Runtu wrote:I rather think you do. In fact, I suspect you're quite happy to do your part. :)
Maybe Will is a closet unbeliever who doesn't want to alienate his family by openly opposing the church, and so does his damage in other, more subtle ways.
Runtu wrote:I rather think you do. In fact, I suspect you're quite happy to do your part. :)
CaliforniaKid wrote:Maybe Will is a closet unbeliever who doesn't want to alienate his family by openly opposing the church, and so does his damage in other, more subtle ways.
Kishkumen wrote:why me wrote:I think that this closes the case against Bíll. He said on the MAD board.
I have no idea what you are talking about. If anything, I feel vindicated for thinking the man stepped out of bounds.
CaliforniaKid wrote:Runtu wrote:I rather think you do. In fact, I suspect you're quite happy to do your part. :)
Maybe Will is a closet unbeliever who doesn't want to alienate his family by openly opposing the church, and so does his damage in other, more subtle ways.
John Larsen wrote:why me wrote:I think that this closes the case against Bíll. He said on the MAD board.
You can no more expect a Mormon to enjoy going to a conference with widespread anti-Mormonism than you can expect a Jew to enjoy going to a conference with widespread anti-Semitism.
I think now we can see the reasons for his comparison. In this light it isn't so bad.
But the comparison still stinks. The world is full of non-practicing Jews, Jewish atheists, and reformed Jews. The Jewish community, except for a few Hasidic crazies, does not consider these people anti-Semitic. Even the Hasids probably still wouldn't label them as anti-Semitic. The problem is that Mormons such as Bill, would label the Mormon equivalent of of these types as anti-Mormon. Sunstone is full of people who attend Church and just have creative takes on certain aspects. The bizarreness of this who story is the paranoia that seeks to marginalize even moderately liberal wings of Mormonism and group them in as racists.
William Schryver wrote:Yeah, that sounds like a plausible theory. Kind of like simultaneous dictation.
Or ... maybe it just could be that I understand things about believing Mormons that no one here ever grasped, either before or since they became disbelievers.
ce you, Chris, have adopted the world view of the exmormon when approaching these questions, you've become indistinguishable from them. You may as well have become a Mormon way back when. Who knows, you might even have been able to get that girl you wanted so badly.
t for a while.
Until you quit in order to feel better about all those heinous sins you love to commit under cover of the night.
Runtu wrote:CaliforniaKid wrote:Maybe Will is a closet unbeliever who doesn't want to alienate his family by openly opposing the church, and so does his damage in other, more subtle ways.
That's a charitable way of looking at it, CK. It's really odd, isn't it, that people like you and me, who really don't mean to do damage to the church, are taken to task by people whose words and actions really bring damage to the church and its reputation.
William Schryver wrote:Thus saith thou.
What I find really odd is that the only people who wring their hands and charge me (and others, like Bill Hamblin, for example) with damaging the church and/or its reputation are ... disbelievers. Whereas the overwhelming majority of the faithful who are aware of what I do and how I do it don't seem to be burdened by any such compunction.
Why do you suppose that is?
why me wrote:
He did go overboard. But something triggered his outburst.
That would require to show some insight into human nature.
I think you're on safer ground talking about mutual masturbation, as that's about as deep an insight as you're capable of.
Is that why you came back to the church?
That explains a lot, William.
Are you one of those members who vicariously gets a thrill by imagining the dark acts of others?
Does it qualify as a circle when it's just you?