Infographics
11 free, shareable graphics covering JW doctrine, history, policy, and accountability. Download individually or grab the full set.
Chronology of Failed Prophecies
A timeline of every major Watchtower date that came and went — 1874, 1914, 1925, 1975 and more — each stamped FAILED, with notes on how the dates were quietly adjusted afterward.
607 BCE vs. 587 BCE — The Date That Drives 1914
Compares the Watchtower's chronology (Jerusalem fell in 607 BCE) against the archaeological and historical consensus of 587/586 BCE — and explains why a 20-year discrepancy matters so much to JW doctrine.
The 1919 Inspection Gap
Asks why Jesus would have chosen the Watchtower in 1919 as his "faithful slave" when the organization was still teaching pyramidology, celebrating pagan holidays, and recovering from its own failed 1914 prediction.
Doctrinal Flip-Flops & Reversals
Documents the official positions the Watchtower has reversed — organ transplants, vaccinations, blood fractions, the "superior authorities," the King of the North — organized by topic with before-and-after comparisons.
The Overlapping Generations Doctrine
Shows how "this generation" stretched from a single lifetime (~70 years) to 120+ years after the 2010 redefinition, which links two overlapping groups of anointed individuals to keep 1914 relevant.
The "Faithful & Discreet Slave" Power Funnel
Traces how the identity of the "faithful and discreet slave" narrowed from all 144,000 anointed Christians down to the handful of men on the Governing Body — a 2012 shift that concentrated all spiritual authority at the top.
The Blood Paradox: Banning the Whole, Allowing the Parts
Illustrates the contradiction at the heart of the blood policy: whole blood and its four primary components are forbidden, yet dozens of fractions derived from those same components are permitted as a matter of personal conscience.
The BITE Model Applied to Jehovah's Witnesses
Applies Steven Hassan's BITE Model (Behavior, Information, Thought, and Emotional control) to the Watchtower, with concrete examples in each category that illustrate how high-control group dynamics operate.
Shunning: Public Spin vs. Internal Reality
Side-by-side comparison of what Watchtower spokespeople say to journalists about shunning versus what internal publications actually instruct members to do — complete social and family isolation.
Australian Royal Commission — Case Study 29
Summarizes the ARC findings on the Jehovah's Witnesses: 1,006 alleged perpetrators identified in internal files, the two-witness rule barrier, Geoffrey Jackson's testimony, and the commission's verdict that the response was "woefully inadequate."
Pennsylvania Grand Jury — 17 Indictments
Covers the Pennsylvania grand jury investigation into JW child sexual abuse: 17 indicted individuals, secret "blue envelope" files kept on known abusers, the two-witness rule used to shield perpetrators, and failures to report to authorities.