QUAKERS ON THE MOON?
Reader Shaun Aisbitt from Ireland reports in again after a long illness which he says has left him crippled and has kept him away from the computer screen for a long while:
I read your piece on the Haré Krishnas (or ISKCON as they sometimes go by) and the Moon in Swift 23/2/07. No wonder they want the Moon landing to be a hoax. You see, they believe and teach Krishna (or Krsna) lives on the Moon now! So, men landing on the Moon in 1969 and for some reason not meeting Mr. Krishna up there, would show the falseness of their teachings! My wife was a devotee for three years before she escaped the cult of Krishna, and an alarming story it is, too, involving chases across two countries and people turning up with baseball bats at 3 a.m. to sort her out shortly after her escape. She told me many of the weird and wonderful teachings of the Haré Krishnas and that one about Krishna living on the Moon came to mind when I read your article.
It's funny though, as a cult researcher, I found out many years ago that Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormons, believed that men seven feet tall, dressed in Quaker clothes and wearing very high hats, lived on the Moon, and he prophesied that a certain young man named Oliver B. Huntington would be a missionary to the Moon – this was around 1837. This false prophecy was reprinted in Oliver B. Huntington's recollections – in “The Young Woman's Journal” – a Mormon magazine, in 1892. They deny it to this day, and certain Mormon Apologists who do venture to mention this to those who have discovered this disturbing bit of false prophecy and who might thereby “lose faith,” try to play down or suppress the prophecy and say Mr. Huntington was either misquoted or had “fanciful ideas.” I wonder if the Mormon church didn't try to hide this false prophecy prior to 1969, and if it was a general teaching instead of a specific prophecy given to a young man, would they join the Haré Krishnas and also be denying the Moon landing today?
Apologists save your breath. Yes, joe was a man, and yes he was speaking but as always he was speaking as a self proclaimed prophet of the Kolobian space god.
So since there are no quakers (or anybody) on the moon how does one wiggle out of this quandary without pulling the whiny/dodgy "he was speaking as a man" BS?
The answer is simple: He was lying/making sh*t up.