My wife said she had seen a notification from the local branch to the effect that nothing serious happened, there may have been a disturbance at the convention, and a couple of people fainted. I didn't see the notification.
shepherdless
JoinedPosts by shepherdless
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27
ANGOLA - JW Regional Convention target of attack.
by EdenOne inaccording to news sources in luanda, angola (read it here, although it's in portuguese language), a regional convention of the jw's taking place this weekend at the outskirts of capital luanda was targeted yesterday, friday, by what may be described as a 'terrorist attack'.. more than 400 attendees (mostly female) passed out in rapid succession in the vicinity of a toilet at the convention place.
reportedly, toxic gas devices were planted there by 3 young members of unita, the main political party that opposed mpla, the dominant regime party in angola since its independence in 1975.
43 people were rushed to the hospital and a few remain there, under medical surveillance.
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Miracle Wheat trial transcript
by VM44 inhere is the miracle wheat trial transcript..
miraclewheattrial.pdf
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shepherdless
Just in response to Anders's questions:
There were no lower court rulings. Typically in a common law legal system, such as USA, civil cases where the amount claimed is above a certain level will be heard by a trial division of the Supreme Court. Any appeal will then go to the appellate division of the same Supreme Court (typically 3 judges).
I recall that Anders lives in a country which has a civil law system, not a common law system. Typically in civil law countries, the equivalent of the Supreme Court only hears appeals.
Just as a general note to anyone put off by the prospect of reading 400+ pages, there is a citation summary in the last 4 pages. In short, Russell sued the newspaper for defamation, lost at trial, appealed on a point of law, and lost again.
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What is the watchtower going to do when
by pepperheart inwhat is the watchtower going to do when the money runs out ??
?.
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shepherdless
Imagine having a business where your customer just hand you their money, and you don't have to pay tax on it.
How could a religion ever go bust?!
Yes, you would think that they never could. Theoretically, any preacher could start a religion and impose a 10% tithe, and if that preacher were able to get just 10 adherents, then the preacher would earn an average income, tax free. Must be one of the easiest ways to make money around. And the one thing that every Christian denomination agrees, is that God needs your money.
But despite it all, religions do sometimes go broke. All that administration, poor management, and too many snouts in the trough. And tax free doesn't help if you are not making a profit.
Canadian stores have run a similar course to Watchtower.
Yes the Sears example is a good indication of what is likely to happen. There are differences, but I can't think of an example where a business has sold branches and later survived.
Ever since I saw the 'bunker' videos I have been waiting for the GB to announce that Armageddon has arrived, to send everyone off to their designated shelters, and then flee the country with their money to whatever off-shore bank account country will have them. Then I expect to see news accounts of bizarre shelter stories.
A few people have wondered if/when the Gov Body will run off with the money. They don't need to. They have your money already. They are more likely to take the approach Scientology seems to be taking; just let the religion die a slow death and keep milking it, hanging onto a big real estate empire. If all the dubs left, they would still have the money and assets, legally, and there is nothing anyone can do.
Anyway, that is my 2c worth.
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36
What is the watchtower going to do when
by pepperheart inwhat is the watchtower going to do when the money runs out ??
?.
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shepherdless
I am one who thinks they do have significant money problems. They definitely did when Lett famously said they had more going out then in. Laying off a lot of bethelites might have stemmed the losses, and time will tell whether it is too little too late. The behaviour of Watchtower does suggest an organisation suffering tight financial constraints, with it selling halls and facilities, consolidating printing and reducing or eliminating what is being printed.
A while ago, I went through the Britain accounts in detail. I never got the chance to write a thread on it, and it is a complicated topic, but they show a large increase in donations and more money going offshore. Australian accounts show the same, and from memory the Canadian ones do as well. That might all sound healthy, until you realise that the donors are the congregations, not individuals.
Just to explain that further, from the UK figures, (from memory now), I calculated that the Britain branch (IBSA and WTBTS combined) were effectively getting £50 per publisher per month, in donations. But I doubt that if you look at the published figures for individual congregations, you would get close to that amount. If someone were to go through the accounts of each individual congregation and see how much they received in donations from individuals, and add that all up (a task far too big for me), you should be able to determine the real rate that Watchtower is losing money in Britain. That loss is being covered by raiding congregation accounts and selling assets, for the time being, but they can't do that forever.
The same issue is probably occurring in all the other wealthier "lands".
That former circuit overseer recently on reddit confirmed that his Central American branch was subsidised and couldn't pay its way, and needed $6 million in subsidy p.a. If branches there can't pay their way, then there is little hope of any African branch paying its way.
I don't think that there is an imminent financial collapse, but I do think that it is a much bigger problem for Watchtower than decline in membership.
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Intro... Back after a long non-lurking hiatus
by jwundubbed ini hope this is the right place to put this.
so, i joined this site a while ago because i was looking for conversation and to help people.
i think at the time i actually needed to be around the kinds of people that i had grown up with as well.
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shepherdless
Welcome back, jwundubbed.
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Finland Knife attack: 2 dead, one of them a Jehovah's Witness
by ILoveTTATT2 intwo people dead and 7 injured in what is apparently a terrorist attack in finland.
one of the deceased was a jehovah´s witness woman who was preaching in the square.. where was jehovah protecting her?
especially considering she was preaching?https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/finnish-police-stabbing-investigated-as-possible-terrorism/2017/08/19/187a034e-84b8-11e7-9e7a-20fa8d7a0db6_story.html?utm_term=.f596f9250d70.
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shepherdless
Actually I was speaking a bit tongue-in-cheek.
Okay. I thought you were being serious.
Just to give my own perspective, I am not totally against guns. In Aust, particularly on farms, they are often a necessary tool. However, to get a licence to own one, you need to satisfy a test and have a reason to need one. Also the types of guns are restricted, so that most people can't own a pistol or semi-automatic, for example. Ammunition can't be bought without a licence, and gun safes are mandatory.
There are some guns on the black market, but overall gun deaths in Australia (apart from suicides) are very rare, despite there still being a reasonable number of legally owned guns in circulation. I think it is partly because anyone with any sort of violent criminal record can't get a licence, and partly because even when laws were at their most lenient, there were never many pistols in circulation. (Relevant because, statistically, pistols are by far the biggest killer in USA.)
Sorry to derail the thread.
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Finland Knife attack: 2 dead, one of them a Jehovah's Witness
by ILoveTTATT2 intwo people dead and 7 injured in what is apparently a terrorist attack in finland.
one of the deceased was a jehovah´s witness woman who was preaching in the square.. where was jehovah protecting her?
especially considering she was preaching?https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/finnish-police-stabbing-investigated-as-possible-terrorism/2017/08/19/187a034e-84b8-11e7-9e7a-20fa8d7a0db6_story.html?utm_term=.f596f9250d70.
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shepherdless
What Finland needs is a gun culture like the U.S.
Given the ridiculous gun death rates in USA, I don't think too many outside of USA are interested in that "gun culture".
Recently there was a shooting here of two people, one the gunman himself. He was apparently getting started when a college student with a concealed weapons permit drew his own gun. When the gunman saw the other guy was armed, he turned the gun on himself...a fact that the media didn't include.
Sounds like b.s. No link. No verifiable details. In any event, how can you possibly know this is a true story if it is "... a fact that the media didn't include"?
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shepherdless
I always found Shiite cleric hats amusing; like giant marshmallows:
But if they are anti-american, then the white marshmallow turns black, as if influenced by Hollywood:
Nothing beats those Orthodox bishops, though, in the silly hat competition:
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The "Jesus is Michael" teaching soon to go?
by Island Man incould the teaching that jesus is michael the archangel, be soon to be discarded?
first of all, watchtower is big on image and this is one of those teachings that paint the jw religion as being rather kooky and heretical.
secondly, this teaching is not an original watchtower teaching but one they inherited from their second adventist ancestry.
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shepherdless
Just an anecdote in support of Island Man.
Until my wife became a "return to Jehovah", I thought JWism was just another quaint fundamentalist Christian religion. When I heard the "Jesus is Michael" thing, it definitely made me think that JWs were just a bunch of silly nutters. This was well before the ARC, and before I had stumbled on sites such as this, or found out the bOrg was a cult.
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JWs biggest problem is not doctrinal issues
by Chook init's biggest problems are associated with its lack of genuine love and concern for the rank& file.
the average person doesn't need a food critic to tell them their hamburger is shit, in the same manner the average person can discern kindness and love.
gbs fake love and concern is evident in the way head office deals with victims of sexual abuse by jw clergy.
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shepherdless
Looks like you are right, joe134cd. I read the wrong numbers somewhere.