mentalgymnast wrote:Sure. I'm sure boundary maintenance is playing a part in this decision to tighten things up. But to think that they didn't think about the possible implications? That puts them back into "stupid" mode. And I am not convinced that they are stupid.
How much do you know about groupthink? It's a well-studied, well-understood process that predictably causes a collection of intelligent individuals to become a stupid group.
Imagine if
you were in the Joseph Smith Memorial building in the finest room, sitting around a huge, lavish boardroom table with 14 apostles, including the Prophet. Everyone is really busy, and there are 20 items on the agenda in a 90-minute meeting. An issue is raised, and a senior apostle says he has an idea--he says, "Just as we have to be clear on our boundaries regarding polygamy, we have to be clear about our boundaries regarding same-sex marriage. It's exactly the same issue. We already have a policy that is proven to maintain the boundary with polygamists, so it makes total sense to implement the same policy with gays."
You have some reservations about the idea, but nobody else speaks up. Everybody seems to want to defer to the senior apostle's judgment and move on. If
you were in that room and saw 14 prophets and apostles that all seemed to be in agreement on this and all wanted to move on to the next item on the agenda, would
you stick your neck out and tell them you thought they were all wrong? Or would you keep your mouth shut and defer to their collective judgment?