Buffalo wrote:
Anyone who has interacted with Zeez even a little knows that's not true.
I only know him from this board. His mind is now closed toward the LDS church. And of course that is his decision and that is fine with me.
Buffalo wrote:
Anyone who has interacted with Zeez even a little knows that's not true.
why me wrote:Buffalo wrote:
Anyone who has interacted with Zeez even a little knows that's not true.
I only know him from this board. His mind is now closed toward the LDS church. And of course that is his decision and that is fine with me.
why me wrote:Buffalo wrote:
Anyone who has interacted with Zeez even a little knows that's not true.
I only know him from this board. His mind is now closed toward the LDS church. And of course that is his decision and that is fine with me.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Doctor Scratch wrote:
A couple of thoughts here, Zeez. For one thing, while the bit about the "hit squad" is wrong, the general eeriness of what happened with Quinn is dead-on. Now, I'm just going off memory here, but as I recall, what happened was that Quinn was basically in hiding from the Church. He'd heard through the grapevine that the Powers that Be were gunning for him, and so he high-tailed it off to New Orleans as a kind of self-imposed exile.
Meanwhile, the Church was trying to track him down. They went looking for him at his mother's house, but his mom had been given strict instructions not to tell anyone where Quinn was. Then, If I recall correctly, they tried to get Quinn's attorney to tell them where he was, but the lawyer didn't budge. Apparently, they wanted to locate his actual, physical address, since they need that--per the bizarre, bureaucratic rules--in order to begin Church disciplinary action. Later, he visited his ex-wife and kids, and it turned out that there was some mail there for him, including an application for some kind of zero APR credit card, and so he went ahead and filled this out.
Later, when he was back in New Orleans, he got a phone call from the credit card company, and they wanted his address. The thing is: he had a P.O. Box, which was the address he gave out when he filled out the credit card application, but this person who called him was asking for his actual, physical street address. Quinn said that he said something to the effect of, "Why do you need my physical address when you have my P.O. box?" and the person on the phone began sort of stammering and backtracking, etc. When he got off the phone, he went digging a bit and made some phone calls and was able to determine that the credit card and phone call had originated out of Salt Lake City.
So: not quite "death squads," but it does seem as if the Church was doing some remarkably strange and creepy surveillance-type things in an effort to track him down.
And all that said, it's not totally misguided to have lingering fears about LDS "death squads" or Danites. These things seemed to have been a historical reality clear up through the end of the 19th century, and perhaps beyond. So there is a historical basis for your (and others') concerns. There is a whole spectrum of ways that the Church can put the hurt on somebody, though, and nowadays "death" seems to be off the table.
zeezrom wrote:Hahaha Why Me. Actually, I was trying to protect Quinn from this apologist friend who claims he was/is crazy.
why me wrote:zeezrom wrote:Hahaha Why Me. Actually, I was trying to protect Quinn from this apologist friend who claims he was/is crazy.
Quinn has been silent for quite a while. And unfortunately does not post on the internet. However, I am sure that he finds it all amusing just how critics rally around him year after year. I would rather here it all from the horse's mouth than from the cheerleader squad.
Oh come on zee, it seems that you and your wife are fishing for these kind of rumors. I am sure that you are just a tad disappointed that it isn't true. I am sure that your friend is misinformed about most things LDS. She seems to be fishing in antimormon waters too.
Simon Belmont wrote:Doctor Scratch wrote:
A couple of thoughts here, Zeez. For one thing, while the bit about the "hit squad" is wrong, the general eeriness of what happened with Quinn is dead-on. Now, I'm just going off memory here, but as I recall, what happened was that Quinn was basically in hiding from the Church. He'd heard through the grapevine that the Powers that Be were gunning for him, and so he high-tailed it off to New Orleans as a kind of self-imposed exile.
Meanwhile, the Church was trying to track him down. They went looking for him at his mother's house, but his mom had been given strict instructions not to tell anyone where Quinn was. Then, If I recall correctly, they tried to get Quinn's attorney to tell them where he was, but the lawyer didn't budge. Apparently, they wanted to locate his actual, physical address, since they need that--per the bizarre, bureaucratic rules--in order to begin Church disciplinary action. Later, he visited his ex-wife and kids, and it turned out that there was some mail there for him, including an application for some kind of zero APR credit card, and so he went ahead and filled this out.
Later, when he was back in New Orleans, he got a phone call from the credit card company, and they wanted his address. The thing is: he had a P.O. Box, which was the address he gave out when he filled out the credit card application, but this person who called him was asking for his actual, physical street address. Quinn said that he said something to the effect of, "Why do you need my physical address when you have my P.O. box?" and the person on the phone began sort of stammering and backtracking, etc. When he got off the phone, he went digging a bit and made some phone calls and was able to determine that the credit card and phone call had originated out of Salt Lake City.
So: not quite "death squads," but it does seem as if the Church was doing some remarkably strange and creepy surveillance-type things in an effort to track him down.
And all that said, it's not totally misguided to have lingering fears about LDS "death squads" or Danites. These things seemed to have been a historical reality clear up through the end of the 19th century, and perhaps beyond. So there is a historical basis for your (and others') concerns. There is a whole spectrum of ways that the Church can put the hurt on somebody, though, and nowadays "death" seems to be off the table.
You're obviously our resident expert on Quinn. How do you know so much about him, might I ask? Was it just a matter of paying attention to the news, etc. while all this was going down?