honorentheos wrote:Ok. I don't have access to their motives, but I am going with my BS detector in both cases. We'll just have to disagree on this one.
When I see this kind of reaction to LDS activists, I can't help but wonder whether a kind of double standard is at work. People complain about the Brethren, but when push comes to shove, they tend to get a benefit of the doubt that activists do not. Activists need to have the purest of motives or the most unexceptionable faith in order to be acceptable, while in the case of the Brethren the question is either not raised or not considered all that important. Put a person in a position of power, and folks assume they have the right to call the shots. The little guy/gal has no right to question that.
Surprisingly, many ex-Mormons feel the same way. They are happy to leave the LDS Church, but they don't understand why a non-TBM might want to stay and raise a ruckus. At some level, people just find it rude, I think.
I have a dear friend, who will flip out if you push too far beyond his comfort zone. Then he'll accuse you of being irrational for having done so. All it takes is saying something that he simply can't accept. As soon as he blows up, the gig is up, whether he realizes it or not. It's not pleasant. But, we all have our flaws.
Maybe it's my fault for being impolite or provocative. Shouldn't I know these taboos and just keep quiet? What on earth possesses me to stir the hornet's nest? Sometimes I start to fool myself into thinking there is enough trust there and freedom of thought that I honestly forget that there actually isn't quite enough of either. When you get down to it, though, I should not feel ashamed because he can't restrain his anger in an exchange of ideas.
I am not thinking of you here, honor. But I think this story relates to the current discussion. There are lots of unspoken boundaries that people are very uncomfortable moving beyond--both faithful and ex-faithful. Those who step beyond those boundaries take a lot of crap from everyone. I can't help but think that it isn't so much that they are bad people, narcissists, or doing something inherently wrong. They do make people uncomfortable though, and that discomfort, even the subtle or sublimated varieties, sends people running for their comfort zones. Those comfort zones can be as simple as a familiar map of the unspoken order of things.