It's Bizarro World over there:
Daniel Peterson wrote:I see nothing particularly "mysterious" about the idea that an in-house document might have been formulated at some point, from which both the Carla Ogden fax and the Michael Watson letter drew (and from which it was intended that such communications draw), and from which the Encylopedia of Mormonism, advised by Elders Oaks and Maxwell, also drew. It may even have been created in connection with the production of the quasi-official Encyclopedia, which, as Elders Oaks and Maxwell surely understood, would be expected to explain the state-of-the-question on numerous issues, including Book of Mormon geography.
Is he reading the Brethren's minds, or what? It seems to me that he is just constructing a larger and larger ball of yarn. Here are some other things to consider:
---DCP has said that he was personally acquainted with (and perhaps friends with, to some extent) both of these General Authorities. Did Prof. P. honestly not know what they were up to vis-a-vis this Encyclopedia?
---There can be no mistake that the scholarship in Bill Hamblin's article is flawed, and that it shows evidence of a cover-up. The apologists can claim this was "accidental," or that it was just sloppy, but there is no question that Hamblin's endnote was seriously lacking in detail.
---Prof. Peterson has insisted over and over and over again that the Brethren are uninterested in Tanners-esque criticism and anti-Mormonism. DCP has said, in fact, that they call
him in when they want to talk about the "Current State of Anti-Mormonism." If this is true, why would they have prepared some boilerplate text to deal with anti-Mormon analysis and criticism of the 1st Watson Letter?
---Brent Hall's coversheet seems to suggest that *he* had to inform Michael Watson about this troublesome "anti-Mormon" criticism, so again, one has to ask: Why would Elders Oaks and Maxwell be knowledgeable about the issues surrounding the 1st WL?
---DCP has not been up front about this whole episode. I have evidence that he hasn't been telling the whole truth, and I can present it if necessary. I suppose we can give him a bit more time to tell us how much he actually knew about the 2nd Watson Letter text. (Or he can claim again that his memory is sketchy.)
Look, Dr. Peterson: it's Christmastime. Why not just tell the truth?
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14