I fail to see the point , advantage, benefit or satisfaction of having a hard copy of what you already know. Can somebody explain this to me, a non-JW?
Firstly, it's clear from Paul's narrative (even if you didn't bother to read the scans) that there was stuff he didn't know at the time.
Secondly, the process of having your records released is one that hasn't yet been documented by former Jehovah's Witnesses as far as I know. For some who may have more dramatic or life-changing or life-saving or legally important stories to tell, this is important.
(Gerard, people die, people lose their families physically or emotionally or socially or custodially, or lose family members to death, by committing to the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. That's just the start of the trauma that documents like these initiate.)
Legally, in Australia or the UK at least, I look forward to this thread having some impact on at least one child custody or wrongful death case, and I really hope to see it having an impact in the more litigious US.
Thirdly, the cult language would be interesting to anybody with even a remote interest in mind-control and group-speak.
Fourthly, we are all interested in what people say about us behind our backs. Until this thread I've never thought about what the elders in my home congregation said about me when I moved to my new one.
By now my give-a-shit-meter has hit zero, but I'm sure there are many people reading this who would like to know what was said about them.