Doctor Scratch wrote:Which, of course, raises the question: if Mormonism doesn't resemble these groups, then why does it produce such angry apostates?
It doesn't resemble the small anti-social groups discussed by Bromley, but it certainly is viewed as subversive by apostates, and it's the anti-cult movement that galvanizes the hostile apostates, not necessarily the relationship of the group to Bromley's particular case studies.
Doctor Scratch wrote:And what "anti-cult" socialization are these people getting? RfM?
That or any other group actively antagonizing Latter-day Saints (CARM, Walter Martin, Ed Decker, James White, etc.).
Doctor Scratch wrote:The Lewis piece is interesting, though the social science seems pretty sloppy, in my opinion. His sample size isn't all that large;
It would have been nice to have a larger sample, but his conclusions are consistent with more recent work.
Doctor Scratch wrote:he's dismissive of exit counseling (which is viewed as legitimate in some disciplines--e.g., social work);
In the context of anti-cult and counter-cult movements, I don't know of any scholars who view deprogramming and exit counseling as legitimate.
Doctor Scratch wrote:he drew his sample set directly from an "anti-cult" organization.
He says he had two pools of participants, one drawn from the NRMs themselves and one drawn from lists provided by anti-cult groups. He points out the consistency of their attitudes is supported by the similar breakdown of their experiences.
Doctor Scratch wrote:I think his research would have been a lot more persuasive and legitimate if he'd gone looking for pissed-off ex-religionists some place else. Of course there is going to be a correlation between hostility and association with anti-cult groups if the only place you're looking for hostile ex-members is...anti-cult groups.
But it wasn't the only place he went looking, and he accounted for that potential bias.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Introvigne alludes to the Bromley piece I had in mind. It's called The Politics of Religious Apostasy. (Google it and you can read the portion online.)
Where he talks about subversive groups as opposed to the two other types. I've read the book.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Basically, he suggests that exit narratives depend upon the "social location of the organization," and that less "legitimate" organizations tend to produce more hostile leave-takers.
"Legitimate" in the eyes of the apostates.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Based on his description of the different levels of legitimacy, I think that Mormonism would fit in the middle category, and in fact Bromley, on pg. 6, seems to be saying pretty much exactly that.
You appear to be confusing an objective judgment of legitimacy by the scholar with a description of the views of the groups' opponents and apostates. Also, he was not fitting Mormonism into his own model on p. 6, but describing Mauss' own framework. Mormonism isn't described as occupying any single particular spot so much as occupying different spots for different people over time.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Apologists tend to avoid acknowledging what ought to be pretty obvious, which is that the organizations bear some of the responsibility for the leave-takers' hostility.
Certainly organizations play an active role to some degree, and some groups shoulder more responsibility than others, particularly the violent ones, but you've not shown that this research is pointing in that direction.
Doctor Scratch wrote:You can't just attribute this entirely to the leave-takers, or to "anti-cult" groups. Sometimes the NRMs or "organizations" have real problems, and as Bromely appears to be saying, this can genuinely contribute to the anger and hostility.
[/quote]
I agree that organizations have problems, and Mormonism is not entirely passive in ex-members' exit narrative, but I don't see Bromley saying that in this particular publication. In fact, he states that the focus of the book is "
the role of apostates in the controversy surrounding those contemporary new religious movements that are deemed 'subversive'" (5, emphasis mine). Can you provide a page number or a quote?