You are like a cat playing with a dead mouse, killing it over and over and over, when it already is beginning to stink. Yet you persist in saying "It stinketh not." *
Persisting in defending the Spalding witnesses and attacking the Smith witnesses when the relibility of both sets is equally suspect is a defensive tactic, that makes the theory more complex , and therefore suspect in itself. It is sufficient to say, as Dan says, that the borrowing from the Bible, and the marks of Joseph' authorship are sufficient to any reasonable person.
My counter is that we are not dealing with reasonable people. Therefore I ask again, "What were the sources, other than Smith family dynamics and the Bible?"
The best defense is a good offense.
*
From Sturlason's Heimskringla, pp 40-41.The king sat beside her, and thought that she would come to life again. And so it went for three years that he was sorrowing over her death, adn the people over his delusion. at last Thorleif the Wise succeeded, by his prudence, in curing him of his delusion by accosting him thus --"It is nowise wonderful, king, that thou grievest over so beautiful and noble a wife... It would be more suitable to raise her, and change her dress." As soon as the body was raised in the bed all sorts of corruption and foul smells came from it.. Now the king came to his understanding again, threw the madness out of his mind, and after that day ruled his kingdom as before.