsed and foundered except for the dedicated efforts and activities of men like President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Marriner Eccles and Senator Elbert D. Thomas.”
In today’s political climate, as well as in the 1930s, the mindset of a Utah banker might seem incongruous with the top-down economic policy of the New Deal, but Marriner Eccles was different. Eccles said “frontier economic philosophy” guided him until the Great Depression, when he changed his mind and chose not to double down on a failed philosophy. In 1933, Eccles testified before the Senate Committee on Finance, saying, “The orthodox capitalistic system of uncontrolled individualism, with its free competition, will no longer serve our purpose. We must think in terms of the scientific, technological, interdependent machine age, which can only survive and function under a modified capitalistic system controlled and regulated from the top by the government.”
The young banker from Utah proposed a bold five-point plan to fix the economy. F.D.R. gave Eccles a job in the U.S. Treasury Department and then, in 1934, the job as chair of the Federal Reserve. His plan became the inspiration for New Deal programs. While the New Deal did not end the Depression, “It restored a sense of security as it put people back to work. It created the framework for a regulatory state that could protect the interests of all Americans, rich and poor…It rebuilt the infrastructure of the United States, providing a network of schools, hospitals and roads,” said historian Allan Winkler in his own 2009 testimony to the U.S. Senate.
Eccles pushed to reform the Fed and create the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Housing Act (FHA). While the FHA allowed many Americans to obtain housing, it did not extend those benefits to generations of Black Americans in a process known as “redlining.” Eccles’ legacy includes some insights relevant to post-Great Recession America, as noted by Mark Wayne Nelson in Jumping the Abyss: Marriner S. Eccles and the New Deal, 1933–1940. Eccles advocated for centralized banking regulation and believed it would “prove effective in establishing a sound financial sector…One imagines that were he with us today he might assert that the remarkable financial stability that has distinguished the first three decades following the New Deal, and the turbulence that marked the years 2007 and 2008, has validated this conviction.”
– 1870 – Utah’s Impact on Voting Rights
Utah Territory holds the first elections in which women could vote in the U.S. Seraph Young is the first woman to cast a ballot. Utah women lost voting rights with the passing of the Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887.
Seraph Young (Ford)
– 1894 – Joining the Union
Congress passes the Utah Enabling Act, admitting Utah into the Union contingent upon its banning polygamy and other mandates.
– 1896 – Utah Statehood
Utah becomes the 45th state in the Union after publicly forgoing polygamy. The right for women to vote and to hold public office is written into the state constitution.
Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon
– 1898 – Women’s Suffrage
Utah State Senator and suffragist, Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon testifies to the success of women’s suffrage in Utah before a U.S. congressional committee.
Reed Smoot
– 1903 – Credentials in Question
Reed Smoot is elected to the Senate. His ability to serve as a senator is challenged due to his leadership role within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, leading to the Reed Smoot Hearings.
William H. King
– 1917 > 1919 – Polygamist Denied Senate Seat
William H. King of Salt Lake City replaces B. H. Roberts, who was unseated over polygamy. King also serves on the Overman Committee, which investigated “un-American” activities during WWI.
Justice George Sutherland
– 1922 – One of the ‘Four Horsemen’ of the U.S. Supreme Court
The Senate confirms the nomination of George Sutherland to the U.S. Supreme Court. He is the first and only Utahn to so far serve on the Supreme Court. During his tenure, he becomes known as one of the court’s “Four Horseman,” a group of conservative justices who rule against some of F.D.R.’s New Deal policies.
– 1930 – The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act
The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, cosponsored by Senator Reed Smoot (then chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance), is signed into law. The act raises U.S. tariffs on more than 20,000 imported goods to record levels, and other countries raise their tariffs in retaliation. It is widely blamed for prolonging the Great Depression.
Marriner Eccles
– 1934 – The Father of the Modern Federal Reserve
F.D.R. appoints Marriner S. Eccles, a Utah banker, as chairman of the Federal Reserve. Eccles advocates for policies that become the architecture of the New Deal. By restructuring the Fed, he becomes known as “the father of the modern Federal Reserve.” He is the son of industrialist David Eccles’ and Eccles’ second wife, Ellen Stoddard Eccles.
Elbert D. Thomas
– 1937 – New Deal
Elbert Thomas of Salt Lake City becomes chairman of the Senate Committee on Education and Labor. He introduces part of the New Deal legislation and serves on New Deal committees.
Arthur Watkins
– 1953 – Leading the Tribal Termination Movement
Utah Senator Arthur Watkins spearheads the assimilation of native tribes and the tribal termination movement, authoring bills that unrecognize and relocate 60 tribes across the country.
Ezra Taft Benson
– 1953 – Secretary of Agriculture
President Dwight Eisenhower appoints Ezra Taft Benson as Secretary of Agriculture. Benson opposes government price controls and aid to farmers, arguing that it amounts to socialism and drawing the ire of farmers across the country and at home in Utah and Idaho.
Ivy Baker Priest
– 1953 – United States Treasurer
President Dwight Eisenhower also appoints Ivy Baker Priest of Utah as Treasurer.
Joe McCarthy
– 1954 – Censuring McCarthy
Arthur Watkins is chair of the Select Committee to Study Censure Charges against Joseph McCarthy, voting to censure McCarthy for conduct unbecoming of a senator.
Esther Eggertsen Peterson
– 1961 > 1963 – Equal Pay for Equal Work
President John F. Kennedy calls up Esther Eggertsen Peterson, a labor organizer and lobbyist from Utah, to be Director of the U.S. Women’s Bureau and later the Assistant Secretary of Labor. She crusades for the Equal Pay Act of 1963.
Frank “Ted” Moss
– 1965 – Consumer Protection
Utah Senator Frank “Ted” Moss champions the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act, creating requirements for cigarette package labels and banning cigarette advertisements. As chair of the Consumer Subcommittee, Moss sponsors numerous consumer protection acts that become law.
David M. Kennedy
– 1969 – Short-lived Term in the Treasury
David Kennedy of Utah serves as Secretary of the Treasury and later as the U.S. Ambassador to NATO, after losing the favor of President Richard Nixon.
Wayne Owens
– 1973 – Taking Nixon to Task
Wayne Owens of Panguitch is elected to U.S. Congress. While in Congress, Owens fights to impeach Richard Nixon for the Watergate scandal, despite Nixon’s popularity among Utahns.
Utah’s Faithful Fight the ERA
– 1976 > 1977 – Equal Rights Amendment
LDS Church leaders direct anti-Equal Rights Amendment campaigns in 21 states outside of Utah, collecting funds for Families Are Concerned Today. Their efforts often receive credit for defeating the ERA.
MX Missle Protest
– 1979 > 1980 – The Mormon Church and the MX Missile
The Carter administration plans to have the Air Force store new MX missiles on bases in Utah. LDS Church leadership releases a statement against the missile bases, after which opposition to base in Utah increases by 21% and the plan does not move forward.
Jake Garn
– 1981 > 1982 – Banking Deregulation
Jake Garn of Utah becomes chair of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. As chair, Garn co-authors the Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982. The law deregulates the savings and loan industry in an attempt to thwart the ’80s S&L crisis. The Act directly contributes to the conditions that cause the 2007 Subprime Mortgage Crisis.
Orrin Hatch
– 1988 > 1990 – An Unlikely Supporter of AIDS Funding + Research
Orrin Hatch of Utah gathers support to pass the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) Research and Information Act. Two years later, Hatch co-sponsors the Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act.
– 1990 – ADA
Hatch proves instrumental in ushering the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) through a gridlocked U.S. Senate with the passage of the Hatch Amendment.
– 1994 – DSHEA
Hatch authors the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act, which deregulates the dietary and herbal supplements industry.
– 1997 – CHIP
Hatch works with Ted Kennedy to create the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to cover uninsured children whose family’s often do not qualify for Medicaid in their states.
– 1998 – Opposing Gay Marriage
The Hawaii legislature passes a bill that bans gay marriage, following the lobbying efforts of the LDS Church and other religious organizations.
– 2001 – The Patriot Act
Orrin Hatch introduces the controversial USA PATRIOT Act in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Some of the bill’s provisions are later struck down in legal challenges for violating individuals’ constitutional and civil rights.
Mitt Romney
– 2012 – On the Main Stage
Utah’s political visibility appears to be at an all-time high. Former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman Jr. (and at times serving as U.S. Ambassador to Singapore, China or Russia) makes a bid for the presidency, and future Utah Senator Mitt Romney secures the Republican nomination but loses the general election to Barack Obama.
Orrin Hatch
– 2018 – Long Legacy
Orrin Hatch announces his retirement from the Senate. He is Utah’s longest-serving senator, surpassing Reed Smoot’s record of 30 years. During his term, Hatch sponsors or co-sponsors nearly 800 pieces of legislation that pass into law. Mitt Romney succeeds Hatch.
Unmaking the New Deal
While Eccles went back to Utah during the Truman administration, he returned to Washington, D.C., in a fashion, when the building that houses the Fed was named for him. The provision to name it after Eccles came in a 1982 bill co-authored by Utah Senator Jake Garn. Perhaps ironically, given Eccles’ convictions, the Garn-St. Germaine Act deregulated financial institutions, removing some Depression-era restraints on savings and loans and allowing variable-rate mortgages. As with Smoot-Hawley, the legacy of the Garn-St. Germain Act is one of devastating, unintended consequences.
If this sounds familiar, VRMs were at the heart of the 2007 Subprime Mortgage Crisis, which preceded the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.
As economist Gillian Garcia noted, “The Garn-St. Germain Act allowed lenders to make alternative mortgages, some of which proved to be problematic…unrestrained lenders offered infamous 2/28 adjustable-rate mortgages to entice subprime borrowers,” who then could not afford payments when the rate reset at a higher rate, and millions of people lost their homes.
Conspiracy Thinking
Eccles’ policies as Fed Chair drew the same sort of shallow criticism that we see in American politics today, when one congresswoman told him, “You just love socialism.” During the Red Scare, such unfounded accusations abounded. Burgeoning McCarthyist fervor ended Sen. Elbert Thomas’s political career. Thomas advocated for accepting more Jewish refugees into the U.S. and against interning Japanese Americans during WWII. His inclinations toward global cooperation saw him labeled a communist sympathizer.
In 1953, one man with Utah ties came to Washington, D.C. with more zeal for rooting out communism than anyone, perhaps save for Sen. Joe McCarthy himself. When Ezra Taft Benson, a Mormon apostle, became President Dwight Eisenhower’s Secretary of Agriculture, he did not face the same scrutiny that Smoot endured. At the time, separation of church and state was not much of an issue, explains Dr. Gregory Prince, author of multiple books and essays on Mormon history. “The precedent of a high-ranking church official holding a high office in the federal government had been in place for decades,” says Prince. “I think what changed was the nature of the public’s perception of what churches should and should not do.”
Ezra Taft Benson boarding an airplane, cir. 1953. As agriculture secretary, he traveled through Western Europe, where he said he would try to pass on U.S. agriculture policies. Photo courtesy of Marriot Library.
The shift in perception might have come about in part because of Benson’s controversial politics. In his book, Watchman on the Tower: Ezra Taft Benson and the Making of the Mormon Right, Matthew Harris, professor of history at Colorado State University, details Benson’s political involvement and influence. Benson believed “he had a divine calling to warn Americans about the dangers of communism,” says Harris. As such, he created a secret surveillance system to catch suspected communists within his department. Benson also worked on dismantling the popular New Deal policies of price controls on farm goods and reducing agricultural subsidies, which he called socialism.
As Benson became entrenched in the John Birch Society, an ultraconservative anti-communist hate group, “Benson emerged as one of the leading anti-communist spokesmen in the United States,” says Harris. For Benson, the concepts of centralized government, socialism, social justice, atheism, etc., were lumped together under a communist conspiracy that he believed had infiltrated all levels of government and corrupted the American way of life.
Harris is careful to point out that Benson was not unique among his peers for embracing conspiracy theories, with one notable exception. Benson and his friend J. Rueben Clark—whose name is still on BYU’s law school—were “the only apostles who associated the conspiracy with Jews.” They made antisemitic claims that Jewish people established communism and the NAACP to promote racial integration, which Benson opposed. Benson’s political ambitions culminated in two failed presidential bids with two high-profile segregationists: Strom Thurmond and George Wallace.
Influence on Civil Rights
In 1898, Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon, the first woman to serve as a State Senator in Utah and the U.S., testified to the success of Utah’s equal suffrage before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C. Cannon declared that the women’s suffrage experiment was so successful that it “is no longer an experiment, but is a practical reality, tending to the well-being of the State,” and “Even those who opposed equal suffrage with the greatest ability and vehemence would not now vote for the repeal of the measure.”
The Utah Territory’s women were the first in the nation to cast their ballots. The comparatively early adoption of women’s right to vote and run for public office allowed Utah women to become powerful and vocal advocates for the national suffragist movement, Cannon among them, alongside household names like Susan B. Anthony. While nothing can purge Utah’s legacy as a state that pioneered women’s involvement in politics, Utah’s role as a civil rights leader would later transform into that of one of its most ardent detractors.
Anti-feminist spokesperson Phyllis Schlafly with Utah Senator Orrin Hatch at an Anti-ERA Gala, cir. 1979. Photo courtesy of Marriot Library.
Officials in Washington, D.C. were not the sole actors from Utah influencing national politics. The Utah-based religious organization, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (aka LDS Church or Mormon Church), has wielded its clout and deployed an obedient membership to sway national politics. Gregory Prince notes that the first time the LDS Church waded into a political issue and made a difference on a national level is with the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment of 1972 (ERA).
The ERA would amend the U.S. Constitution to include, “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex,” and needed the approval of three-fourths of state legislatures to ratify. The Utah-based church (then led by Spencer W. Kimball) publicly justified its opposition to the ERA in 1976 when it needed only four more states’ approvals. The church considered the ERA not a political issue but a moral one. The church claimed that the ERA allowed for a “possible train of unnatural consequences” such as “encouragement of those who seek a unisex society, an increase in the practice of homosexual and lesbian activities, and other concepts which could alter the natural, God-given relationship of men and women.”
LDS Church leadership created a Special Affairs Committee to spearhead anti-ERA efforts in 21 states outside of Utah, where members collected funds for anti-ERA candidates, distributed pamphlets and organized letter-writing campaigns. Historian D. Michael Quinn wrote, “The results were numerically staggering.” Of the anti-ERA mail received by state legislators in Virginia, for instance, 85% of the letters were written by Mormons. They succeeded in swaying ERA “I think the ERA was when they honed their political skills, certainly,” says Prince. “And that same playbook came back in the marriage equality battle.” The Utah-based church once again mobilized to influence votes in other states—this time to oppose the legalization of gay marriage. “That started in Hawaii,” says Prince. The LDS Church “allied with the Catholic Church, very quietly, under a front organization called Hawaii’s Future Today,” says Prince. “It had a significant influence on the debate and the legislation that was going on in Hawaii.”
In Oct. 1958, a group of farmers from Utah and Idaho travel to D.C. to ask Ezra Taft Benson for much needed aid. Benson had the reputation of “a heartless ideologue who lacked sympathy for small farmers.” Photo courtesy of Utah Historical Society
The LDS Church followed similar patterns in 2000 with Proposition 22 and again in 2008 with Proposition 8, both in California. “When Proposition 8 came around, they jumped in with both feet,” says Prince. “They took a very public stand and had a considerable boots-on-the-ground initiative within the state.” Mormons’ financial contributions accounted for more than half of the money raised in support of Prop 8.
The LDS Church likewise declared this a moral issue, not a political one, and published its justification, called The Family: A Proclamation to the World. The document asserts that divine design only allows for a narrow definition of marriage, families and gender roles. The proclamation warns that living outside this definition “will bring upon…the calamities foretold by ancient and modern prophets.”
The promises of the unraveling of society are not unlike the arguments made against women’s rights. As Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon observed in her prescient testimony on women’s suffrage to Congress in 1898, “None of the unpleasant results, which were predicted, have occurred…[They] have all been found to be but the ghosts of unfounded prejudices.”
Some of women who lead the national suffragist movement 1848-1920. The 19th Amendment, which gave non-native women in the U.S. the right to vote, was ratified in 1920. Photo courtesy of Marriot Library.
Time Will Tell
Utah’s history of political influence could show that who wielded power was determined by the swing of the ideological pendulum. The same state that produced George Sutherland, who ruled against New Deal legislation as a Supreme Court Justice, elected Abe Murdock, a New Deal supporter; Republican Arthur Watkins replaced him, and Frank Moss, the last Democrat to represent Utah, replaced him. Moss lost reelection to Orrin Hatch. Had the pendulum stopped swinging?
“Utah began to swing to the right with the full aid of Benson,” says Prince. “And I think it’s kept going in that direction ever since. I think that’s where the genesis of it was, in the early 1960s, to the point now where Utah is one of the most reliably pro-Trump states in the country.”
That is not the sum of Utah’s political legacy. People—even politicians—are complex, and sometimes they break ideological ranks to great effect.
As a final example, take Sen. Watkins, who championed a policy that forcibly disconnected indigenous people from their culture and lands. But during his tenure in Congress he also headed a committee to censure Joe McCarthy, a move so unpopular in Utah that he likely lost his seat over it. What was right and what was wrong depends on not just who you ask but when. Legacy is our choices and all of the unintended consequences.
When it comes to removing unwanted hair, don’t be left to your own devices! At-home laser hair removal seems convenient, but there are major differences between DIY at-home and professional in-clinic laser hair removal.
At-home hair removal with permanent results in the comfort of your own home? Sounds amazing and easy—but is it? These devices claim to be cheaper and offer the same results as professional laser hair removal. Before you try them and potentially throw away your money, see what the experts at Milan Laser Hair Removal in Salt Lake City think about the differences between professional laser hair removal and at-home hair removal devices.
Laser hair removal is a one-time expense for permanent results.
What are the results from at-home devices vs. professional laser hair removal?
At-home hair removal devices typically use an actual laser (diode) or intense pulsed light (IPL), often confused with laser technology, so the results from an at-home device can be lackluster. The intensity is low, and the small treatment areas take a long time to treat and see results. The results you do see are often patchy because of the treatment inconsistencies.
On average, there’s about a 70% reduction in unwanted hair after three months of using IPL and diode devices at home. Typically, hair will grow back once you stop using at-home devices, and there’s no guarantee that users will see results.
Professional laser hair removal uses true laser light to target the hair follicle, which is exceptionally stronger than the strength of at-home devices. The pigment in the follicle absorbs the laser light and overheats, which destroys the follicle so hair can’t grow back. When performed correctly, results from professional laser hair removal are permanent—in seven to 10 treatments, most Milan Laser clients are 95%+ hair-free.
Results from an at-home device can be lackluster.
Is at-home laser hair removal safe?
With at-home devices, you’re on your own. There’s no medical supervision or provider to help if something goes wrong. IPL and diode devices carry a high burn risk, especially if there’s a user error. At-home laser hair removal devices can also cause eye damage. Most of these devices don’t include goggles or protective eyewear.
At Milan Laser Hair Removal, all providers are medical professionals, and every clinic has strict safety protocols with oversight from medical doctors. Protective eyewear is always used during treatments, and necessary precautions are taken to avoid complications. All Milan Laser Hair Removal providers are extensively trained to operate the lasers.
Who can use at-home hair removal devices?
Everyone has a higher chance of burning with at-home devices due to user error, but deeper skin tones have an even greater burn risk. Some devices will even lock the user out—rendering the device completely unusable—if the skin tone isn’t compatible. IPL devices aren’t as sophisticated as real lasers at distinguishing between the pigment in the skin and hair, which makes them unsafe for anyone who doesn’t have very fair skin and dark hair. Professional laser hair removal is the only safe option for all skin tones. Also, most at-home devices cannot be used for facial hair removal.
Places like Milan Laser can safely treat almost any body area by utilizing a customized treatment plan for each client. Some lasers, such as the Candela GentleMax Pro used at Milan Laser, include two laser technologies to treat all skin tones—the Nd: YAG for deeper skin tones and the Alexandrite for lighter skin tones.
How expensive is laser hair removal compared to at-home devices?
An at-home device is indeed cheaper upfront than laser hair removal. But let’s break this down: the average cost for IPL can be between $300 and $600. However, batteries die, and technologies malfunction. There are add-ons you need to purchase that enhance your treatments. And even after all of that, you’re not guaranteed results. Any results you do see will require continued use to keep.
All Milan Laser Hair Removal providers are extensively trained to operate the lasers.
Professional laser hair removal may be your best bet!
Treating larger areas with at-home hair removal devices is time-consuming and painful. These areas require multiple sessions, depending on the device’s battery life. Many areas, such as the lower legs, the back of the neck, and the back, are hard to reach and will yield better results when treated by a laser hair removal professional. Laser hair removal treatments for multiple body areas can be done quickly, often over a lunch break. For lower legs and underarms, treatments are only 30 minutes!
Professional laser hair removal ensures all treatments are safe and effective for all skin tones, with tailored options for all clients. Providers like Milan Laser have medical oversight in a judgment-free environment with care for you and your safety. Don’t be tempted by the promising lure of at-home devices! Call the experts at Milan Laser at 833-NO-RAZOR, or visit a local laser hair removal expert at any of Milan Laser’s Salt Lake City locations conveniently located in Bountiful, Orem, Riverdale, and Sandy.
“The gym makes your body strong but your mind soft” is an adage many seasoned rock climbers know all too well. And it’s no wonder. Even the most mindful climbers let their brains revert to autopilot while spending the winter cruising from one colored plastic hold to another in the climbing gym. But as the first hint of warmth hits the Wasatch in the spring, dusting off those outdoor climbing-critical decision-making and body-awareness skills you’ve let lie dormant all winter long can feel a lot like being a beginner all over again.
To avoid the dreaded springtime two-steps-back feeling, spend time on the Spray Wall, Tension Board or the Moon Board. So says Natasha Hodges, Climbing School Manager at Momentum Climbing Gym in Millcreek. “People are often intimidated to try the training boards because they are where the really strong climbers tend to hang out,” Hodges says. “But the boards are really useful for all levels of climbers and everyone using them is there for the same reason: to get stronger, both physically and mentally.”
Natasha Hodges climbing in Little Cottonwood Canyon. Photo by Jon Vickers
All three of the aforementioned walls are bouldering features, or climbing walls that don’t extend more than 15 feet off the ground. A Spray Wall is densely packed with holds of all shapes and sizes; a Tension Board has an adjustable incline and uses sleek wooden holds set in distinct patterns designed to maintain body tension and improve footwork; and the Moon Board is fixed at a 40-degree incline and is made up smaller, oddly shaped holds focused on improving finger strength and power. Both the Moon Board and Tension Board also feature LED-lit holds that offer an endless variety of problems accessed through free apps. Additionally, the Tension Board allows users to flip, or mirror, routes for symmetrical workouts. A few of the drills Hodges utilizes with her students include…
Timed movement: Set a timer for two, three or four minutes with the goal of continuous movement around the Spray Wall for that entire time. Rest for the same amount of time you worked and then repeat the set twice. Mix it up by finding holds where you can comfortably rest for 30 seconds. “Playing around with doing things like dropping a knee or opening up your hips to find a rest position, especially on holds that aren’t so good, will give you awareness of how to use your body to find rests on those long routes outside,” Hodges says.
Four by fours: Climb four routes or problems without resting in between. When all four are completed, rest for the same amount of time you spent climbing the four routes. Instead of running around the gym to find four problems in the same grade, stay at the Tension Board where you can do a problem, mirror it, do it again and then complete the same process with a second problem. “Doing problems back-to-back like that will help give you the power, endurance and confidence to do those hard, tension-heavy moves, typical of outdoor bouldering and climbing, while you’re pumped or fatigued,” Hodges says.
Project mimicking: Because the Spray Wall is packed with so many different types of holds, you’ll likely be able to find, or closely mimic, a move on an outdoor climb you were working on last season. “For example, maybe the outside move you’re working on is a hard gaston off of a crimp with a bad foothold,” Hodges says. “Because there’s so many holds and different options on the Spray Wall, you can replicate moves and continue to get better at a specific outside climb before the season starts.”