rcrocket wrote:There you go. Evidence of suppression may be seen from the Tanners' claim that the Church published the materials only two months after obtaining the fragments. I got it. If you want to suppress material, make sure you publish it so that it does not really appear that you are suppressing it.
Look, I don't doubt that the Church wanted to get the leg up on publication rights and an explanation. I see that frequently in the Church (as well as other cases -- the Dead Sea Scrolls project, for instance). But I hardly see this as a good example of suppression. Two freakin' months, for crying out loud.
I think you are misinterpreting the evidence, Bob. As the Tanners' account states, the Church *was* actively suppressing the material. Unfortunately, an outsider had managed to get his hands on some photos and was about to release them. So, the Church had to scramble in order to get the photos out ASAP. (Otherwise, it really would seem to everyone that the Church was hiding something.)
And to say, as Scratch claims, that the Church continues to suppress the facsimiles -- citing Gee? How could that possibly be, with Larson's publication and the Improvement Era's?
You haven't yet fully established that Larson's photos came by way of the Church. Mightn't he have gotten them from the source mentioned in the Tanner article?
Do you, Rollo, really subscribe to Scratch's view that the Church is suppressing knowledge of the facsimiles?
I never said that the Church was suppressing "knowledge" of the facsimilies or other Book of Abraham materials. Instead, as per Gee, they are suppressing access to them, probably out of fear that critics will notice yet another problem with them. (The so-called "two ink" theory regarding the KEP further bolsters this observation.)