http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith_and_politics
I was spot on.

why me wrote:Well, now that I checked the FAIR site I see that FAIR agrees with me.
Uncle Dale wrote:Joseph Smith's 1844 bid for the US Presidency was a "long shot." but not
an impossibility. Had the Democrat and Whig candidates somehow alienated
enough voters, Smith might have possibly made it into office as an unexpected
"dark horse" third-party leader.
solomarineris wrote:Uncle Dale wrote:Joseph Smith's 1844 bid for the US Presidency was a "long shot." but not
an impossibility. Had the Democrat and Whig candidates somehow alienated
enough voters, Smith might have possibly made it into office as an unexpected
"dark horse" third-party leader.
Your conjecture is based on an impossible hypothesis.
There wasn't even a remote possibility of this scenario. Joseph Smith was living in an isolated island
full of hardcore followers, outside people hated him, resented his charisma, success not to mention
his religion.
why me wrote:Well, now that I checked the FAIR site I see that FAIR agrees with me. This should come as no surprise since I do believe in traveling in good company:
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith_and_politics
I was spot on.
cinepro wrote:. . . and Joseph had a "revolutionary" approach to get rid of slavery (selling public land and buying the slave's freedom).
Nevo wrote:cinepro wrote:. . . and Joseph had a "revolutionary" approach to get rid of slavery (selling public land and buying the slave's freedom).
I guess it was "revolutionary" in the sense that it had been around since at least the 1780s (see, e.g., Gary B. Nash, Race and Revolution [Madison, WI: Madison House, 1990], 36-37).
Joseph Smith wrote:Born in a land of liberty, and breathing an air uncorrupted with the sirocco of barbarous climes, I ever feel a double anxiety for the happiness of all men, both in time and in eternity. My cogitations, like Daniel's, have for a long time troubled me, when I viewed the condition of men throughout the world, and more especially in this boasted realm, where the Declaration of Independence "holds these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness," but at the same time some two or three millions of people are held as slaves for life, because the spirit in them is covered with a darker skin than ours; and hundreds of our kindred for an infraction, or supposed infraction, of some over wise statute, have to be incarcerated in dungeon glooms, or suffer the more moral penitentiary gravitation of mercy in a nut-shell, while the duelist, the debauchee, and the defaulter for millions, and other criminals, take the upper-most rooms at feasts, or, like the bird of passage find a more congenial clime by flight. ...
Uncle Dale wrote:Where Smith diverged from past proponents of these sorts of schemes,
was in his theological linkage of the enslaved and the imprisoned. This
was a radical interpretation of the gospel injunction to "free the captive."
UD
cinepro wrote:Uncle Dale wrote:Where Smith diverged from past proponents of these sorts of schemes,
was in his theological linkage of the enslaved and the imprisoned. This
was a radical interpretation of the gospel injunction to "free the captive."
UD
That was another thing mentioned in Gospel Doctrine: Joseph Smith's innovative idea to abolish debtor's prisons and introduce "rehabilitative" prison programs that would teach prisoners instead of just punishing them.