an individual who
was never a Jehovah's Witness is not going
to fully understand or appreciate
Respectfully submitted to Wanderer,
You are saying that you gotta be a "dumbass" to understand a "dumbass."
That is one way to understand, but there are others. Many people can empathize with JW's.
Many counselors and advocates are not victims of the same things they help people with, some are former victims
and that is their tool. Others have education, sympathy, they are good listeners, many tools. Many former victims
are basket-cases that would not be that helpful, others are marvelous at using their experience.
I understand what you are saying, but the former victim is not always the best at understanding why he was a victim.
There are experts that can totally relate, but have never been victims.
Who might be better at helping an ex-JW to relate to the real world, a former JW who escaped or a person who
avoided being a victim in the first place. Maybe both are able to do the job, maybe neither.
The person in question here is married to a JW, and she sees what it does to him.
A WT example is this: Sometimes you are too close to see the truth, example: a woman's slip is showing, but it takes someone
else to point it out to her. This can be true of people and their problems also.