Eric wrote:Jackson goes on to say that the Nibley family's "candid reaction to [the accusation] should cause reasonable readers to have serious doubts about its veracity."
I, for one, find nothing compelling in the letter signed by some of Beck's brothers and sisters. Obviously, sexual abuse is not typically part of family home evening and does not require the consent of the rest of the family. I've struggled to find an account of a sexual abuse victim that was victimized while other family members watched. I'm sure abuse happens while other siblings stand-by (sadly), but it is by no means a measure for verifying a sexual abuse accusation. I can just imagine an investigator saying, "Well, little girl, since your sister says it never happened..." Actually, I can't imagine that at all. Furthermore, my personal experiences have shown me just how easy (and "righteous") it is for a family to turn on a critic of the LDS cult. I wouldn't expect any other response from the Nibley family, to be honest.
So you agree that no other response from the Nibley family would have been honest.
How refreshing.
It's not merely a case, as you would like to pretend, of a family in denial. The Nibleys had
eight children in a
three bedroom house. How does that work? Well, you have all the girls in one room, all the boys in another, and the parents in the third (usually largest) room. Martha and her sister slept on top and bottom bunks. Martha's dream/recovered memory/thingy has her father coming into her room in the middle of the night with an Egyptian mask on to molest her. Where was her sister at the time? Asleep on the other bunk.
If it happened, the sister could not have failed to have known.And indeed, Martha accuses her mother of knowing and turning a blind eye. Evidently you support her claim that the entire family were in on a conspiracy to get poor little Martha.
Eric wrote:Again, Jackson reaffirms whom he thinks the book is written for:
"Again, this book was written for those who like stories about people victimized by powerful men and powerful institutions."
The second reason to disbelieve that the FARMS reviewer gives is even more trivial and, ironically, hard to believe.
Jackson says that in Leaving the Saints:
"The misrepresentations about the church are too numerous even to mention."
He gives his readers a taste, though, with the following list of quotes from Beck:
"Lineage matters in Mormonism. A lot. . . . To this day the social structure of the Latter-day Saint community is more aristocracy than democracy. Descendants of the early pioneers enjoy a subtly but distinctly higher status than new converts"
This is at least arguably true, especially if you are familiar with Mormon Hierarchies.
No. It is not.
Eric wrote:"The one occupation recommended for Mormon females: breeding well in captivity"
I don't know why Jackson would include this quote. It may not be phrased as flatteringly as he would like, but it is by no means an egregious misrepresentation.
Yes. It is.
Eric wrote:"The more chicks per man-God, the better"
"The celestial kingdom has a central zone called the kingdom of the firstborn, reserved for Mormons who live the 'true and eternal principle of plural marriage' (polygamy)"
"A good Mormon girl doesn't ever" engage in "direct communication"
"Most Mormons see financial wealth as a sign of God's favor"
Who can argue that?
Only someone who knows any actual Mormons.
Eric wrote:"Mormons are discouraged from reading any materials about the Church that are not produced through official channels"
Again, who can argue that?
Again, only someone who knows any actual Mormons.
Eric wrote:This quote gives me chills to read (especially considering the FARMS Review editor's personal attempt to cause havoc in my own life):
"I suspected that even though the Mormon powers that be might not actually threaten my life, they would probably try to ruin it. Yes, these suspicions were outlandish. Yes, they were paranoid. And yes, they were completely accurate"
So are you saying that your allegations are just as bogus as Beck's?
Or are you supporting her very strong insinuation that "Danites" are busily murdering people in Utah?
Eric wrote:Jackson continues:
Through the voices of unnamed BYU professors, Beck tells us that the "Strengthening the Membership Committee" is "a squad of investigators who work for the Church. Very hush-hush. A lot of ex-CIA guys" (p. 189).
While I won't presume to know the background or even the members of the SCMC, the rest of her assessment - based on my experiences - is accurate.
No. It is not.
It's a clipping service.
Eric wrote:He goes on to say:
Beck writes concerning BYU faculty members' fears of their scholarship being repressed: "I suddenly remembered where I'd seen people act this way: in the People's Republic of China, where I'd gone to do research in 1984" (pp. 80—81). BYU professors live in fear of being "called in" by church leaders.
"The General Authorities were destroying the careers of BYU's best young professors, firing them for 'shoddy scholarship' when, in our view, their work was the only publishable material coming out of the university"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/September_Six
And you think that event supports her paranoia, do you?
Regards,
Pahoran