MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

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_harmony
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _harmony »

beastie wrote:UNBELIEVABLE. It's now not scheduled to be delivered until Dec. 9. Geez Louise!


Merry Christmas.
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.
_TAK
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _TAK »

harmony wrote:
beastie wrote:UNBELIEVABLE. It's now not scheduled to be delivered until Dec. 9. Geez Louise!


Merry Christmas.


A lump of coal would do you better..
God has the right to create and to destroy, to make like and to kill. He can delegate this authority if he wishes to. I know that can be scary. Deal with it.
Nehor.. Nov 08, 2010


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_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

Oddly enough, after sending me an email informing me that it wouldn't be delivered until Dec 9, today I got an email saying it was shipped today.

Amazon is as confused as the rest of the country, it appears.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

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_capt jack
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _capt jack »

In case anyone is interested, CSPAN BookTV is showing a talk by the authors; it airs at 12:00 Eastern Time this Saturday, 4 October.
_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

Thanks for the heads-up, Jack, I'll have my sweetie TIVO it.

by the way, I'm about two thirds of the way through the book. I'll probably finish this weekend, but am going to take a few days to put together my response. I will say that, at this point, my opinion is that TAK's earlier assessment was fairly accurate. I will back that up in some detail later.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

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_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

At least in our area, it looked like cspan's schedule got changed due to coverage of the bail-out. But folks can watch it on their website, which I did last night:

http://www.booktv.org/program.aspx?Prog ... yMedia=Yes

I did get a good opening line for the review I'm going to write of this book from the interview:

"Readers can look at the manuscript and see if they're being manipulated."

My vote is that not only are readers being manipulated, but the authors were manipulating themselves.

A couple of questions had to do with volume 2. Their comments hint that their tactic will be to show that BY was lied to about the event, and didn't know the truth. I already talked about that idea on this thread - the idea that Brigham Young could not have discovered the truth had he really wanted to is nonsense.

They implied that the lie BY believed was basically that the Indians did it. We're being asked to believe that BY received a letter asking if the settlers should participate in destroying the emigrants, replied saying "leave them alone", then found out the massacre occurred, and he wasn't suspicious when he was told "the Indians did it"??????

Brigham Young may have been many things, but stupid wasn't one of them.

For those who are interested, I'm going to take a week or two to write up my review because it will be detailed.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

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_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

As a teaser, here's one example of how I think the author's bias impacted the work:

Massacre, page 98
One extended passage in the August 16 sermon was clearly meant for Washington, possibly in hopes of bringing about a settlement. “I…wish to say to all Gentiles,” Young told non-Mormons in the congregation, to “send word to your friends that they must stop crossing this continent to Calafornia for the indians will kill them.” He wanted Washington to know what it would lose by alienating the Mormons. The Mormon leader was raising the stakes by threatening the flow of goods and people across the middle of the continent. But there was also the practical reality that if the Saints fled to the mountains to fight a guerilla war, they could no longer mediate between emigrants and Indians. “This people have always done good to the travelers,” Young insisted. “They have kept the Indians from injuring them and have done all in their power to save the lives of men, women and children, but all this will cease to be, if our enemies commence war on us.”


This implies that the reason the Indians would start attacking emigrants would be due to the absence of the intervening Mormons, who would have fled. Yet look at the passage omitted in Massacre, but included by Bagley:

“If the United States send their army here and war commences, the travel must stop; your trains must not cross this continent back and forth. To accomplish this I need only say a word to the [tribes], for the Indians will use them up unless I continually strive to restrain them. I will say no more to the Indians, let them alone, but do as you please. And what is that? It is to use them up; and they will do it.” (page 91)


See the difference?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

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_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

Here's one more, in regards to the involvement of George A Smith and Brigham Young. Here's the quote from Massacre, page 70:

In after years Smith’s journey to southern Utah became a matter of controversy, with some interpreting his sermons and even the places he stopped as a deliberate prelude to the Mountain Meadows Massacre less than a month later. John D. Lee’s several posthumously published “confessions” – which appeared two decades after the tour – said that while the party was passing through the Santa Clara canyon, Smith asked, “Brother Lee, what do you think the brethren would do if a company of emigrants should come down through here making threats? Don’t you think they would pitch into them?”

“They certainly would,” Lee replied, to which Smith answered, “I asked Isaac (meaning Haight) the same question, and he answered me just as you do.

Several months after the first publication of the this conversation, another version of Lee’s confessions appeared under the title Mormonism Unveiled. It made the charge against Smith even stronger. “I have always believed, since that day, that General George A. Smith was then visiting Southern Utah to prepare the people for the work of exterminating Captain Fancher’s train of emigrants,” the book said, “and I now believe he was sent for that purpose by the direct command of Brigham Young.” The passage would be used by some writers as key evidence for saying that Smith and Young had planned the massacre.

These statements, however, would have required remarkable prescience on Smith’s part. Even if he knew which trains would take the northern or southern routes to California, it is doubtful he knew their behavior on the road would include making threats against the southern Utah people. Moreover, Lee’s attorney and editor, William W. Bishop, almost certainly reworked Lee’s “confessions” in Mormonism Unveiled to improve its sales, including the charges against Smith and Young. Bishop had a motive before making these changes as his legal fees were tied to the book’s royalties.

Just moments before Lee’s execution – and after he had supposedly written the words in Mormonism Unveiled – Lee talked with a reporter from the then unabashedly anti-Mormon Salt Lake Tribune. The reporter pressed Lee to know what Smith had said to him before the massacre.

“Did he preach hostile to the emigrants?” the reporter asked.

“He was visiting all the settlements and preaching against the emigrants,” Lee said. Then referring to the people killed at Mountain Meadows, he added, “I don’t know that he meant those particular emigrants.” This – Lee’s final statement on the subject – makes it unlikely that he made the statement attributed to him in Mormonism Unveiled, especially since he had been offered his life by prosecutors if he would just charge Smith and Young with ordering the massacre. He went to his death instead.


Here's the passage discussing the same event from Bagley. I have highlighted the portion omitted in Massacre which I find pertinent, page 86:

Smith claimed that he enjoyed his “glorious interview” with the natives of the desert, but Lee found the large numbers of Paiutes that gathered around the Mormons impudent. As Lee translated, the apostle told them the Americans were their enemies and the enemies of the Mormons too. If the Indians helped to fight their mutual adversary, the Saints “would always keep them from want and sickness and give them guns and ammunition to hunt and kill game with, and would also help the Indians against their enemies when they went into war.” This pleased them, Lee recalled, “and they agreed to all that [he] asked them to do.”

During their visit to the Tonaquints, Lee thought Smith was a little fearful of the Indians. Lee hitched up quickly and left. “Those are savage looking fellows,” Smith said after a mile or so. “I think they would make it lively for an emigrant train if one should come this way.” Lee said the Paiutes would attack any train. Smith went into a deep study and said, “Suppose an emigrant train should come along through this southern country, making threats against our people and bragging of the part they took in helping to kill our Prophets, what do you think the brethren would do with them? Would they be permitted to go their way, or would the brethren pitch in and give them a good drubbing?” Lee said the brethren were under the influence of the Reformation and were still red-hot for the gospel. Any train would be attacked and probably destroyed. “I am sure they would be wiped out if they had been making threats against our people.”

Smith seemed delighted with Lee’s answer and rephrased the question, “Do you really believe the brethren would make it lively for such a train?” Lee said they would, and he warned that unless Smith wanted the Saints to attack every train passing through the south, Brigham Young should send direct orders to Dame and Haight to let them pass. The people, Lee said, were bitter, full of zeal, and “anxious to avenge the blood of the Prophets.” Smith said he had asked Haight the same question, and Haight gave the same answer. Smith thought the Paiutes, “with the advantage they had of the rocks, could use up a large company of emigrants, or make it very hot for them.” Lee again warned that if Young wanted emigrants companies to pass unmolested, he must give Dame and Haight explicit instructions “for if they are not ordered otherwise, they will use them up by the help of the Indians.” The conversation convinced Lee that Smith expected every emigrant passing through the territory to be killed. I thought it was his mission to prepare the people for the bloody work,” Lee wrote.

Federal investigators were later convinced Brigham Young sent letters south “authorizing, if not commanding,” the destruction of the Fancher train, but it is unlikely Young would commit such an order to writing. Lee’s tale of his ambiguous conversations with Smith on the Santa Clara may best reflect what actually happened. If Smith gave orders to kill the emigrants, they may have been no more explicit than to “use them up” or “give them a good drubbing.” Mormon leaders often spoke in code words whose meaning was clear only to insiders. One of Young’s favorite phrases, “A word to the wise is sufficient,” meant, “Don’t make me spell it out.” This ambiguity had many advantages; it sheltered Mormon leaders from accountability and shifted responsibility from top leaders to local authorities. But orders couched in such enigmatic terms were easily misinterpreted, a serious problem given the volatile atmosphere and the slow pace of communications in Utah Territory.

Lee arrived at his own conclusion: “I have always believed, since that day, that General George A. Smith was then visiting Southern Utah to prepare the people for the work of exterminating Captain Fancher’s train of emigrant, and I now believe he was sent for that purpose by the direct command of Brigham Young.”



Again, see the difference?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
_Ray A

Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _Ray A »

Indeed. How historians select and interpret is an interesting phenomenon, one that fascinates me.
_beastie
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Re: MILLIONS spent by LDS Inc on new MMM book

Post by _beastie »

For what it's worth, I don't think the authors were doing this deliberately. I think that they started this work with the preconceived belief that BY could not have been involved in the massacres, because, as DCP said long ago on this thread, that would call in prophethood into question. So they read and interpreted, and chose what to include and what to leave out, through that filter.

I think that their bias impacted two things in particular - BY's possible involvement, and the behavior of the Fancher train. As I said, I'm working on a longer reviewing containing more demonstrations, but couldn't resist the early teasers as I work.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
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