Emower wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2017 6:05 pm
wtfluff wrote: ↑Fri Jun 30, 2017 2:55 pm
If I support an organization that does a whole lot of bad, and a tiny bit of good, is it OK ignore the "bad" that the organization does, and support the "good"?
It's more complicated then that for me. Some may view the church as evil, quite simply, I don't.
I don't want to put words in wtfluff's mouth but I didn't read the original question as asking whether the church could be considered good or evil. I took it to ask people at what point they decide to cut off their support.
E.g.
If you believe the church is 10% bad and 90% good.
If you believe the church is 25% bad and 75% good.
If you believe the church is 49% bad and 51% good.
If you believe the church is 50% bad and 50% good.
If you believe the church is 51% bad and 50% good.
If you believe the church is 75% bad and 25% good.
If you believe the church is 90% bad and 10% good.
etc.
"Good" and "bad" are entirely subjective and everyone has a line. Someone that believes the church does 90% bad may wonder why someone else stays. Maybe because the person that stays is in the 10% bad camp.
Corsair wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2017 7:45 pm
I agree, it is complicated. How many of you are willing to give up your U.S. citizenship after many unfortunate incidents in U.S. history? Every four years we get people insisting that they are leaving the country because some disagreeable person won the U.S. presidency. Very few people actually do leave. Let's be clear that I am deeply happy and grateful to have been born as a U.S. citizen and I have no interest in changing to some other more "enlightened" country. For one thing, which country is objectively best that all good people should emigrate into?
It's even more complicated than countries.

In the USA there are elections. People get a
say in who runs the show. In the USA the democrats held the presidency, the house, and the senate in 2009 and in 2017 the republicans hold the presidency, the house, and the senate. Church would be wild if every decade or so one faction got their way while the other faction was told to pound sand - only to have the roles reversed every so often.
And things can get bad enough in a country to make people leave (wars, economics, etc.). Usually it's something drastic because leaving it
all behind isn't easy. It's far easier to wait until the next election and hope your side wins so it can tell the other side to pound sand.
I don't view the church as evil either but I think the question was more, where's the line where people decide to drop their support for the church? I know many that bailed after the November policy. It wasn't the policy itself, the policy played more of a "straw that broke the camel's back" role.
Corsair wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2017 7:45 pm
I can't fix the historical challenges of the LDS church, the United States, or humanity in general.
Is it the history or the perceived future that causes people to leave? For instance, someone might believe the church will change but they may also believe that by the time it changes to something palatable they'll be long since dead. Maybe all the history does is shake people up enough to get them to perform a cost/benefit evaluation of imagined future experiences.
We don’t see things as they are, we see them as we are.
– Anais Nin