Tobin wrote:Equality wrote:This makes no sense. It's like saying you don't believe a whistleblower because he reports a crime he witnesses at work. How does taking steps to expose a fraud make the person exposing the fraud less credible?
Law wasn't a whistleblower. He was a troublemaker. Who was he attempting to inform with his actions? Clearly not the leadership of the church (they knew).
Law's only crime was breaking omerta, the law of silence. I suppose you would also condemn Sammy the Bull Gravano as being not credible, and a troublemaker. At least he was from the perspective of those on whom he informed. I mean, the mob bosses already knew they were committing crimes, so Gravano's telling the cops about it wasn't whistleblowing; it was troublemaking. Right?
Law was trying to inform law-abiding citizens and Mormons who were not in on all the secret shenanigans taking place by those at the highest levels of church government about what was taking place. Again, only 100 people in Nauvoo, a city of 18,000, knew about Joseph's polygamy, and far fewer still knew about Joseph's polyandry. The Expositor was going to expose it for the general membership who were in total darkness about what was going on. You've admitted that the polygamy accusations were true, so it wasn't that the Expositor was going to spread lies about Smith--it's that it was going to expose the truth. And it is precisely because William Law WAS credible that the paper posed such a grave threat. He was a member of the First Presidency, a close intimate associate of the Prophet. He wasn't some yellow journalist raking up muck. The Mormons tolerated all sorts of criticism from outsiders. They could chalk all that up to ignorant anti-Mormon bias. But this was coming from upstanding citizens and faithful members and believers in the restoration who knew what they were talking about.
Tobin wrote:Clearly the members of the church weren't impressed, they didn't believe his slanderous accusations nor join his "newly" minted church in droves. As I said, Law isn't credible. You may characterize him however you want and believe his non-sense. I certainly don't believe him and I really doubt many Mormons today will either.
What was slanderous? Point to something in the Expositor that Law said that wasn't true. You are talking out of both sides of your mouth. On the one hand, you say polygamy wasn't a secret; that people knew about it or could have known about it, and that it was no big deal. Then you say that what Law was saying was "slanderous" and "non-sense." Which is it? Old hat common knowledge or slanderous non-sense?
"The Church is authoritarian, tribal, provincial, and founded on a loosely biblical racist frontier sex cult."--Juggler Vain
"The LDS church is the Amway of religions. Even with all the soap they sell, they still manage to come away smelling dirty."--Some Schmo