Gadianton wrote: So let me be even more clear, if you think that Gary's "joke" is funny, and holds sort of a polemical truism regarding "anti-Mormons", then clearly your definition of "anti-Mormon" is sneaky and dishonest. But, I haven't accused you of that, since you haven't really made your position clear on "Novak's rule" other than by saying you don't take it literally given i'ts a joke, which I never would have thought you did and I would have never looked for such a useless clarification from anyone.
I think Gary's joke is funny, and, based on my experience, I think there's an element of truth (just a small one) to it. You, of course, won't agree that there's any truth to it.
But my definition of
anti-Mormon is neither sneaky nor dishonest. I intend it with entire seriousness and quite openly.
I should clarify, too, that, as I recall, Gary's joke wasn't so much intended to refer to "anti-Mormons" as an entire class as to former Mormons
turned anti-Mormons. That won't play well here, I realize, and I don't think it applies, or that Gary thinks it applies, to everybody -- not even to every member of the class of Mormons become anti-Mormons.
I wonder if Democrats ever tell jokes about Republicans, or conservatives about liberals, or laborers about office bureaucrats, or farmers about professors, or Marines about sailors, or non-Mormons about Mormons, or women about men, or husbands about mothers-in-law, or tennis players about football players, or non-lawyers about lawyers, or alienated ex-believers about "TBMs."
I suspect that they do. I'm pretty sure that I've heard such jokes. And laughed at them. And, while stereotypes are potentially dangerous,
faux-stereotyping jokes are not intrinsically evil, so long as they're not taken all that seriously. Not, at least, outside of Scratchworld.