Agent zero said, i certainly don't think a blanket statement or generalization can be made about it, because there are ALWAYS exceptions. as was already brought out, often people who seem to have it all together outwardly, have other internal issues others don't know about.
Very true in my opinion, that making generalizations is risky. I actually agree with the OP, in that many people are attracted to the religion because of problems in their life. The Society promotes the religion on that basis...no more hunger, no more financial worries, no more war, no more violence, no more anything that stems from our imperfect nature, no more problems associated with this old system, come join our spiritual paradise now. Naturally people with problems will be attracted.
But not all who come in have problems. The religion is also promoted on the basis of 'Truth', worshiping God in the right way, loving God and neighbor, and many respond actually believing it is all that.
Another thing that attracted me personally, that I did not mention previously, was the people and friendships that had developed. I liked the people! And still do. Most witnesses are good, caring people -- but as I've learned, blind as well -- and being one of them provided a very strong sense of community, a powerful motivator for me. However I'm sure the same sense of community can be had with Mormons, Adventists, and other groups as well. It's the organization that is the big problem; witnesses are so misled by it.
Sizemik said, For those converting prior to the internet age . . . obtaining any external information at all on Jehovah's Witnesses was next to impossible . . . and publically available knowledge of this group was non-existent.
That is huge Sizemik. I remember hearing of only one book before I became a witness, and that was 'Thirty Years a Watchtower Slave'. To my discredit, I did not bother to get a copy and read it. One of the great scriptures used by withesses, then and now, is 1Th 5:21, "Make sure of all things and hold fast to what is fine." If I had actually applied that safeguard it would have made a huge difference in the path I chose, but I ignored it. I had already accepted that the Society was telling the truth, and I let the organization do my 'making sure' for me.
Now it's different. The internet is a life saver. I research lots of information about JWs, almost every day. And I use Amazon and Ebay to buy old literature so I can read for myself what the Society once said, rather than accepting what most witnesses say about the past, which is usually to blame the followers for having a 'misunderstanding.'
If most witnesses used the internet to research and investigate the religion, the organization would crumble. But they are afraid of it, because the Society has demonized both the internet and those who dispense information there. I remember when I first went on and looked up something about witnesses. I could feel my heart start pounding, I did a double check of the house to make sure I was alone, my breathing became heavy. I felt guilty.
A relative, now in her 70s, tells me it was different in the '50s when she was active. The Society used to welcome investigation. Put it to the test, they would say. We have nothing to hide. But it was safe enough to say that then, since, as you noted Sizemik, there was no readily available information exposing the Society's past.
In reality the Society has everything to hide, and getting at the information is easy, once you get past the fear of displeasing an organization, and use the available resources...the internet!