Bokovoy on the other hand is sincere. One can only dance with the devils under the pretense of being an actual scholar for only so long, but eventually the truth has to be acknowledged to present a believable argument that one possesses the capability for critical thought. Eventually, the truth that the entire Book of Mormon came from some magical occult props (seer stones) and the pagan book of the dead (incorrectly translated) has to be accepted as somehow logical. It certainly isn't Christian, but it also isn't logical.
Bokovoy admitted in a thread talking about the Kinderhook plates, that he'd believe anything Joseph Smith translated... to include the Kinderhook plates (story of the descendant of Ham) which is an acknowledged hoax. Think about that for a second... My stance, is that I would believe anything said by a man (Joseph Smith) who lived almost 200 years ago as true, including a translation of something I know is not true (the Kinderhook plates). How could one be more honest about their own intellectual dishonesty? A clever one this Bokovoy is, but not sinister. Once the truth is acknowledged and he becomes an actual scholar, Joseph Smith is exposed for who he really was, which wasn't a cool person. Bokovoy will crack under the pressure... not because he's weak, but because he'll eventually find the truth. The truth isn't either true or not true, because there is only one truth if the question is phrased correctly to define what it encompasses... we'll see.
