OneEyedJoe
JoinedPosts by OneEyedJoe
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43
Change to dress and grooming rules for JWs in USA soon?
by RayPublisher inmy guy with the lurk account on jwtalk (where all the kool-aid drinking jws go to talk about how wonderful 'the twoof' is) sent me some more interesting threads, here's one:.
spoiler: starting new the new service year september.
"there will be new directives from the branch through the circuit overseer on dress and grooming that will disqualify one to be a congregation publisher.
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OneEyedJoe
Oh I so hope this is legit. The more they ramp up unscriptural control, the more will wake up. -
36
Small details...
by Garrett ina witness friend wanted to meet up recently and talk.
since this person was a close friend and who i thought had a level head, i'd go ahead and speak with him.
our conversation actually helped me figure a few things out not only for myself but also about the witnesses.. so we're talking and i'm telling him my experience and the doctrines that i disagreed with as well as the scandals that made me disgusted with the organization.
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OneEyedJoe
One last thing I finally realized is that the majority of witnesses DO NOT want to wake up. I no longer feel like the brainwashing is all that's keeping them in. I think that deep down, they understand what were telling them and they know that what we're saying is truth, but they don't want to face that reality. For them, living in their world, they are doing something that they believe has purpose. Taking that away from them is devastating and the majority is not mentally capable of allowing their mind to accept the facts that we provide them with
That's part of the brainwashing, though. The idea that if the cult is not true they'll have no where to go is very purposefully implanted in their minds by the cult.
I would've asked him to name the "core teachings." Something tells me that most of them have changed. About the only ones that I don't think have changed at some point are rejection of the trinity and hell. If that's all that's required to be true, there's lots of true religions out there.
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12
Two questions for all "apostates"
by sloppyjoe2 indid any of you have a family member or close friend become an apostate first and you shunned them for it only to eventually see the light?
if so, how did your eyes become opened?
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OneEyedJoe
AFAIK I'm the first apostate I've ever known. I do have a couple never baptized cousins that I've shunned (and feel terrible about it still) for having a revolving door of "worldly" live-in boyfriends. I only saw the light due to my own issues with the doctrine and the passage of time.
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19
Jw's don't let their kids die because of blood...
by freemindfade inanother nauseating detail i remember from saturdays program.
there is a video (one of so many) shaming young people for being afraid to admit they are jw's.
one australian girl talks about how one of her teachers was saying jw's let their children die over the blood issue (fact) and she goes on to say how that is not true.
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OneEyedJoe
Sadly a great many jws seem to have really bought in to the propaganda. My wife actually said the other day "a blood transfusion never saved anyone." She seems to really think that bloodless medicine is always better than blood. -
42
Where are the Young Elders?
by James Jack ini was appointed as an elder when i turned 30, 25 years ago.
which was the norm back then.. now, i very rarely here of a young man becoming an elder.
in our town we have 2 english congregations.
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OneEyedJoe
The only elders (2) appointed in my former congregation in the last 6 years have been in their 50s. Both born-ins. One of them had been an ms for ~20 years and admitted to me (in one of his frequent attempts to get me to "step up") that he'd been "controlling [his] service time" in order to prevent his getting appointed all those years. -
41
Convention Tomorrow...
by freemindfade inkill me.... it's hard to put into words just how badly i do no want to sit through this 3 days of bull $hit.
i will appreciate any and all words of condolence, humorous, serious, or otherwise.
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OneEyedJoe
My condolences. When I was still thinking I'd end up going this year I was 100% going to bring a flask and spend almost the whole time walking around in the halls (too hot to venture outside in a suit). I'm on call 24x7 for work, and last year I had a few "work emergencies" haha. I didn't actually play bingo, but last year I did set out to identify all the fallacies. I quickly gave up though because they'd string so many together that I couldn't keep up.
Start complaining about the seats early, and use it as an excuse to get up and walk around. Spend more time out of the seat each day. Or you can always claim to be filling in for a friend that couldn't make his assignment, then just be hazy on who the friend is and what the assignment is.
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10
KH Libraries Redundant?
by The Searcher ini heard from an elder that his kh library is to be terminated when a refurbishment takes place.. is this now standard policy?
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OneEyedJoe
Makes sense - it's a lot easier to revise history and change embarrassing statements in the literature when the average JW will only have access to it via JW.org. Just put a cheap computer in there and you don't need all those pesky hard-copies floating around in every KH. -
49
this weeks bible highlights: Jehovah slaughters his own people to teach David a lesson
by nowwhat? infrom 2 samuel 24. i am so mad at myself for not making a comment how could anyone explain this away?
then after he slaughters 70,000 he then feels regret?
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OneEyedJoe
So. How do believers explain this slaughter?
My wife would probably explain that it's ok to kill innocents because they have a hope of a resurrection. That's how she explained being fine with people dying because of the transplant ban and the (now repealed) ban on all blood products/fractions.
She still hasn't been able to explain how this is different than shooting someone in the face and it being ok because they might be resurrected.
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89
Problems with Common Atheist Arguments
by FusionTheism inthe reason i entitled this "problems with common atheist arguments" instead of "the case against atheism" is that many atheists claim that atheism is not a belief system, makes no claims, and has no requirements to follow, so there's no way to argue against atheism itself.
i will go along with this idea, and argue against the most frequently used arguments of atheists instead of atheism itself.disclaimer # 1: this is not an argument against atheism or all atheists.
no, rather this is an argument against the most frequently used claims and arguments made by the atheists i speak to on twitter.
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OneEyedJoe
Screw it. I’ll play. I’m in a weird mood today and this just irritated me more…
Since you seem to like disclaimers, I’ll give one of my own, when I refer to atheists below, lets all assume I’m talking about atheists that actually know what they’re talking about and aren’t just reciting talking points they’ve heard from a friend that watched a youtube video of Richard dawkins once.
"You must only accept scientific evidence as truth"
You’ve misframed the “argument” (I won’t nit-pick like you probably would if I were to make a similar mistake by calling an assertion an argument. Oops, I guess I kinda did.) made by atheists. The point is not that things are only true if they’ve been proven scientifically, the idea here is that by definition something that makes no testable claims cannot be shown to be true or untrue. Therefore religion is a terrible way to “truth” because it makes no testable claims (or if it does make a testable claim, they often fail). If something makes a testable claim, it can be tested using the scientific method and therefore shown to be true or untrue. If something does not make a testable claim, it by definition cannot be tested in any way (via the scientific method or otherwise) and therefore is impossible to demonstrate as true. Claiming something is “truth” when it cannot be shown to be such is disingenuous at best and an outright lie at worst – yet this is what most religions do.
In short, your rebuttal was a straw-man.
"The Multiverse Explains the Fine-Tuning (and perhaps the origin) of our Universe"
This isn’t so much an “atheist argument” as it is an idea in cosmology (one, I might add, of many) to explain much of the universe, and it’s explanation of what theists love to describe as “fine-tuning” is more of a side-effect. Your criticism of the origin of the theory is meaningless – how an idea came about does not influence it’s accuracy. Plus you’d need a citation to convince me that the origin of the idea was in an attempt to explain the apparent fine-tuned nature of our universe. So I’ll just ignore that bit. The idea of multiple universes with different physical constants that are balanced differently, some of which contain life and some of which do not, is just one of many explanations for the apparently fine-tuned nature of the universe. Another might be that since life is relatively complex, it requires some fine-tuning and we just got lucky. Or, perhaps there are an infinite variety of life forms that could possibly exist, and which one arises (and subsequently marvels at how perfectly suitable the universe seems to be for life) depends on the physical constants that happen to be in play and therefore always appears to be in an environment that is perfectly suited to it.
The point is that there’s a very valid alternate explanation for why the chemistry of life works in our universe aside from “god did it.” We don’t necessarily know that there are multiple universes out there, or what, but the point is that god is not necessary to explain any of it.
Furthermore people who promote the idea of the multiverse are considerably less likely than a theist to criticize someone for pointing out that there’s insufficient evidence to prove it. It’s also not so much a philosophical idea as it is something that the math says is possible and therefore a good area to explore scientifically. You are correct that the theory doesn’t explain the origin of the multiverse, but it doesn’t attempt to either so you can’t really hold that against it.
"The Moral Values of Modern Atheists are Much Superior to the Moral Values of Yahweh"
There are objective definitions of morality – one I think frames things in a particularly useful way is Sam Harris’ idea that the moral course should be, if nothing else, to avoid the scenario of the absolute greatest amount of human suffering. I think that YHWH could’ve done a much better job to that end.Even without an objective definition of morality, you can easily be more moral that the god of the bible even by his own rules. Don’t murder is one of his rules, yet he constantly did it – therefore I (having never murdered) am immediately morally superior in that regard. In fact the only way to explain the bible in a way that makes it seem like any significant portion of YHWH’s actions are moral is to add in some later reward that no one actually knows to exist while simultaneously assuming that “god knows best.” If you want to define morality as being whatever actions are taken by YHWH, then he is by definition the most moral entity. However, I would like to assume that most people see murder, forcing a woman to marry her rapist, and many of the other atrocities committed by YHWH as immoral actions. If we can agree on that, then we should immediately agree that most atheists (and theists alike) are morally superior to the god of the bible.
"Logic, Mathematics, and Morals are the Things We Should Base our Lives On"
Logic and mathematics (leaving morals out since it doesn’t really fit here, and I’m not sure why you included it) are a good way to determine what is true, and have been shown to be effective in this regard countless times. Sure you have to make some assumptions to make them useful, but the assumption that 1+1=2 is a little less of a leap than the assumption that because I thought about something I wanted and it happened there must be some invisible man in the sky reading my mind and giving me stuff."Logic tells us that the only things which exist are those which can be naturally explained by physical processes"
This is the first time I’ve heard anyone make this statement. The closest I’ve come is that so far so many of the things that were previously explained by the actions of one deity or another have been demonstrably proven to be caused by natural processes that require not divine intervention. If you observe the trend, it seems reasonable to expect that everything will eventually be similarly explained. The god of the gaps is constantly finding himself with smaller and smaller gaps in which to reside. Sure, that’s not proof that such a god is not controlling or influencing some phenomena that we don’t understand, but it’s a good reason not to expect that to be the case.
"The time-space-matter universe began to exist with no cause"
Firstly, I don’t think this is the claim, I think the claim is that we don’t know if there was a cause or what it was.Secondly, it’s a much more reasonable claim to make that a completely unordered sea of particles and forces that have a net energy of zero sprang into being with no cause than it is to claim that an all-powerful, omnibenevolent, sentient being sprang into existence with no cause.
Thirdly, it can be demonstrated that particles spring into existence and annihilate one another constantly all around us without any order to it. If the universe sprang into being with no cause, the natural cause would likely be a similar mechanism.
"Moral values evolved and developed separately from religious beliefs in early humans, therefore, that is why we are free to reject religion while clinging to moral values"
There’s a fair amount of evidence to support the idea that a conscience and sense of morality developed prior to religious belief – animals from primates to dogs to mice demonstrate many similar tendencies. They are necessary for a social animal to maintain a society and a society is beneficial to a species survival (in some cases, at least) thus we evolved to have a certain level of moral compass because it benefitted our species’ chances of survival. Morals are demonstrably necessary on some level to maintain a society and while society is not absolutely necessary for the survival of humans, it’s rather important. Religion is not necessary for society, and this is demonstrated by many people living just fine without it.
"Atheism is not a belief system and it makes no claims, therefore you cannot lump atheists together as making the same claims." (But then sometimes the same atheists make this statement:"You are making a 'straw man' argument against atheists. NO atheist ever makes that claim!")
Yup, the statement that “No atheist ever makes that claim” is hyperbole. What’s your point?
"Religion is evil"
I think this is usually more of a personal assessment based on observed facts. It’s not necessarily a reason not to believe in god, but the conclusion one comes to if when one loses said belief. Personally I believe that religion was probably somewhat necessary in the early development of human civilization, it’s just had some rather regrettable and long-term side effects that I’d really like to be rid of."No evidence for any god exists anywhere"
Having fun taking hyperbole and disproving it? It’s pretty easy, huh? The point is that there’s roughly equal amounts of evidence that god exists as there is that there’s a unicorn the size of a hydrogen atom dancing around on my desk. Yet many people believe one of those while I don’t expect I’d find many who would believe the other.
"A good God would never allow unnecessary suffering"
You’re falling back on the crutch of using god as a definition of what is good and/or necessary. The only explanation you can come up with is that if god allowed some suffering to happen, then it’s necessary for some reason we’re not privy to. I think the burden of proof lies on you that river blindness, childhood leukemia, tsunamis, HIV, etc are necessary since that is the claim you’re making. It seems quite unnecessary to me."Atheism is the superior mindset to hold, because that is the mindset we were born with"
This is a pretty stupid statement, and one I’ve never heard made by any atheist that thinks about things prior to saying them. Now, if the argument is that god should have made us to naturally know everything about him so that we’d all end up believing in the same god (vs having countless religions, sects, and denominations, many of which claim to be the exclusive path to god) then I think this is a pretty good point – why wouldn’t god give us a fighting chance to start on the right track?Anyway, the rest of your post was just stupid nonsense so I’m not going to bother. Actually, by that standard I’m not sure why I bothered with the first bit. Oh well.
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42
No end to JW logic, Oranges can make you gay
by James Mixon ini was told that today by a jw...no more to say.
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OneEyedJoe
Can water make you gay? Most homosexuals that I know drink it, bathe/shower in it, and some even have enormous pools of it in their back yard!