Are you referring to that Jesus quote of "Blessed be the deceivers for they shall inherit the Land of Provo"? What if he never said that?
Three cheers for Alyssa Grenfell!
Are you referring to that Jesus quote of "Blessed be the deceivers for they shall inherit the Land of Provo"? What if he never said that?
Those are just my observations as someone who was Mormon and has personally seen the best people in my ward leave one by one.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 11:19 pmWow. This may say more about you than it does those "low IQ" folks. In regards to "low moral character" that hasn't been my observation at all. Some of the most moral people on the planet are those that attend the LDS Church on Sunday.drumdude wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:02 amShe's such a lovely person, and someone who apologists like DCP simply cannot label away as a "rabid, mouth foaming, angry atheist."
I think it's clear the LDS church is losing their best people, and (on the whole) those with low IQ or low moral character are quickly becoming the majority left behind.
Would Alyssa Grenfell be "such a lovely person" if she was still a member of the church? What's changed??
Regards,
MG
What this tells me is that it very much depends on who it is you know who is a Mormon - it's not the fact of their belief, it's the kind of person they are.sock puppet wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 3:01 pmInteresting data point and observation. So to know, know, know him, is not to love, love, love him if he's a Mo.Xenophon wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 2:45 pmTwo of the more interesting callouts from the survey:
First, only one of the religious groups has a net favorable view of Mormons, Catholics at a measly +2%. Yes the unaffiliated are much more prone to unfavorable responses but it isn't like Mormons are winning the hearts and minds of everyone else. As for why the unaffiliated have such strong feelings, my guess would be that politics has the biggest role in that.
Second (and maybe more importantly, or at least funnier in my opinion), Mormons are the only group who's favorability doesn't improve when a respondent knows a member of the religion. I know the authors in MG's link suggest bridge building as a key focus, but so far the data hasn't really backed up that assertion.
It's sometimes said that the Church is guarding its wealth to see humanity through some kind of catastrophe that only hundreds of billions of dollars can handle.Analytics wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 4:18 pm...MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 19, 2025 1:56 amI don't think it will. The church, even though criticized for its mistakes recently, has a barrel of cash and will continue to invest wisely into the future. If I was a bettin' man I'd give the church at least a 90%+ chance of managing and growing their funds into the future.
And saving for a rainy day ain't such a bad idea.
[The Church's] behavior is consistent with a hedge fund that is accumulating wealth for the sake of accumulating wealth. It is also consistent with a dysfunctional organization that has no vision, plan, or courage to deploy its resources for any worthwhile purpose, so it hoards them by default. The latter is what’s really going on.
Ultimately the Church can do whatever it wants with its own money, but the laws should be changed so that its investment income is taxed like a hedge fund.
But the more relevant question is that if an individual rejects what Jesus said about such things and personally believes that extreme saving “for a rainy day” is really a virtue, they should save that money for themselves rather than giving it to the Church. Because unless you are already independently wealthy and your income only comes from investment sources, you are going to need money when you can no longer work. In contrast, the Church will always receive enough donations to do its work. People need savings for when they retire. The Church will never retire and doesn’t need to save very much for the future.
Why do you post cheap little dismissive responses like that instead of responding properly? Is it your arrogance, rudeness, or something else? Do you think it shows Mormons in a good light? You could have provided a rebuttal, some examples of why I’m wrong. But you’re too damn lazy to do that aren’t you. You could have simply not responded at all to something you felt didn’t warrant a proper response. Or perhaps you’re incapable of that so you have to convince yourself you’ve waved it away. Pathetic.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 10:30 pmCommon refrain. Regards, MGI Have Questions wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 7:51 amPeople who need to believe in a supernatural thing to whom they are accountable, seem to lack the adult skill of taking responsibility for their own actions, and acting accordingly within the realm of being a good, considerate, moral person.
So you acknowledge that you’ve improved nobody’s impression of Mormons throughout your long history of posting extensively on this forum and the previous one. And your introspection has concluded that’s everyone else’s fault…priceless.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 10:32 pmOf course not. This would be a skewed sample.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 3:07 pmInterestingly, through “knowing” a Mormon on this board (MG 2.0) has anyone’s opinion of Mormons improved directly because of how MG 2.0 behaves and interacts?
Regards,
MG
Risk management professionals would agree with your sentiments here, 100%.malkie wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 12:42 amIt's sometimes said that the Church is guarding its wealth to see humanity through some kind of catastrophe that only hundreds of billions of dollars can handle.
That makes me wonder, however: for any such imaginable catastrophe (perhaps I lack imagination) is it likely that the Church would be able to do anything with its vast wealth, tied up as it is in property and investments? Even liquid/near liquid investments may be worthless if, for example, a big asteroid were to precipitate an ice age.
I guess my question should be: what kinds of (likely worldwide) catastrophes requiring such vast amounts of wealth could actually be mitigated with the form(s) of wealth the Church has? Or any reasonable forms of wealth? I'm open to suggestions.
I've heard this trope over and over again over the years. It deserves no response.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 6:25 amWhy do you post cheap little dismissive responses like that instead of responding properly? Is it your arrogance, rudeness, or something else? Do you think it shows Mormons in a good light? You could have provided a rebuttal, some examples of why I’m wrong. But you’re too damn lazy to do that aren’t you. You could have simply not responded at all to something you felt didn’t warrant a proper response. Or perhaps you’re incapable of that so you have to convince yourself you’ve waved it away. Pathetic.
I didn't acknowledge anything except that the reporting system here on this board leans heavily in one direction.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 6:30 amSo you acknowledge that you’ve improved nobody’s impression of Mormons throughout your long history of posting extensively on this forum and the previous one. And your introspection has concluded that’s everyone else’s fault…priceless.
So shouldn’t you have typed TTOC? Or can’t you remain consistent on that either?MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 3:59 pmI've heard this trope over and over again over the years. It deserves no response.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 6:25 amWhy do you post cheap little dismissive responses like that instead of responding properly? Is it your arrogance, rudeness, or something else? Do you think it shows Mormons in a good light? You could have provided a rebuttal, some examples of why I’m wrong. But you’re too damn lazy to do that aren’t you. You could have simply not responded at all to something you felt didn’t warrant a proper response. Or perhaps you’re incapable of that so you have to convince yourself you’ve waved it away. Pathetic.
Regards,
MG