rcrocket wrote:Chap wrote:
So the emigrants got massacred, in part, because they were 'barbaric'?
I think it more accurate to say that the emigrants were massacred because the Mormons thought or claimed they were barbaric. News reports of the Fancher train abuses quickly made it to the Los Angeles press.
Whether they were indeed barbaric rests upon the eyewitness testimony of murderers in large part. Maybe they were, maybe they weren't. But, if they were as the witnesses testified, there was no basis for the massacre.
In your first sentence you correct the description on the Amazon website, which read:
The authors find responsibility almost everywhere: in the escalating tensions between the federal government and Mormon authorities, in the 19th-century American culture of violence, in the barbarism of the emigrants and in the unchecked hunger for vengeance the Mormon militiamen felt toward Americans who had opposed their faith.
According to that, the 'barbarism of the emigrants' is just a brute fact alleged (so it is said) by the authors, not a mere opinion of those LDS involved in the massacre.
But then you go on to refer to the fact, which you allege, that "News reports of the Fancher train abuses quickly made it to the Los Angeles press". You do not say "alleged abuses", and thus your phrasing implies that you believe that the people on the Fancher train did commit "abuses" to an extent that is worth raising in the context of explaining why the massacre occurred.
So I am puzzled. Do you or do you not think that acts actually committed by any of the emigrants by way of 'abuses' contributed in a significant way to the occurrence of the massacre?
(I appreciate that you do say that nothing the emigrants did could have
justified their being murdered by the LDS militia).