Daniel Peterson wrote:Maklelan is right.
Harmony is wrong.
Maklelan knows what he's talking about.
Harmony . . . has poor DCNC4M(8) on her side.
Hello Sir,
I reference Mr. Maklelan's interactions with Ms. Beastie.
Very Respectfully,
Doctor CamNC4Me
Daniel Peterson wrote:Maklelan is right.
Harmony is wrong.
Maklelan knows what he's talking about.
Harmony . . . has poor DCNC4M(8) on her side.
maklelan wrote:harmony wrote:What do you classify as "real work"? Please show a consistent employment record for Joseph Smith, which includes his extensive list of "real work".
Do you really mean to aver that "real work" entails employment? You've never worked on a farm or made extensive repairs to your own home before, have you? This is an utterly ludicrous inference, harm.
harmony wrote:(Bilking people out of their money doesn't count as "real work".)
Joseph never had money. I don't know where you get the idea he was bilking people out of their money.
harmony wrote:I'm very interested to see it. And since he lived the vast majority of his life "on the members' dime", I don't see how you have much of a list. (Incidently, prison time doesn't count as "real work" either, but since while he was incarcerated, Emma and his family were taken care of by others, that does count as "on the members' dime".)
And you find that reprehensible?
harmony wrote:Actually, yes, I am. Closer than you, anyway. You might want to look under my name. Since Shades is God here...
I wasn't aware that one's number of posts dictated some kind of unquestionable hierarchy.
harmony wrote:I'm waiting your correction.
Take off the blinders.
harmony wrote:But you haven't, Mak. You have asserted, but you haven't corrected anything. Show me what ya got.
I already explained why Joseph Smith cannot be asserted to have avoided hard labor.
I'm not going to copy and paste dozens of journal entries because you're not willing to do your due diligence. If that irks you then grow up.
harmony wrote:Actually, Mak, I've lived on a farm all my life, with the exception of my 9 months in a dorm room. I still live on a farm.
harmony wrote:And "real work" entails employment. Even farming qualifies as employment, Mak.
That perfectly describes scraping out the letters. Cutting out small amounts of material is how you scrape inscriptions into thin metal. You're not the first to contemplate this problem, and I'm not the first to show that it's not problematic, so you might as well just move on to something a little more in your wheelhouse.
beastie wrote:I’m sure you have found your own assertions very persuasive. I haven’t.
beastie wrote:Gold plates that would rustle when flipped with the thumb cannot be much thicker than Reynolds Wrap. Just how thick are you suggesting they could be?
beastie wrote:It would be helpful if you shared an example of plates of similar thickness with engravings on both sides.
beastie wrote:Perhaps “erosion” wasn’t the best term for what I have in mind – more like flattened by a thousand years of being compressed by sixty pounds of weight.
harmony wrote:Do NOT ever make the mistake of thinking you can tell me or anyone else on this board what to do. If you think my posts are a waste of time, don't read them. But do NOT tell me to stop anything, ever. This isn't MAD and you aren't God here.
I have 120 pound Bristol board that is much thicker than tin foil, and it rustles when a stack of sheets is rubbed around. You seem to think "rustle" can only refer to the folding of paper. It can also refer to the movement of sheets back and forth without folding. Keep in mind three rings running through holes allegedly kept this book bound. That affords quite a bit of looseness, which would allow sheets of metal of considerable thickness to "rustle" when rubbed against each other.
The plates often lay on the table without any attempt at con=cealment, wrapped in a small linen <table> cloth, which I had given him to fold them in. I have felt of the plates, as they lay on the table, tracing their outline [p. 8] and shape. They seemed to be pliable like st thick paper, and would rustle <with a mettalic sound> when the edges were moved by the thumb, as one does sometimes thumb the edges of a book.
“My mother [Emma Smith] told me that she saw the plates in the sack, for they lay on a small table in their living room in their cabin on her father’s farm, and she would lift and move them when she swept and dusted the room and furniture. She even thumbed the leaves as one does the leaves of a book, and they rustled with a metalic sound.
There's nothing available to the public on the internet, and you don't seem willing to go searching elsewhere.
Calculus Crusader wrote:Joseph Smith performed manual labor until he discovered the attractive alternative of conning people.