What would be a good counter other than directly attacking the false narrative Kwaku & Co. raised? In debates like these, sometimes a good tactic is to calmly point out the hysteria and how there is no proof for it.honorentheos wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 5:10 pmTactically, the debate was a wash.
It's interesting to me that MM appear to have a narrative strategy that they successfully followed.
The bullet proof vests are part of this narrative strategy that, while gimmicky and even outrageous, land for those who were the intended audience of said narrative strategy.
The need is to articulate the narrative so one understands when one is playing into it and can, if appropriate, counter it.
That being: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is a welcoming shelter in the rising storm brought on by the turmoil of our times and the nihilistic influence of secular atheism and extreme individualism. Those who would use the complicated history of the church to separate you from the safety and joy found in the church do not have your interests at heart but are instead bitterly attacking the church out of negative motivations and not out of concern for the people involved. They are doing this, not because they care, but because they hate. This hate is manifest in virtual attacks against the church and literal attacks against church property and it's members. The storm is increasing and those who follow the Pied Piper song of the critics will find themselves abandoned among hate-filled and hurting nihilistic individuals with no community bonds to share besides when they flock together to shower spite and hate at the church.
It's goal isn't to win converts though it could appeal to some in the conservative community in western democracies who view the progress of pluralism as an assault on the order they feel the past represents. It's main goal is to discourage those who are within the fold already, warning them the calls they hear are really those of wolves who will rend and tear them, leaving them to bleed out in misery if you are deceived into trusting them.
ETA: It was RFMs failure to recognize this and counter the strategy rather than play into it that was most disappointing to me. Getting caught up in reacting tactically is how one loses a game after capturing a queen.
1. The rising storm is like Fox's war on christmas like so many other media frenzies. It just isn't happening and people wouldn't know it was happening unless idiots like Kwaku and his masters told them. It's manufactured hysteria.
2. Calmly and forcefully say that the motivation is to point out the truth. Venturing into the unknown is better than living with an abusive parent that constantly hides realty from you in order to stunt growth. Also, the Mormon guilt is washed away by leaving. Sure, there is a transition and it shouldn't be an excuse to live like rock stars, partying the night away, trying every drug, etc., but it is certainly better than being shackled to an authoritarian church.