Your question is a continuation from http://exmormon.org/phorum/read.php?2,1135792 ****Hot off the press****SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ― A private alert system, similar to the publicEmergency Broadcast System (EAS) used by local law enforcementand public officials to warn of immediate emergencies such aschild abductions, prison escapes or weather related warnings,was sounded during the twilight hours of January 10, 2014.The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and the First Presidency ofthe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were summonedto an emergency meeting according to a confidential-anonymoussource high-placed within the Utah-based Mormon Church.Sources report three unnamed General Authorities of the Churchhave coalesced to announce their disaffection from the worldwideinstitution. A pending press conference is said to include the threeAuthorities and their attorneys, who will address truth claims,secretive meetings, contracts, and top-secret forgivable milliondollar loans given to the 15 Apostles.Plans are to release personal experiences of a clandestine templerite that guarantees select LDS members eternal appointments inthe after-life. One such description has been circulating on theinternet by the managing editor of MormonThink.com, Tom Phillips,a prior Stake President from England. His story is easily found atThe LDS Church’s non-transparent-hidden financials, estimated inthe tens of billions of dollars, will be discussed, including moneylaundering, tax evasion, and confidential monetary reward systemskept hidden from the average Mormon tithe payer and governmenttaxing authorities.The announcement is expected to have monumental consequencesfor the corporation’s squeaky-clean, morality-based, family-orientedimage ― one governed by 15 men who are sustained as prophets,seers and revelators claiming direct communication with Deity.In a prior news article that caught the LDS Church off guard, the NewYork Times disclosed the disaffection of Sweden’s highest Churchleader, Hans Mattsson, who headed the Church as an Area Authority.He searched the web, asked questions, received little or no goodanswers from the highest rank and file leadership, and now doubtsthe truth claims of the Church. In the July 20, 2013 article Mattssondivulged, “I felt like I had an earthquake under my feet. EverythingI’d been taught, everything I’d been proud to preach about andwitness about just crumbled under my feet. It was such a terriblepsychological and nearly physical disturbance.”Mattsson is not alone in his quest for truth and the ramificationsare beginning to spell C-A-T-A-S-T-R-O-P-H-I-C for the Utah-basedfaith. Reporter John Iadarloa, host of TYT University, spells out some ofthe concerns in his piece “How the Internet is Destroying Mormonism.”Reports of another growing disaffection from high-placed Mormonswas broadcast on the internet last year. A General Authority from theFirst Quorum of Seventy and a returned LDS Mission President weremeeting secretly with Grant Palmer, a retired teacher of 34 years forthe Church Education System (CES). Palmer described his secretmeetings in an on-line article published at MormonThink.com in 2013.Questioning the faith, these leaders sought out Palmer, whose work,“An Insider’s View of Mormon Origins” (published in 2002 and sold atDeseret Books and BYU bookstores) is making its round into the handsof even the highest levels of the elite Mormon hierarchy. Some arecoming to the factual conclusion that the Mormon faith is not what itclaims to be ― a literal restoration of the original Church of thehistorical Jesus of Nazareth.Palmer’s book represents more than thirty years of researchconducted into Mormon origins, including: the Church's founderJoseph Smith, his early life, the Book of Mormon, Smith's visions, andthe restoration of priesthood authority.Palmer's meticulous annotations suggest that most Latter-day Saintsremain unaware of the significance of these discoveries, and he givesa brief survey for anyone who has ever wanted to know more aboutthese issues.Historians who have looked closer at the foundational stories ofMormonism and its source documents have restored historicalelements, including a nineteenth-century world view, that have beenmisunderstood, if not forgotten. These views are kept from the LDSfaithful at large.Adding to the heightened suspicion that something major is about tobreak, the Church’s own Deseret News reported on a young SingleAdult members conference that opened at the Grady GammageAuditorium on the Arizona State University campus on January 10,2014. “Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve and hiswife, Sister Patricia Holland, were expected to attend the conferenceand offer remarks. Organizers said Elder Holland was called away bychurch leaders on an "emergency assignment."”Update to follow.Edited 7 time(s). Last edit at 01/14/2014 03:17AM by jiminycricket.