Perhaps, but many including myself did not have a clue about the guinea pig morals of the founder, his successor, and more yes men than you could shake a stick at..
The austerity, bad manners, and attempt to control every facet of MY life certainly hastened my exit, especially when I started considering how little I was really getting from my "investment".
True, knowledge about the moral depravity would have certainly hastened my departure.
"According to Iannaccone, the devout person pays the high social price because it buys a better religious product. The rules discourage free riders, the people who undermine group efforts by taking more than they give back. (http://www.slate.com) "
This is a very good point.
We were taught that you get what you pay for, and many of us paid, dearly. Up to a point, when the light finally started going off, I thought it was worth it. "We are the best that you can find in the biblical world"- hogwash.
But keep saying it enough times, and some people will believe it..
Unfortunately, what I got out of being closely involved with the Vey was not anywhere near the price I personally paid.
Their "failure" was to continue raising the price. Pretty soon we were paying gold bullion for the priviledge to sit at the BOT's feet and catch a few crumbs.
At some point, of course, the disadvantages of zealotry outweigh the benefits. A church reaches that point when it fails to offer acceptable substitutes for everything it has asked its members to give up.
Very very good point. When their god is so stinking small that he needs a plethora of rules, regulations and advisors to get anything accomplished- add to that, "results are not guaranteed"- EVENTUALLY, people wake up. At least most. Funny that they call people "disgruntled" at that point..
This article makes some interesting observations about the religions and churches some people choose because they WANT to belong to controlling, manipulating churches. Having been through what we have been through it’s so hard for me to fathom.
Then again, you see videos of soldiers actually doing the goosestep variety of marching, and they seem to live with it. Or of people actually preferring to live in Muslim religious dictatorships, that they actually go rabid at the thought of not living that way. ... Go figure. -->
quote:
It wasn't the strictness that really ruined twi, it was the lack of morality.
Perhaps the rigid strictness gave a clue as to how immoral they actually were. The strictness only served to quell any dissent.
quote:
We were taught that you get what you pay for, and many of us paid, dearly.
Seems to me that in the religious world, the quality of what you get doesn't coincide with what you pay out, ... if ever. :(-->
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oldiesman
It wasn't the strictness that really ruined twi, it was the lack of morality.
I think most folks can live with rules and regs., as long as they're dispensed in an honest and fair way by folks you can trust.
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Ham
Perhaps, but many including myself did not have a clue about the guinea pig morals of the founder, his successor, and more yes men than you could shake a stick at..
The austerity, bad manners, and attempt to control every facet of MY life certainly hastened my exit, especially when I started considering how little I was really getting from my "investment".
True, knowledge about the moral depravity would have certainly hastened my departure.
"According to Iannaccone, the devout person pays the high social price because it buys a better religious product. The rules discourage free riders, the people who undermine group efforts by taking more than they give back. (http://www.slate.com) "
This is a very good point.
We were taught that you get what you pay for, and many of us paid, dearly. Up to a point, when the light finally started going off, I thought it was worth it. "We are the best that you can find in the biblical world"- hogwash.
But keep saying it enough times, and some people will believe it..
Unfortunately, what I got out of being closely involved with the Vey was not anywhere near the price I personally paid.
Their "failure" was to continue raising the price. Pretty soon we were paying gold bullion for the priviledge to sit at the BOT's feet and catch a few crumbs.
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Ham
Very very good point. When their god is so stinking small that he needs a plethora of rules, regulations and advisors to get anything accomplished- add to that, "results are not guaranteed"- EVENTUALLY, people wake up. At least most. Funny that they call people "disgruntled" at that point..
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GarthP2000
Then again, you see videos of soldiers actually doing the goosestep variety of marching, and they seem to live with it. Or of people actually preferring to live in Muslim religious dictatorships, that they actually go rabid at the thought of not living that way. ... Go figure. -->
Perhaps the rigid strictness gave a clue as to how immoral they actually were. The strictness only served to quell any dissent.
Seems to me that in the religious world, the quality of what you get doesn't coincide with what you pay out, ... if ever. :(-->
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