Hellothere, Beth Sarim, and others, when I made the post which says "... get out while you still can get out alive ..." I was not being entirely serious. I was being partly serious and largely comical (and theatrical). Furthermore, my post was not saying JWs who believe in the JW religion should get out. Instead I was saying those JWs who are PIMOs should get out. Since PIMO means Physically In Mentally Out, that means the PIMOs no longer believe in the religion (other than possibly parts of it).
Hellothere, you made a good point though about those who were born in and who also have JW family members. But I wasn't specifically urging anyone to officially leave the religion (such as by "disassociation"). [I have not even officially left the religion.] A person could physically get out, in the sense of simply ceasing to attend meetings inside the kingdom halls and ceasing to engage in field service outside of their home. For example, some of them could attend meetings only on Zoom (despite the governing now strongly discouraging most JWs to such) and engage in field service time only by writing one letter per month. Perhaps to attend the Memorial that now would have to be in person, but that would only be one day per year. By doing such they would not be at risk of being killed inside a kingdom hall by an angry wacko person. Those things would be easy to do if they don't have any JW family members living in their home.
I was raised as a JW ("born in") but about 10 years after I began living by myself I started becoming PIMO, and within a few years after that I was mostly POMO. When I became mostly POMO I began reading the entire Bible (reading some Bible books in one English translation another Bible books in other translations). I read through the whole Bible - including the Apocrypha and some books which didn't even make it into the Apocrypha.
Furthermore, probably some of the Mentally Out JWs who live in the same home as believing JWs family members, might still be able to reduce the number of days in which they go inside a kingdom hall, and the amount of time they spend going door door in field service (and the number of days in which they go out in field service).