rebel8: I understand. Your experience has a lot of merit. The path you found for achieving a better way of thinking involved a formal method that required academic discipline.
It was different for me. I learned about the Scientific Method in High School. I graduated in 1970 and was deep into the "Borg". I faced going to jail for not going to the Army and Viet Nam. I didn't go to college until 1978 and I was still a Witness attending meetings. In the mean time (right after High School), I "pioneered", managed to spend 2 and a half years in Bethel, and most importantly, I read like crazy. I read heavy stuff (Cosmology, Quantum Physics, Biology, etc). The important thing I noticed was the language used in magazines like Scientific American and other literature. I learned how far one could go without stepping out of a formalism that would negate one's argument or conclusions.
I suppose that kind of criticality is what eventually led me to leave Bethel (I had a lot of issues there) until I could bring myself to leave the Organization altogether. Of course, I didn't know too many people who would attend college after going to Bethel and still attended meetings. I caught a little hell for it and eventually, I just left NY and headed West where I managed to get lost.
I grant you this: I took a Logic class once that enlightened me in a way I would not have conceived, at least not as concretely. I was finally able to put names to ideas I knew but could not make more material. The formality of Logic has given me a weapon that I can use to combat the ill-formed opinions of my rabidly political friends. I wish everyone was forced to take such a lesson in a formal setting. I value formal education highly, but I realize that it's not the only way to achieve higher reasoning powers and intellectual discrimination. I've known individuals with high degrees who can't wipe their asses without a set of instructions. On the other hand, there are many famous scientists and discoverers who were "self-taught" and achieved things important enough to have a place in history (Thomas Edison, Charles Babbage, Michael Faraday). Of course it's not so easy today. I can't imagine (unless there's an unusual gift) that someone can just jump into some scientific discipline without the benefit of formal education. Scientific ideas and technology are just too complicated today. I don't think that's true regarding the Arts (music, painting, etc). Unfortunately, for the rest of us, formal education, although it's not a guarantee, is our best bet.
Whichever way it's achieved, there's no doubt that thinking clearly is a most important weapon to defeat false information specially that which comes from cults. The WTBTS had a ring of truth for me, way back when, and I can see why they don't want their followers to obtain higher education. I don't think that they're afraid they'll be found out. I think that they just couldn't handle the questions and arguments from "educated" people that would reveal their "Swiss cheese" universe.
Etude.