charity wrote:I like the way you change your story. I think you probably know that a 17 year old is quite different than an 18 year old in this culture. 17 means while in high school, or dropped out. 18 means graduated from high school. 19 for women means graduated from high school, living away from home, going to school, working. And the national averge of 22 is hardly a child.
You just don't know when to stop, do you charity? You have been caught making a number of stupid statements on this thread. You have never adequately defended one of your misrepresentations. You have misattributed statements to me, and now you have the nerve to come back here and quibble because I didn't use the number 17 in my last post? Like this is some kind of "Aha! Gotcha" moment? You know, I used to get pretty irked with Kevin for calling you an idiot, and, although I don't particularly like that tack, I am beginning to understand why he has lost his patience with you. Mine is growing thin too.
You have been caught being sloppy, charity, and misunderstanding or misrepresenting the meaning of statistics. That's all this is. Let go of it.
charity wrote:And of course, you forgot to mention that 21 year old males in LDS culture are a lot different than 21 year old males in the culture at large. A returned misisonary has been out "in the world." Many of them in foreign countries. Away from home in a sense that most other males don't experience. Only letters from family in 2 years. No running home to mom when the McD job ran out. The missionary has to learn how to survive with a roomate that he can't just chug down the hall to get away from. And 2 years of serving other people, putting away his own selfish interests. That is pretty maturing. And of course, the average age of marriage is 3 years after getting back.
This, of course, is debatable. I would say that in some ways, and not just negative ways, it is the LDS missionary who is less mature.
charity wrote:Hardly the 17 year olds in the chapel marriage you suggested.
Strawman, strawman, strawman. Charity, people really aren't so stupid as you apparently take them to be. They aren't sitting back and saying, "nice one, charity, you really showed him!" Or, "that Trevor thought he could say that all of our young LDS marrieds are seventeen years old! Good on you for stopping this travesty, charity!" All you have done here is misrepresent my position by excluding the fact that I mentioned that there were some teenagers, even as young as 17, who were getting married in LDS chapels by bishops. I would say that given the statistics, this is a fair assumption. If you say otherwise, you are being unreasonably stubborn.
What is so bad, anyway, about two kids getting married? You act as though this were the end of the world, and so now you have to pretend as though it is not happening. I wouldn't call it ideal, but maybe for some people it is better than single motherhood, abortion, or a young man who loves a girl, conceives with her, and leaves in fear. People need to make their own choices, and sometimes marrying young is not the worst decision to make.
Finally, just because I chime in on a thread started by someone you dislike, and then point out what I see as your mistake, does not mean I am invested in everything the other person contended. You may like to imagine your dramatic role as the lone wolf fighting a united front, but that is not necessarily the case. I don't have to agree with Scratch 100% to disagree with your use of evidence. When I was a TBM, I would have taken you to task for misusing information. I should think you would like to know when your arguments are flawed. Instead you plow on as though you have me on the run. What a hoot!