That's a valuable observation. I think it helps illuminate the narrative strategy MM showed behind their efforts, too. The disenfranchised among those who have found leaving easy only to not find the next step on a new journey are an audience uniquely modern. This is the first generation finding leaving to be easy.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 7:21 pmI think the only bit I’d add to your observation is the subreddit exists to affirm people, most like in the zeitgeist of the day of ‘extreme acceptance’, probably as a result of age and being raised in a narrow moral paradigm. One of the interesting things about the subreddit is if you fall outside of its implicit morality or ‘exmo orthopraxy’, you’ll be downvoted with the gusto of a Torquemadian inquisition. No debate allowed.honorentheos wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 6:59 pmPerhaps the risk in the current age of Exmormon Reddit is the flippant ease of rejection Mormon beliefs have achieved online. Anti-establishment "BULLS EYE!" like the exposed flaws of the leadership leave a false impression that one is walking away from one community to join another. But that's not accurate. All the Exmormon subreddit community shares for an identity is attacks in Mormonism. It not even a waypoint let alone a destination yet if one makes such the substance of post-Mormonism one is losing a bigger argument with human nature and basic human needs.
- Doc
I'm reminded of the movie The Devil's Playground about Amish youth experiencing Rummspringa. The Amish believe that baptism should be a choice and their equivalent of the age of accountability is 16. Many youth, on turning 16, don't choose baptism but instead make a go outside of their community. Because the Amish also don't continue their education past 8th grade, most of these kids hold full-time jobs as well. Being 16 and making what seems like a lot of money ends up fueling a period of wild living and extreme freedom. But within a few years most of the youth inevitably end up either baptized and living Amish or in pretty dark places. Only one young lady in the film moved on to earn a high school degree and go to college and that was with the help of a Christian group where she found new community.
The alternative to Mormon belief is a paradigm shift in how one engages the world, with knowledge, with communities of ones choice or even making. The need isn't to provide an alternative communtiy, but an understanding that the tools and agency that comes with this shift in thinking is a new world.
It also sounds like too many in the Exmormon subreddit community only know how to emulate their former Mormon organization.