If I recall, consig also did a similar takedown of Nelson's story about getting robbed at gunpoint in Africa.
Nelson and Paul H. Dunn seem to have more than just their religion in common.

I have a third option that also supports disqualification.Hagoth wrote: ↑Sat Jul 24, 2021 9:40 am There are really only two options when you take into account all of the Nelson stories that have turned out to be demonstrably untrue:
1) Russell M. Nelson is a bald-faced liar
2) Russell M. Nelson is delusional
Either option disqualifies him from being a trustworthy and competent leader.
Reuben this is a really interesting and helpful framework, thanks for sharing! I've never seen it explained like this before, I'm going to have to ponderize this.Reuben wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 5:40 am There are 3 major things that our brains try to keep consistent:
1. The external world
2. Our internal worlds (thoughts, memories, beliefs, actions, expectations, etc.)
3. The inferred internal worlds of people in our social groups
There's legit a system of rewards (peace, euphoria, pride) and punishments (cognitive dissonance, guilt, shame) to keep them all in sync. We all differ on how much our brains weight these
Reuben wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 5:40 amSo here's my third option: President Nelson has a casual relationship with reality and a strong drive for pride instead of shame. And he's risen to a position where nobody calls him on his BS - about spiritual things it's actually fawned over - so he ends up believing it.
yeah, I'm still putting it in the delusional category. He hasn't lost grip on reality but where his own ego is involved he can't always tell where reality ends and fantasy starts.
Let's face it: Anyone who claims to "know" things about religion, invisible all-powerful beings, etc. is delusional. Claiming to "know" things for which there is absolutely no real evidence is delusional.