For your viewing pleasure, compare the two quotes:
October 15, 1966 Watchtower, page 631:
"'What about the year 1975? What is it going to mean, dear friends?' asked Brother Franz. 'Does it mean that Armageddon is going to be finished, with Satan bound, by 1975? It could! It could! All things are possible with God. Does it mean that Babylon the Great is going to go down by 1975? It could. Does it mean that the attack of Gog of Magog is going to be made on Jehovah's witnesses to wipe them out, then Gog himself will be put out of action? It could. But we are not saying. All things are possible with God. But we are not saying. And don't any of you be specific in saying anything that is going to happen between now and 1975. But the big point of it all is this, dear friends: Time is short. Time is running out, no question about that.'"
Jehovah's Witnesses: Proclaimers of God's Kingdom, page 104:
"Brother Franz then referred to the many questions that had arisen as to whether the material in the new book meant that by 1975 Armageddon would be finished, and Satan would be bound. He stated, in essence: 'It could. But we are not saying. All things are possible with God. But we are not saying. And don't any of you be specific in saying anything that is going to happen between now and 1975. But the big point of it all is this, dear friends: Time is short. Time is running out, no question about that.'"
Notice the difference in presentation of the same speech? The 1966 article, while it includes cautionary statements, also seems to excite people that 1975 is at least quite possible. The latter presentation of the speech shows a calm, cautionary statement without anything that might excite people who are hanging on your every word. But the presentation of it in the Proclaimers book makes it seem like there was no reason at all for anyone to be concerned about 1975. As if it was just another belief--and can there be such a thing amongst Jehovah's Witnesses? We might add that they were still promoting the "generation of 1914" as an absolute certainty at this time anyway, so it becomes meaningless even if the 1975 thing was an 'apostate fantasy'.
And hey, sure, they didn't actually say 1975 = the end, that I can verify. But if someone in a position of near-infallible trust places considerable emphasis on the end of 6,000 years of human history as the GB did, it's going to at the very least disturb people, if not mislead them altogether about its significance. It's not like an average Joe saying, "Well, 1975 might be important, but it might not."
In conclusion, this post, from an average ex-JW, might mean something. Then again, it might not. Don't you go telling people JWs are false prophets, because there's NO PROOF WHATSOEVER that they said ANYTHING DEFINITE about millions of people never having to die or this generation not passin' away or whatever. That's all a load o'crap.
--sd-7