Kishkumen wrote:...the larger problem.
This.
I don't believe Scott is a liar.
Kishkumen wrote:...the larger problem.
My advice about faith, which I give to everyone, would be to make your choice and move on. Maybe that would allow for some healing.
3sheets2thewind wrote:Notice the Scott "the liar" Gordon, does not provide one bit of evidence that Twede was hoping to lead people out of the Church.
By Scott "the liar" Gordon standards I am an apostate and so is one of the clerks in my ward. We have talked about corporate America making Home Teaching more about numbers, we talked about Joseph Smother polygamy and him shooting three people, and we talked about people can not ask questions in Church or ask other members with some Gawddammed asshole like Gordon coming along with his witch hunt.
Gordon is a documented speaker of falsehood and has no credibility.
RayAgostini wrote:
Can you point to any section on Mormon Think that tries to balance this:
Personal Stories & LDS Heretics
With faith-promoting stories? As one example, take the return of Don Bradley.
Where on Mormon Think can I find something like this?
quaker wrote:It seems like many of you are in denial about how connected everyone is through the internet. You run calling Gordon a snitch and a hundred other things for 'ratting' out Twede while simultaneously mocking the most obscure LDS or Utah related blogs, videos, or comments from all around the internet. Good luck hunting out all the 'snitches'. You might as well get the membership list from Salt Lake City and go round them all up. You could literally find thousands of plausible pathways to connect Twede's blog to his Stake President. And this is only one small incident of snitching. Maybe you could make a business out of hunting LDS snitches that dare mention apostate activities to authorities. You could do paid work sniffing for the Obama campaign like Helen Radkey sniffs around for Jewish sounding names.
MormonThink is an anti-Mormon website that claims to be balanced.
The fact that he portrays himself as a sort of sexual icon seeking sex would probably be reason enough for any Florida church member to figure out what ward he attended that Sunday.