Mom leaves the church becomes anti-Mormon.
Mom heavily influences the daughter in her outlook on the church and other things.
Mother and daughter drop out of church attendance, with daughter only attending on rare occasion.
Daughter reads statement in F&T meeting condemning the church's view on LGBT policies.*
Anti-Mormon community exploits the situation.
Mormons react back against the Anti-Mormons.
*It could have been the daughter's idea. It could have been mostly the daughter's opinions. When they invited friends and recorded it they might not have intended it to become what it became. Or it could have been the mother's idea and 100% the mother's words. And intended to create an anti-Mormon icon sympathetic to the public. It doesn't really matter and we probably won't know.
A big question is whether the priesthood leader did the right thing and whether he represents the church. There are 30,000 wards and branches and it likely gets handled 30,000 different ways. Her bishop that wasn't there said he would've allowed the testimony had he been there. There are a lot of extenuating factors that make this impossible to judge, especially the fact that it happened in the heat of the moment, something unplanned, and in those situations humans sometimes do the right thing and sometimes do the wrong thing. It probably was very difficult for that guy to sit there and watch the mother, a known anti-Mormon, who never attends, show up with three rows of LGBT advocates, and watch her daughter dressed up looking like a boy and start reading a written statement that opposed church teachings. I consider myself an LGBT ally, and I'm not sure what I'd do.
Mom heavily influences the daughter in her outlook on the church and other things.
Mother and daughter drop out of church attendance, with daughter only attending on rare occasion.
Daughter reads statement in F&T meeting condemning the church's view on LGBT policies.*
Anti-Mormon community exploits the situation.
Mormons react back against the Anti-Mormons.
*It could have been the daughter's idea. It could have been mostly the daughter's opinions. When they invited friends and recorded it they might not have intended it to become what it became. Or it could have been the mother's idea and 100% the mother's words. And intended to create an anti-Mormon icon sympathetic to the public. It doesn't really matter and we probably won't know.
A big question is whether the priesthood leader did the right thing and whether he represents the church. There are 30,000 wards and branches and it likely gets handled 30,000 different ways. Her bishop that wasn't there said he would've allowed the testimony had he been there. There are a lot of extenuating factors that make this impossible to judge, especially the fact that it happened in the heat of the moment, something unplanned, and in those situations humans sometimes do the right thing and sometimes do the wrong thing. It probably was very difficult for that guy to sit there and watch the mother, a known anti-Mormon, who never attends, show up with three rows of LGBT advocates, and watch her daughter dressed up looking like a boy and start reading a written statement that opposed church teachings. I consider myself an LGBT ally, and I'm not sure what I'd do.

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