warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
I'm not LDS and I'm not offended by it.
Of course, not everyone is.

I'm not LDS and I'm not offended by it.
Because the guy is dead. He is unable to join any new organizations anymore. His life is over.
By posthumously signing him up for the hitler youth, a manchester united fan club, or mormonism, or WHATEVER, you are implying that he endorsed these organizations in some way.
That's why it's offensive and disrespectful to his memory. The guy's made all his choices. Don't make any new ones for him. It's not your place.
Ah, the "everyone else is doing it" excuse. Nope, not good enough
Only his mortal existence on Earth is over.Because the guy is dead. He is unable to join any new organizations anymore. His life is over.
I mean, seriously, you seem to miss what I am saying people are free to accept or reject what we have done for them
No, because they are dead.
Dead. Gone. Deceased. Expired. No more.
Feel free to convert the living. Let the dead Rest In Peace.
edit: Seriously though, your inability to understand why someone could find this disrespectful and offensive is very telling. It's like you've been ignoring everything that I've been saying just so you can go to sleep tonight not wondering whether this sort of thing is moral or not.
But I guess that answers my initial question of "Do Mormon leaders realize how offensive this sort of thing is to some people?".. The answer is "Yes", but they don't care. How nice..
I can see legitimate offense if someone's religion suspected that the baptising would be harming the souls of their dead ancestors. Like (for example) if it distressed their souls to be subjected to rituals, etc.
This.Speaking for myself, I would take the view expressed by Eran. I don't think that "baptising" a dead person can do them any harm because I don't think that the dead can be harmed. It wouldn't bother me if a Mormon "baptised" any of my dead relatives or me after my death. I wouldn't want to be a Mormon, but I don't think a dead person can be recruited into any group, so if Mormons "baptise" me after my death, that doesn't make me a Mormon.
Does the Mormon belief in a goddess married to God the Father come from any Biblical basis, or from the revelation of Joseph Smith alone?
Continuing with the marriage analogy, do Mormons believe that Jesus was conceived through some sort of god-sex?
How does the ritual of baptising a deceased work?
Do Mormons believe in hell or something similar?
Is it also possible to stand in as a proxy for a living person?Well, the name and information of a deceased person is identified. We practice baptism by immersion, for the living and the dead. In the temple, an individual stands in as a proxy and is baptized in their name.
Will, all, non-Mormons move to this afterlife of suffering?Not in the traditional sense. Those who do not repent of their sins, in this life or the next, will have to suffer for them, but not eternally - after that, they will move on to an afterlife that, no matter how wicked they were in this life, is unimaginably better than anything we can experience on earth.
Is it also possible to stand in as a proxy for a living person?
Will, all, non-Mormons move to this afterlife of suffering?
So are other Christians allowed right into Heaven?No. Just people who don't accept Christ's sacrifice for us (whether they do so on earth or in heaven).
So are other Christians allowed right into Heaven?
What part of "we believe in a life after death" don't you get?
it bothers me that you seem to think I am lying here. The fact of the matter is, you haven't said anything I haven't heard before; and just like before, you have yet to explain exactly how anyone is ACTUALLY worse off as a result of what we have done. The dead? Either they don't care or we have done them a service.
Well, why should they? Lots of things are offensive to various people.
Plotinus said:To the non-Mormon (who finds it offensive) such as Warpus, it's viewed in a completely different way, namely identity and belonging. What matters is what group a person belongs to, how they identify themselves, and how other people identify them. From this perspective, to impose an identity upon someone that they do not choose themselves is an extremely offensive thing to do.