I have read several posts by posters who fervently hope JWs will become a mainstream religion, or will become "the truth," or will stop teaching this doctrine, or tweak that one, and "Oh, if they would only [fill in the blank]."
Such dreaming will, in the end, come to naught. There are practical reasons why.
(1) The rank and file have no authority over the Governing Body.
(2) The rank and file do not hold sway over any of the corporate interests.
(3) The vast majority of Memorial partakers are not credible in the eyes of the Governing Body, nor do they have any authority over anything.
(4) The organization shows a willingness to publicly claim beliefs to which Jehovah's Witnesses do not actually subscribe in order to improve public image (see Lisa's interview with J.R. Brown), while retaining the same hard-line beliefs in reality.
(5) The Governing Body is unwilling to relinquish control over the organization, to share authority with underlings (e.g. eradication of Bethel elders), or to cease its pretense of Spirit direction.
(6) The members of the Governing Body are appointees of the Governing Body, the current Governing Body is directly descended from Corporate executives, not from any kind of spiritual body of believers.
(7) The lack of donations will not change doctrine. It is an End Times cult. It expects (and teaches) that eventually the love of the greater number will cool off before the end, also that the work of publishing "Good News" will cease. Such occurences will be a source of inspiration to continue in the same course, not a signal for change.
"Vote with our feet" and "vote with our wallets" only works with organizations that anticipate a lengthy future for themselves. There will be no significant shift toward mainstream reform for this organization, it expects that its seeming demise is imminent and looks forward to that tmie with a sense of gleeful anticipation.
Those who hoped for blood reform, what has happened? Currently, any JW may take a blood transfusion without any fear of being disfellowshipped. If it is discovered, however, it will be viewed as though they disassociated themselves. Identical announcement, same practical effect, only a different check mark on the card in the congregation files. Is that reform?
Although there is an appeals process for disfellowshipping, there is no appeal for disassociation. It is a different animal altogether, and the applications for this type of summary judgment (where the person's actions are seen as act of removing themselves from the congregation by their own choice) are vast.
I expect that a reform will be happening, and fairly soon (within the next few years). But I do not expect anything about this religion to become "mainstream" anytime soon, nor do I understand the basis for hope along those lines that seems to be retained by some. I see no indication of softening anything beyond their public image, which has always been a farce anyway.
Since Jehovah's Witnesses have provably never been God's organization, why would God fix it? I invite anyone who believes it will reform to state your case for hope. I don't really care why you think it should reform, I only want to know why you hold out hope that it will reform.