beastie wrote:Wade,
Even as you claim you are trying to change, you shift the responsibility of your past and current bad behavior onto others. "Textual mirrors", instead of just admitting you behaved badly.
Human beings operate under the Tit for Tat moral theory, even if they claim otherwise. We tend to initially offer cooperation to a newcomer in good faith. If that cooperation is returned with bad faith, then we alter our behavior accordingly, and return bad faith for bad faith. If a long history of bad faith has been established, it may take a very long time to overcome.
This point is important in regards to two things - your own behavior and the bad faith of the church in regards to apostates. You have long history of bad faith with exmormons. I was just looking at some of the old archives on Z, and you have consistently been nasty, snide, etc. Of course, at the same time, you refuse to accept responsibility for your own behavior by claiming you are simply mirroring the behavior of others, or that people consistently misunderstand you. You must be the most misunderstood person on the net, given not only your interactions with exmormons, but Mormons (witness their frequent banning of you from boards they control) and homosexuals. There is one consistent factor in all these failed interactions. That is you.
You encourage other people to take responsibility for the one person they can change. You need to do the same. Not with stating your intentions to do so over and over, but to analyze why, if you sincerely are acting in good faith, you are so consistently misunderstood. Begin to establish a pattern of good faith behavior and maybe people will respond to you in kind. It may take a while, you have a long history. And you also have a history of claiming the high road while behaving poorly. I have not yet seen this changed behavior in you, on threads on this board. Go reread some of your comments to Tal in his interview, for example. He commented:You write that you have "great confidence in the verity of the truth claims of the CoJCoLDS". You further write that "if it turns out that my confidence was misplaced, then how that will affect me will depend upon what the truth turns out to be", before going to describe a few possible outcomes.
I believe many of those familiar with Moroni 10:3-5 would find your language here surprising. You even go so far as to contemplate the possibility that there might not be any God at all. Indeed, your entire answer here appears to reveal the bedrock of your testimony, if it can be called that, to be optimistic but pragmatic, belief-based calculation as opposed to the knowledge promised in Mormonism's foundational epistemic claim. Your answer reminds me of Pascal's Wager - but obviously, this type of reasoning could have no place if Moroni's promise was really true, could it?
And you responded:I suppose if people in and out of the Church were relatively ignorant of the nature of faith and knowledge, and thus were unaware of the overlap, on several levels, between these two notions (consisting of varying degrees of confidence); or if they were fundamentalistic in their thinking, and were thus overly narrow and rigid in how they conceptualize these notions; then I can see how they might think that.
Tal had been nothing but polite to you by that point. Yet you were already calling him "fundamentalistic" "overly narrow and rigid" in his thinking.
Up to that point, you had both been cooperating. At that moment, you returned bad faith for his good faith.
and in the same post you said:I suppose, too, if these same people inanely confused a positive expression of belief with a philosophical response to a hypothetical question (that I explicitly said I tend not to think that way about or see value in exploring), then I can also see how they might think that as well. I certainly didn't confuse the two.
You do understand what "inanely" means, right? Again, example of bad faith being returned for good faith.
Tal, however, continued in good faith. In your response, you launch back into your "fundamentalistic" bit. Tal still doesn't take offense and continues on in good faith. When you refused to ask a question Tal viewed as important to continuing, you said:That is not the real reason you are folding up the interview tent, is it? Reasonable and secure people don't suddenly break off interviews genuinely intended to learn about others, if the people they are interviewing don't see the value (not to be confused with "refusal") in responding to a few "what if" kinds of questions, and have suggested much more reasonable and effective approaches to learning about them. Certainly, they would not need to frame a lame excuse that stands insipidly against AUTHORITATIVE evidence to the contrary. Nor, for that matter, would they think they have learned something about the person's beliefs other than that the person does not value answering "what if" kinds of questions.
Look at those bolded words, Wade. In terms of human interactions, there is no way comments peppered with those sort of words are viewed as being offered in good faith and in cooperation. No, they are clearly offered to attack, belittle, and in bad faith. By this time, most people who begin to return like with like. Instead, Tal continues to offer good faith. Of course, he does remind you that he has heard you clearly:You might have people who don't even know you making fun of you, casting aspersions on your character, labelling you a "fundamentalist" or a man who could no longer control his basest urges and just wanted to "rebel against what he deep down knows is true", and all kinds of things. And you would have no way to refute them. They wouldn't even really want to listen to you, and even if they ever did, they would never fully believe you. Etc. etc.
And the pattern continues.
I could present many other examples of your bad behavior. In fact, I'm guessing I could provide evidence of your bad behavior on nearly every thread you've posted on.
So perhaps you can begin to understand why exmormons are a bit skeptical of your claims to only want to "help" them, and claiming the high road. You will have to demonstrate the high road instead of just claiming, over and over, that you take it, and you will have to do it for quite a while to overcome your history.
The second point has to do with the interactions between Mormons and exmormons. You never really dealt with my statement about how the well is poisoned even before one becomes an exmormon due to the pejorative statements and teachings the church makes about apostates. There has already been established a long history of bad faith extended by the church. It will take a long time to overcome that, and the first step will be to stop teaching these ideas about people who lose faith. Decent, sincere people lose faith in the LDS church not due to psychological problems, not due to wanting to sin, not due to laziness, having their feelings hurt, etc etc, but due to real issues that can easily cause reasonable people to lose faith. When they leave, knowing that their LDS friends and family now view them with fear and suspicion due to the church's teachings creates a "bad faith" moment, and they will return that bad faith Tit For Tat. Each person is responsible for his/her behavior, but it makes no sense to talk about stopping a "cycle" of anger without talking about where the cycle begins.
An additional problem is this - you have a tendency to read emotions and ideas in other people that are not present. You read anger in people, you read bigotry in people, when none exits. I have seen you do it many times. Given your propensity to flawed readings of other people, I suspect you over-exaggerate whatever problem may actually exist.
Here is the rub. Both sides (Mr. A and B) are opposed in their views. Both side believe they are RIGHT. Both sides believe the other party is where the cycle begins and they are ready and willing to BLAME the other party for "bad faith". Both sides see the other party as overreacting. Both sides have long memories and are slow to forgive. Both sides can list a variety of examples that support their respective positions. That is the dynamic. That is what causes the cycle.
So, by asserting that you are RIGHT, and assuming that the cycle began with me, and blame me and the Church for "bad faith", and suggest that I am overreacting, and listing my past sins, and suggesting that we determine where the cycle begins (as if that can be done to the satisfaction of both parties), doesn't that epitomizes the very dynamic and cycle that your suggestion is intended to solve. In other words, does it WORK?
Granted, this kind of strategy may WORK to some degree for either side. They may just get so fed up and frustrated and riled with anger and thnking it is all a waste of time (which it invariably is) amd stop speaking to each other and content themselves with the more certain belief that they are RIGHT and the other party is WRONG, and tht they are the one's being hurt and angered and grieved. But, that unnecessarily ends a relationship between two relatively decent people and well-intending people. It squanders huge amounts of time and energy. It leaves a wake of ill-feelings and an empty sort of victory over one's foe. Nobody really wins in any sort of way--least of all in the things which are at the heart of the dynamic and cycle. Most importantly, it fails to satisfy our basic and critical need to love and be loved, and to value and be valued. And, in that respect, it is the highth of dysfunction.
Then, there is Mr. D. His is quite a different outcome. I sure like Mr. D, and think he gets it. I am trying to learn from him and emulate him, though I believe and remain faithful.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-