It boils down to this - they are offering me everlasting life in a peaceful new world - will I get to see it in my lifetime.
Young Jehovah's Witnesses now can look back at 3, 4 of even 5 generations of JWs in their family and see that they have been preaching about the end of this system of things for 130 years - yes, that's one hundred and thirty years.
Do they realistically see themselves as being part of that promised new world of righteouness or simply part of an enduring legacy?
My observations are:
1) Many witnesses in the 20-39 age range do not truly believe and act on the information provided by the Society that the end is imminent - they are going to college, enjoying themselves and not taking the beliefs seriously.
2) Fewer brothers are reaching out for positions of oversight
3) More families are leaving the witnesses not just individual members of families
4) The dumbing down of literature has reduced the average JW to a sheep-like intelligence - they know how to reason from the scriptures but not why they reason from the scriptures - it's mostly memory recall of scriptual arguments against Christendom's teachings
5) The organization as a whole offers no services for young children and teenagers. There are no support systems for single mothers, no social groups of any kind, no preschool as many churches have - this reduces the social framework to merely seeing brothers and sisters at the hall and on field service but outside of that there is little or no contact on a purely social basis, especially for older witnesses.
A strong social element in any religion is like a glue that binds people to each other - most of us need to be around people, even if only infrequently; we need friends, - the JW framework does everything in its power to limit contact with each other, even with other members of the congregation as their counsel is to limit activities to small groups and couples.
Their recent advice in the Kingdom Ministry to introduce yourself to the person or family sitting next to you at the District Convention will generally not result in any long term relationships but will have the likely outcome of meeting a potential partner at the convention - will I or will I not get their phone number?
Such temporary "joy" that comes from these District Conventions introductions is very short lived as a general rule and not the exception, the end result being that the family or brother/sister you introduced yourself to will be sitting somewhere else the next day and will have completely forgotten about you.
Perhaps this advice serves to reinforce the global concept of "our whole association of brothers"?