The Cult Alcoholics Anonymous ( Lois VS Bill Wilson ) Co founder

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Alcoholics Anonymous The 12 Step Cult Louis VS Bill) Alcoholics Anonymous (South Park Sound)Lois Wilson, the wife of Bill Wilson and co-founder of The Al-Anon Family

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26 Responses to “The Cult Alcoholics Anonymous ( Lois VS Bill Wilson ) Co founder”

  1. quickcap Says:

    @raysny – You’re …
    @raysny – You’re wrong, not just on one level either
    As soon as you used the word “requires”, you were wrong. You DO know what the correct word is, don’t you?
    If you walk into a group of people (even a liberal group – like alcoholics) looking for a fight, you’ll find a fight. It is silly and counterproductive to discuss or debate religion in a mixed group of people. Sounds to me like this is what you do – argue with people instead of listening, and trying to help the guy next to you.

  2. raysny Says:

    The blistering put …
    The blistering put downs of atheists and agnostics in the rooms and literature are not abstractions or metaphors.

    The program requires faith in a “Higher Power”, then describes that HP as God.

  3. quickcap Says:

    @raysny – I am an …
    @raysny – I am an agnostic – more and more so as I age. I am also a member of AA sober for over 40 years. I have never found a conflict between my personal beliefs and the program as it is expressed in the BB. Much of our program deals in abstractions and interpretation of the literature. If one is unwilling or intellectually unable to understand the abstractions little progress can be made.

  4. coomadoug Says:

    Monster

    You …
    Monster

    You could have quit playing marbles. Dont give credit to bullshit. You did it yourself…its ok to claim it

  5. monsterhockey7 Says:

    So busy looking for …
    So busy looking for answers, while all this life passes you by. I’m probably the youngest sober one in here, at 26 with over 13 months, and could give a about all this bickering. AA worked for me, and there may be a god that had a part in or maybe not, I don’t know. I don’t need to waste my time on Youtube arguing about it, I’m to busy living. I’m glad that I’m not so ignorant that I have to push my views and beliefs on others. Again, AA worked for me, you don’t like it, you

  6. monsterhockey7 Says:

    I have read “We …
    I have read “We Agnostics”

    The question, raysny, is have YOU read my motto – “you don’t like AA, then You.”

  7. raysny Says:

    The question, …
    The question, monsterhockey7, is have YOU read “We Agnostics”?

    It’s about atheists and agnostics finding God, at which point, they are no loner atheists or agnostics.

    “In this book you will read the experience of a man who thought he was an atheist.” How condescending.

  8. coomadoug Says:

    Start by loving …
    Start by loving yourself, knowing you have the power and staying away from religouss crackpots in AA

  9. andreasheinz Says:

    Sure, but the way …
    Sure, but the way Lois clap hands is quite totally awesome (technically speaking)
    like the message or not, this vid is brilliant

    BTW “wish i could”
    watch?v=VJU1bbBC3g8

  10. monsterhockey7 Says:

    This is the most …
    This is the most stupid video ever created by retards!!! Have to believe in a God? Why is there a whole chapter titled “We Agnostics?” I know people that haven’t read a word of the literature, never worked a step, only go to meetings and have been sober longer than I’ve been alive. For some, it’s just hanging out with other sober drunks that keeps them sober. Everything in AA is A SUGGESTED PROGRAM OF RECOVERY. Wish I could be AA’s spokesman, my motto-”you don’t like AA, then You.

  11. dix345 Says:

    There are many ways …
    There are many ways to get sober. AA is one way. A sense of humor is good to have; a lot of funny events occur in life. Check out for yourself the many methods available and choose one that fits you.

  12. dix345 Says:

    joedigits — this …
    joedigits — this is just another of your anonymous poison pen letters. read one, read them all

  13. blamethenile Says:

    @joedigits You …
    @joedigits You might want to work on the timeliness and effectiveness of your insults and snappy retorts. Maybe oldstumpcutter could give you some pointers. Just a suggestion.

  14. joedigits Says:

    Blamethenile is a …
    Blamethenile is a laughing stock. ( there, I’ve said it again) A collection of fallacious accusations contrived just to malign and slander Alcoholics Anonymous.

  15. dix345 Says:

    joedigits — troll …
    joedigits — troll. you cant even do that correctly.

  16. dix345 Says:

    so what joedigits. …
    so what joedigits. No one here cares what you ‘think’.

  17. blamethenile Says:

    @joedigits You …
    @joedigits You don’t need my permission to make a fool of yourself. As you were.

  18. joedigits Says:

    @blamethenile …
    @blamethenile Carry on! You have my permission to make a fool of yourself anyway you want to. As said earlier, a few of your videos have serious content. The rest are based on obviously fallacious premises and serve only to make you a laughing stock..

  19. oldstumpcutter Says:

    This is why you …
    This is why you need a sponsor thats got a sponsor thats got a sponsor…

  20. dix345 Says:

    two faced? you …
    two faced? you wote the book joedigits. When joedigits accuses someone of something, joe digits has just done or is about to do the same thing himself.
    that is called: canting hypocrite.

  21. dix345 Says:

    you are a troll …
    you are a troll miket. And a stupid one as well.
    hysterical parnoia? you have an argument with an atheist, trying to tell him he is not logical. Stupid troll

  22. blamethenile Says:

    @joedigits- One …
    @joedigits- One more time, from wikipedia-

    “In Internet slang, a troll is someone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum, chat room or blog, with the primary intent of provoking other users into an emotional response, or of otherwise disrupting normal on-topic discussion.”

    When have we ever mischaracterized AA? As for slanderous misinformation, same question.

  23. joedigits Says:

    @blamethenile – …
    @blamethenile – you are describing yourself. Anyone who disagrees with you, you label as a troll.
    Who, more than anyone else on YouTube is guilty of mischaracterizing Alcoholics Anonymous? No one. Some of your videos do have reasonable viewpoints and might be taken seriously, but others are complete misrepresentations that can only be described as hysterical paranoia intended to slander and misinform.

  24. andreasheinz Says:

    @ joe some …
    @ joe some old-timers change
    Xtreme aa-member ’till death rates got low

  25. blamethenile Says:

    @joedigits–No, I …
    @joedigits–No, I have no respect, or tolerance for those who try to force their opinions and beliefs on others, or to drown out the voices of others by attacks, name-calling, and mischaracterizations.

  26. Maria Says:

    The awful truth of my alcoholism hit me when I wanted to quit drinking and found that I couldn’t. It was AA that finally opened up my eyes to the “disease” I was carrying. However, my life had become unmanageable long before I ever took my first drink, due to my own father’s alcoholism and the devastating effect this had on my family. Needless to say, by the time I started drinking (at sixteen) I was ripe for addiction. I began going to meetings at twenty-four and gave up alcohol, but I still continued to get high on drugs for many years after that. Finally, at the age of 50, I gave everything up and truly got sober. Through it all, the lessons of AA always rang true; and I’m convinced that were it not for this organization, I would have either gone insane, been incarcerated or died. It doesn’t matter how imperfect AA is, or that at least one of its original founders may have been a womanizing egomaniac, who smoked himself to death, and who experimented with spiritualism and LSD. The bottom line is that AA started me on a journey of self-realization that quite literally saved my life. Thirty years after attending my first meeting, I’m still learning and will forever remain grateful for the “gift of sobriety.

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