All exmos are divorced adultering alcoholics, which includes you.
Hysterical.
I dont really think that. Just playing along with saying untrue things about groups of people if there is an example of it being true.
All exmos are divorced adultering alcoholics, which includes you.
Thanks wtfluff. I know there are those here who still attend to support family, but I see them as not supporting their families - but instead putting their family in harms way. Sorry, but to me its like standing by smiling not stopping family from smoking, not stopping them from drinking poisoned kool-aid -smiling, being nice and kind, not pulling away the chains...wtfluff wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2024 7:57 pmHateful or not.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2024 3:32 pm I dont think calling all saints hateful is kind nor accurate.
Kind or not.
Like angel said: Those who "stay" are in some way complicit in supporting a hateful organization.
Not only bigoted and hateful, they spend millions protecting predators.
And... I don't see anywhere in this post where the penguin typed "all saints." You seem to be putting words into the flightless bird's beak.
Backing up a bit here, the jolly penguin didn’t say “some”saints. I would hate to put words in his mouth and understate who he is accusing of hatred.Angel wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 6:09 amThanks wtfluff. I know there are those here who still attend to support family, but I see them as not supporting their families - but instead putting their family in harms way. Sorry, but to me its like standing by smiling not stopping family from smoking, not stopping them from drinking poisoned kool-aid -smiling, being nice and kind, not pulling away the chains...wtfluff wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2024 7:57 pmHateful or not.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sat Jan 13, 2024 3:32 pm I dont think calling all saints hateful is kind nor accurate.
Kind or not.
Like angel said: Those who "stay" are in some way complicit in supporting a hateful organization.
Not only bigoted and hateful, they spend millions protecting predators.
And... I don't see anywhere in this post where the penguin typed "all saints." You seem to be putting words into the flightless bird's beak.
Its called "institutional complicity". A culture with abuse and bias, it includes collective responsibility - it takes the whole tribe driving lgbtq kids to kill themselves. For abuse- the protection afforded by clergy-penitent privilege can perpetuats abuse.
Just smile, wear a fancy suit, look good - don't say anything, don't help. Look sad, shake head, perpetuate the idea you don't believe them, that you think they are the problem (not organization, not leader), protected the church, downplay the evil. It takes the whole smiling congregation.
When the entire congregation sustains and supports biased pedophile leaders, there's a shared responsibility. Raised their hands and sustained him to bishopric in front of kids he abused. Everyone telling kids he is called of God, that they felt spirit, telling abused kids how they 'know' their dad is called of god.... The belief in and protection of these leaders takes precedence over safeguarding the well-being of children. Its known as "victim-nlaming". The leaders and the organization are prioritized over the protection of vulnerable individuals within the community.
It takes the whole tribe.
Some stay in the tribe. Raise their hands to sustain leaders. smile sadly at the kids, pat them on the back... treat kids like they are the insane ones, treat those who leave like they are the weak ones...
Some don't stay. Some pull the chains off their family.
I love America - love the ability to vote, to attend protests and rallies, to participate in checks and balances, to uphold the idea of a nation "by the people, for the people" - not "by the pope, or by the prophet for the prophet".Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:01 am
Backing up a bit here, the jolly penguin didn’t say “some”saints. I would hate to put words in his mouth and understate who he is accusing of hatred.
If you live in America, and America starts a war, are you a complicit killer? Is the blood of dead soldiers on Dick Cheney’s hands or yours? If America protected every predator on Epstein Island and you remain a voting citizen in America - are you the pedophile or just a voting American?
Sometimes a member of a church is just a member of a church and not complicit in the acts of others. And all times when we judge mass groups of people based on the color of their skin they were born with or the shape of their religion they were born with- that’s bigotry.
There is something to this. I love my husband who is currently at church. But occasionally I get angry that he can remain in a church and just plain not WANT to understand that his tithing dollars go to bad mouthing sexual abuse victims like the church did in the Joseph Bishop case. I try to talk to him about how corrupt this is, how it hurts me, when the church spends money to make a sexual abuse victim look crazy and supports a $##@-$##+&++$ in court. They really do not give a damn that this guy used his church calling to abuse more than one missionary. Nope, they totally support the criminal, and make his victims look crazy because of the emotional damage their beloved criminal did. They knew about the abuse and did not pull him out of the position. You cannot write this off as one bad apple making a mistake or even one bad apple making a mistake and another bad apple supporting the asshat. Nope, there are a whole bunch of them. And my husband just can’t see how the way they treated me is pretty much how they treated Bishop’s victims. My husband doesn’t want to know. He doesn’t want me to talk about it. He WANTS to not see it so he can keep supporting the church.Angel wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 11:10 amI love America - love the ability to vote, to attend protests and rallies, to participate in checks and balances, to uphold the idea of a nation "by the people, for the people" - not "by the pope, or by the prophet for the prophet".Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:01 am
Backing up a bit here, the jolly penguin didn’t say “some”saints. I would hate to put words in his mouth and understate who he is accusing of hatred.
If you live in America, and America starts a war, are you a complicit killer? Is the blood of dead soldiers on Dick Cheney’s hands or yours? If America protected every predator on Epstein Island and you remain a voting citizen in America - are you the pedophile or just a voting American?
Sometimes a member of a church is just a member of a church and not complicit in the acts of others. And all times when we judge mass groups of people based on the color of their skin they were born with or the shape of their religion they were born with- that’s bigotry.
As a citizen I am not complicit - I am able to speak up, I am able to vote, and yes - I did walk away from a government job I felt was unethical involving work for the DOD.
The church is different than America. Church is not "by the people for the people". Church is "by the prophet, for the pro$$it".
a member of a church is NOT just a member of a church. They volunteer, they stay there, they raise their hands and support leaders, they testify - an organized mob. they put the group in group think.
Please give an example where congregations actually vote and control who is given leadership positions (as is done in America). Everyone sustains leaders. You don't go to the temple if you don't sustain leaders in the church. You must raise your hand and testify that god called the bishop/youth leader/RS president/pedophile - and then you have to follow their counsel, protect them, think the best of them - would never testify against them in court. Members are actively engaged in all of it, responsible for what goes down.
- Have you ever voted against giving someone a calling?
Name a court case where the LDS church protected a child against one of their pedophiles. There are none.
Apples and oranges. You have made a false analogy. Religious affiliation isn't an ethnic group - after you turn 18, you have a choice in what church to go to. Evaluating a group of individuals based on their skin color differs significantly from assessing a group based on their voluntary religious affiliations. When it comes to politics and religion, these are choices individuals make, and it is reasonable to form judgments based on these voluntary decisions.
Members of religious groups, who voluntarily stay in those groups, and voluntarily follow the leaders in those groups, are accountable for the actions of their group.
Members of countries are accountable for voting, for holding leaders accountable, for organizing protests and changing their country when needed. If I voted, and spoke up, and worked to correct/convict/change policies - I can wash my hands of it.
I found the church does not allow any changes to come from within, so I walked away, removed my record, pulled my family out, and encourage others to do the same.
The current Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, is a member of that Christian Nationalist movement.
Thanks. I acknowledge your point as I have acknowledged Angel’s. I am not refuting these points or positions. I believe you. I hear you.alas wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 1:19 pmThere is something to this. I love my husband who is currently at church. But occasionally I get angry that he can remain in a church and just plain not WANT to understand that his tithing dollars go to bad mouthing sexual abuse victims like the church did in the Joseph Bishop case. I try to talk to him about how corrupt this is, how it hurts me, when the church spends money to make a sexual abuse victim look crazy and supports a $##@-$##+&++$ in court. They really do not give a damn that this guy used his church calling to abuse more than one missionary. Nope, they totally support the criminal, and make his victims look crazy because of the emotional damage their beloved criminal did. They knew about the abuse and did not pull him out of the position. You cannot write this off as one bad apple making a mistake or even one bad apple making a mistake and another bad apple supporting the asshat. Nope, there are a whole bunch of them. And my husband just can’t see how the way they treated me is pretty much how they treated Bishop’s victims. My husband doesn’t want to know. He doesn’t want me to talk about it. He WANTS to not see it so he can keep supporting the church.Angel wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 11:10 amI love America - love the ability to vote, to attend protests and rallies, to participate in checks and balances, to uphold the idea of a nation "by the people, for the people" - not "by the pope, or by the prophet for the prophet".Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:01 am
Backing up a bit here, the jolly penguin didn’t say “some”saints. I would hate to put words in his mouth and understate who he is accusing of hatred.
If you live in America, and America starts a war, are you a complicit killer? Is the blood of dead soldiers on Dick Cheney’s hands or yours? If America protected every predator on Epstein Island and you remain a voting citizen in America - are you the pedophile or just a voting American?
Sometimes a member of a church is just a member of a church and not complicit in the acts of others. And all times when we judge mass groups of people based on the color of their skin they were born with or the shape of their religion they were born with- that’s bigotry.
As a citizen I am not complicit - I am able to speak up, I am able to vote, and yes - I did walk away from a government job I felt was unethical involving work for the DOD.
The church is different than America. Church is not "by the people for the people". Church is "by the prophet, for the pro$$it".
a member of a church is NOT just a member of a church. They volunteer, they stay there, they raise their hands and support leaders, they testify - an organized mob. they put the group in group think.
Please give an example where congregations actually vote and control who is given leadership positions (as is done in America). Everyone sustains leaders. You don't go to the temple if you don't sustain leaders in the church. You must raise your hand and testify that god called the bishop/youth leader/RS president/pedophile - and then you have to follow their counsel, protect them, think the best of them - would never testify against them in court. Members are actively engaged in all of it, responsible for what goes down.
- Have you ever voted against giving someone a calling?
Name a court case where the LDS church protected a child against one of their pedophiles. There are none.
Apples and oranges. You have made a false analogy. Religious affiliation isn't an ethnic group - after you turn 18, you have a choice in what church to go to. Evaluating a group of individuals based on their skin color differs significantly from assessing a group based on their voluntary religious affiliations. When it comes to politics and religion, these are choices individuals make, and it is reasonable to form judgments based on these voluntary decisions.
Members of religious groups, who voluntarily stay in those groups, and voluntarily follow the leaders in those groups, are accountable for the actions of their group.
Members of countries are accountable for voting, for holding leaders accountable, for organizing protests and changing their country when needed. If I voted, and spoke up, and worked to correct/convict/change policies - I can wash my hands of it.
I found the church does not allow any changes to come from within, so I walked away, removed my record, pulled my family out, and encourage others to do the same.
At what point is he still innocent in harming women? Or is he guilty of doing the same thing to another woman as the church did to me by loving and supporting my father and treating me, telling me that I was worse than the man who abused me because I was hurt by it. That is like blaming the victim of a drunk driver because they were injured and can’t walk without a wheel chair and to forgive they have to stop using the wheel chair, and if they don’t forgive by getting up and walking then they are worse than the drunk, who by the way hasn’t stopped drinking.
Yes, that is EXACTLY what the church does to sexual abuse victims. It blames them for the harm and expects them to heal the harm all by themselves while they love and help the abuser pretend to repent.
So, who is helping the church do this? Who is guilty of not wanting to know? Who is complicit in the cover up? Any member of the church has a responsibility to inform themselves about how the church covers up an abuser’s confession and allows the abuse to keep happening and totally fails to help a child.
So, Mayan, your analogy is bad because people have a responsibility to find out what the church does and stop it. It is not at all like the comparison to America. You can say Trump voters are guilty of not caring that the man is a rapist, but you cannot hang that on those of us who have been against a rapist for president from the start. I voted against Trump. My husband still supports those who allow rapists to get away with it, just as bad as if he was voting for Trump. He votes to sustain church leaders.
After writing this, I see Mayan has adjusted his position.
There's far more than just Johnson unfortunately.moksha wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 2:44 pm
The current Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, is a member of that Christian Nationalist movement.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Apost ... 0Orthodoxy
Let's hope it doesn't take force.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 3:22 pm
Thanks. I acknowledge your point as I have acknowledged Amen’s. I am not refuting these points or positions. I believe you. I hear you.
I think change is necessary and that it will only happen by and through external force.
However, I don’t see my family members or your husband as hateful or proselyting hatred. They may all be misguided or wrong or ignorant. They may be aware but have different considerations.
To me, and for me, bigoted comments about good people stalls the progress by destroying credibility.
I did not intend for force to mean war.Angel wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 4:26 pmLet's hope it doesn't take force.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 3:22 pm
Thanks. I acknowledge your point as I have acknowledged Amen’s. I am not refuting these points or positions. I believe you. I hear you.
I think change is necessary and that it will only happen by and through external force.
However, I don’t see my family members or your husband as hateful or proselyting hatred. They may all be misguided or wrong or ignorant. They may be aware but have different considerations.
To me, and for me, bigoted comments about good people stalls the progress by destroying credibility.
Let's hope it doesn't take bombs, and killing people - is force working in the middle east right now? is force changing the hearts of Russians? Ukrainians?
Let me tell you a Halloween story. I made the evening class optional - just there for review / catch up to let ppl enjoy the holiday with their kids etc. I went in, hoping no one would show up - but the international students, they showed up - Halloween means nothing to them, not one of their holidays. A family of Muslims, and one Israeli were there - they made it to class before I did, and they were sitting around a table, talking and laughing with one another. I could have cried. They had all grown up on the same streets. They were familiar with the same neighborhoods. Before Halloween my Israeli - he sat at the front row, and the Muslims, they sat in the back. The Israeli had PTSD, had scars on his legs. One class he had a breakdown, was holding his phone shaking - watching the news. From this rift in class, to all of them sitting around a table talking with one another - in Arabic (Israeli's learn how to speak Arabic as part of their training) - laughing with one another, talking.
Communicating - talking - getting to know people outside your bubble - this is the solution I see. Have to peel everyone away from their bubbles.
Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 4:45 pmI did not intend for force to mean war.Angel wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 4:26 pmLet's hope it doesn't take force.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 3:22 pm
Thanks. I acknowledge your point as I have acknowledged Amen’s. I am not refuting these points or positions. I believe you. I hear you.
I think change is necessary and that it will only happen by and through external force.
However, I don’t see my family members or your husband as hateful or proselyting hatred. They may all be misguided or wrong or ignorant. They may be aware but have different considerations.
To me, and for me, bigoted comments about good people stalls the progress by destroying credibility.
Let's hope it doesn't take bombs, and killing people - is force working in the middle east right now? is force changing the hearts of Russians? Ukrainians?
Let me tell you a Halloween story. I made the evening class optional - just there for review / catch up to let ppl enjoy the holiday with their kids etc. I went in, hoping no one would show up - but the international students, they showed up - Halloween means nothing to them, not one of their holidays. A family of Muslims, and one Israeli were there - they made it to class before I did, and they were sitting around a table, talking and laughing with one another. I could have cried. They had all grown up on the same streets. They were familiar with the same neighborhoods. Before Halloween my Israeli - he sat at the front row, and the Muslims, they sat in the back. The Israeli had PTSD, had scars on his legs. One class he had a breakdown, was holding his phone shaking - watching the news. From this rift in class, to all of them sitting around a table talking with one another - in Arabic (Israeli's learn how to speak Arabic as part of their training) - laughing with one another, talking.
Communicating - talking - getting to know people outside your bubble - this is the solution I see. Have to peel everyone away from their bubbles.
Peeling people away from their bubbles is good. Allowing people into our bubbles and being welcome into theirs is better.
It’s not clear to me whether you disagree entirely with my point or if you sorta agree. On the one hand, you seem fine with the name-calling, blaming, and judgements of mormons as hateful and complicit with crimes. On the other hand, you see some value in people gaining trust and understanding.
I've been thinking about your post Alas. to heal the harm all by themselves.alas wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 1:19 pm
There is something to this. I love my husband who is currently at church. But occasionally I get angry that he can remain in a church and just plain not WANT to understand that his tithing dollars go to bad mouthing sexual abuse victims like the church did in the Joseph Bishop case. I try to talk to him about how corrupt this is, how it hurts me, when the church spends money to make a sexual abuse victim look crazy and supports a $##@-$##+&++$ in court. They really do not give a damn that this guy used his church calling to abuse more than one missionary. Nope, they totally support the criminal, and make his victims look crazy because of the emotional damage their beloved criminal did. They knew about the abuse and did not pull him out of the position. You cannot write this off as one bad apple making a mistake or even one bad apple making a mistake and another bad apple supporting the asshat. Nope, there are a whole bunch of them. And my husband just can’t see how the way they treated me is pretty much how they treated Bishop’s victims. My husband doesn’t want to know. He doesn’t want me to talk about it. He WANTS to not see it so he can keep supporting the church.
At what point is he still innocent in harming women? Or is he guilty of doing the same thing to another woman as the church did to me by loving and supporting my father and treating me, telling me that I was worse than the man who abused me because I was hurt by it. That is like blaming the victim of a drunk driver because they were injured and can’t walk without a wheel chair and to forgive they have to stop using the wheel chair, and if they don’t forgive by getting up and walking then they are worse than the drunk, who by the way hasn’t stopped drinking.
Yes, that is EXACTLY what the church does to sexual abuse victims. It blames them for the harm and expects them to heal the harm all by themselves while they love and help the abuser pretend to repent.
So, who is helping the church do this? Who is guilty of not wanting to know? Who is complicit in the cover up? Any member of the church has a responsibility to inform themselves about how the church covers up an abuser’s confession and allows the abuse to keep happening and totally fails to help a child.
So, Mayan, your analogy is bad because people have a responsibility to find out what the church does and stop it. It is not at all like the comparison to America. You can say Trump voters are guilty of not caring that the man is a rapist, but you cannot hang that on those of us who have been against a rapist for president from the start. I voted against Trump. My husband still supports those who allow rapists to get away with it, just as bad as if he was voting for Trump. He votes to sustain church leaders.
After writing this, I see Mayan has adjusted his position.
Force is a type of warfare, warfare doesn't work.Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 4:45 pm
I did not intend for force to mean war.
Peeling people away from their bubbles is good. Allowing people into our bubbles and being welcome into theirs is better.
It’s not clear to me whether you disagree entirely with my point or if you sorta agree. On the one hand, you seem fine with the name-calling, blaming, and judgements of mormons as hateful and complicit with crimes. On the other hand, you see some value in people gaining trust and understanding.
Back to the OP.
Bold underline edit my "me"Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:10 pm What is bullying about not laughing at a poorly made joke calling all mormons proselyters of hate?
...
So you are saying the penguin agrees with me? All saints are not hateful missionaries of hatred toward gays? He was just making a bigoted joke and you think its funny? Is that correct?wtfluff wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 12:41 pmBold underline edit my "me"Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:10 pm What is bullying about not laughing at a poorly made joke calling all mormons proselyters of hate?
...
There you go again Elephante - putting words into the Penguin's flippers.
Nope, I'm pointing out that the penguin never typed "all saints"Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 12:49 pmSo you are saying the penguin agrees with me? All saints are not hateful missionaries of hatred toward gays? He was just making a bigoted joke and you think its funny? Is that correct?wtfluff wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 12:41 pmBold underline edit my "me"Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Sun Jan 14, 2024 10:10 pm What is bullying about not laughing at a poorly made joke calling all mormons proselyters of hate?
...
There you go again Elephante - putting words into the Penguin's flippers.
Great. So the penguin meant to disparage some saints, but not all of them? Does he agree with that?wtfluff wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 1:31 pmNope, I'm pointing out that the penguin never typed "all saints"Mayan_Elephant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 12:49 pmSo you are saying the penguin agrees with me? All saints are not hateful missionaries of hatred toward gays? He was just making a bigoted joke and you think its funny? Is that correct?
Nor did he type "all mormons"
You did.
You're all about semantics and evidence when it comes to others, yet you can't live up to your own rules.