Halfway through the article Scientists unsure what triggers stranding -- illness, perilous coast may be factors (link: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2002/07/31/MN185450.DTL) the thought occurred to me, What if there are complex human behavioral reasons beyond anyone's control behind the Jehovah's Witnesses organization's rapid moral disintegration?
The above quoted article reads in part:
"The mass stranding of pilot whales on Cape Cod was probably a natural event, marine biologists said Tuesday, an accident linked to tight social groupings and the perils of navigating a rugged coastline.
Pilot whales tend to swim in large, stable family groups. If for some reason one of the leaders goes astray, "they all follow," said Steve Webster, senior marine biologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
"They're not all planning to go kill themselves on the beach," he said. "It happens because they have this social structure, and it becomes something like the highly mechanized behavior we see in birds or insects."
Suppose that a very influential and enigmatic member of the governing body has gone astray in handling the pedophile situation and, for whatever reason, is not able to grasp or is unwilling to change basic doctrinal inconsistencies in the blood teachings and bazantine handling of individual congregation member judicial matters? Should this be the case then everyone at Bethel is blindly following that enigmatic GB member down a road leading to an obvious dead-end, because tightly knit social structures result in "highly mechanized behavior" resulting in the spiritual stranding of Jehovah's Witnesses like those whales are stranded and dying.
It will take someone high in Bethel to break away from the herd mentality if they are to save this organization for future preaching of the Bible's good news of the kingdom.
Derrick