Calculus Crusader wrote:I did not suggest that they were not engaged in real labor. But helping out your family (and/or yourself) by chopping wood is not the same as hiring yourself out as a manual laborer.
They were subsistence farmers who lived, to a large extent, by barter in a frontier economy that often lacked currency. (That was the reason for the issuance of notes by the Kirtland Bank, whatever you may think of it otherwise. And it was far from the only bank on the American frontier to issue its own quasi-currency.)
In a frontier farming community, basically brand new, to whom would you hire yourself out? Virtually every family was farming for itself. They had little alternative.
And what difference does it make? Your claim was that Joseph Smith gave up on manual labor in order to glut himself on the labor of others. That he and his family were still doing their own clearing and plowing and sowing and harvesting in mid-1832 runs directly counter to your claim. It's irrelevant, really, whether they were hiring out or farming for themselves. In neither case would they be giving up manual labor. In neither case would they be living off the proceeds of a con.
You're obfuscating, CC.
And, by the way, you have an even narrower window than I had indicated above in which to have Joseph Smith abandoning manual labor in order to live off of his supposed con.:
"Come brethren," Joseph would say when he was foreman of the quarry in Kirtland, "let us go into the stone-quarry and work for the Lord." "The Prophet went himself," remembered Heber C. Kimball, "and worked at quarrying stone like the rest of us" (
Deseret News [27 May 1863], 377).
Construction began in the summer of 1833 -- a year after Brigham and the others met Joseph when the Prophet was out chopping and hauling wood -- and the temple was dedicated in the spring of 1836.
So you now have not
twelve years in which to have Joseph giving up on manual labor prior to his assassination, but, at most,
eleven years. And, very possibly, as few as
eight years.
How many trees have
you chopped down and hauled? How much stone have
you quarried? How much of this did you do with manual tools -- that is to say, with neither electric- nor gasoline-powered equipment?
Harmony? CC? Tell us of your strong commitment to truly manual labor. Boast of your brawny arms, your backbreaking dawn-to-dusk work. Point the finger of scorn at the shiftless Joseph Smith yet again.