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Justitia Themis
Thanks for your contribution.
Nothing in Canadian law suggests the Watchtower organization could not continue disputing these cases with legal filings. If they wanted to they could and would. But they don’t want to.
The Letter of Understanding approach is the result of the Watchtower organization being compelled to soften its position because of at least three things.
1. Watchtower’s attempts at litigation through Canadian courts have been beaten to a pulp. At this point were Watchtower to persist in litigation the courts would have little choice but to conclude Watchtower was wasting the courts time and respond to it accordingly. Watchtower has lost its fight in the courts.
2. Watchtower’s attempts at litigation through Canadian courts has resulted in such damning publicity that to continue this approach would reduce the image of Jehovah’s Witnesses to a point where no one would want to listen to them, including the small fringe that does so now. Watchtower has lost its fight in the public media.
3. All this publicity has emboldened (if not trained!) parents among Jehovah’s Witnesses to confidentially accept blood transfusion for their sick children. Watchtower is losing the fight to keep Jehovah’s Witnesses in line.
Watchtower has little choice but to advocate this softened Letter of Understanding approach.
And, honestly, at this point anything Watchtower can do to extract itself from problems consequential to its blood taboo is fine with Bethel. That’s been their aim for decades.
Don’t overlook this significant point: what’s okay for Jehovah’s Witnesses in Canada is, from Watchtower’s doctrinal perspective, okay for Jehovah’s Witnesses everywhere. Right?
Marvin Shilmer