why me wrote:Darth J wrote:That's right. The fact of Joseph Smith's polyamory is irrelevant to whether the Expositor was telling the truth about Joseph Smith engaging in polyamory.
The early saints were not living in a bubble. I am sure that the Warsaw Gazette was printing articles about polygamy and Joseph Smith, and the saints were free to read that paper.
No, you are not sure of that. You are supposing that out of convenience. All you are doing is dancing around from one point to the next with no consistent idea other than Joseph Smith being right no matter what. Your failure to make anything resembling a coherent argument makes this clear. You have previously said that Joseph Smith was justified in lying and keeping the secret to "protect life." Now you're saying that everyone knew about this, anyway.
You also have this habit in the various threads in which you post of inadvertently proving that against which you are arguing. You're trying to argue that the
Expositor was printing lies, but have failed to articulate a single claimed fact in that paper that was not true. Now, contrary to your previous assertions, you are hypothesizing that Joseph Smith's polyamory was a matter of common knowledge. You don't seem to have realized yet that if what you are guessing at were true, you would be acknowledging that the
Expositor was telling the truth when it said Joseph Smith was practicing plural marriage.
William Law could not control his hate for the leadership of the LDS church and it filled the newspaper.
Whatever motives you want to impute to William Law are irrelevant as to whether the factual allegations in the
Expositor were true. Motive did not become an element of defamation of a public figure until
New York Times v. Sullivan, when the U.S. Supreme Court held that to balance the First Amendment against defamation claims, a public figure has to prove that defamation against them was done with actual malice. That has absolutely nothing to do with the
Expositor, however. First,
Sullivan was decided 120 years later. Second, truth is still a defense to defamation, and actual malice does not come into the picture until it is established that the alleged defamatory statements were false.
Why Me, perhaps the other residents of the planet you live on find whatever you are trying to say to be cogent. On Earth, however, talking ad infinitum about William Law's supposed motives has no relevance as to whether the Nauvoo Expositor was libelous. Libel is a question of law, not a question of "he's a big, fat meanie for saying that." Libel means that printed statements are harmful
and that they are false. If the statements are true,
then by definition the statements are not libelous.
The Nauvoo city council had no ground to stand on in claiming that the
Expositor was libelous, and neither do you. The claim that the paper was libelous was nothing more than a pretext to silence the truth about what Joseph Smith was doing.
The paper did nothing to quell the hatred that the mobs felt toward the Mormons. In fact, just the opposite. If it were allowed to continue the mobs would have been at the gates burning homes and william law would do nothing about it.
This kind of argument, which is common among defenders of the faith, reminds me of
The Terminator, when the soldier sent back in time to protect the mother of the future leader of the human race ends up fathering the guy who sent him back in time in the first place.
The mobs did come to Nauvoo after the
Expositor press was destroyed, and the mobs did come and murder Joseph and Hyrum. What you are positing is that the result that Joseph's actions caused (destroying the press) is proof that if he hadn't destroyed the press, the actions that resulted from destroying the press would have happened.
For readers of this board, did that last sentence make any sense at all when you read it? If not, then why would it make any sense when you think it in your head?
It was not what the
Expositor said that brought everything to a head; it was the fact that the city council under Joseph Smith destroyed the press. Since you volunteered speculation about what the papers in Warsaw may have said, let's look at
what the Warsaw Signal actually did say:Can you stand by, and suffer such INFERNAL DEVILS!! to ROB men of their property and RIGHTS, without avenging them. We have no time for comment, every man will make his own. LET IT BE MADE WITH POWDER AND BALL!!!Thomas Sharp is not saying anything here about the substance of what was published in the
Expositor. It was destroying the Expositor that enraged him and led to the mobs. There is no reason to speculate about what was happening or why, as Why Me invites everyone to do, when there is clear evidence showing that the situation complained of by defenders of the faith was one of Joseph Smith's own making.