I do not know just what you are proposing then.
And I can't help but think the reason for that is that you (and Dan and Mikwut) are not paying attention to what I have been saying, but instead have been superimposing your own concept of what you think I ought to be saying. It's not like what I am saying is new. I've been saying it for many pages now.
All of the witnesses participated in some kind of coverup of the actual provenance of the Book of Mormon and the method that it was translated, knowing that what they were saying was not true.
No. I did not say that. Which then makes this completely erroneous:
Yet they did not believe or realize they were participating in a fraud? Conspiracy, fraud, scam, it would all amount to the same thing, no matter what label you try to give it.
Yes, in your mind--your box--that all equates and makes complete sense. In the box you want to squeeze us into, that's how simple it is.
So Glenn, if we were to interview the devoted followers of Warren Jeffs (who sits in prison for participating in and encouraging underage relationships)--those at the highest levels in his organization--are you going to believe everything they say? Are you going to conclude that they are telling us everything they know and not withholding any facts that might do damage to the cause they are highly devoted to? In short, do you think we'd get the full story about Warren's involvement with underage girls from his loyal followers? And especially from those at the highest levels?
If a person were a devoted follower of Warren Jeffs, they would probably tell the world that Jeffs was a prophet of God and that God had commanded him to do what he did.
If any of that group stated that they had witnessed Jeffs dictating a book using some unusual artifact which Jeffs kept hidden from their view but said that it was an oracle from God, I could believe them, if they produced the book. I would not necessarily believe that Jeffs indeed translated anything with such an oracle, but I couls believe that they saw and heard Jeffs dictate using his unusual method.
Alright we're making slow progress. Why would you "not necessarily believe that Jeffs indeed translated anything with such an oracle"? For all you know, these are honest people. They seem nice and polite. You are already choosing to believe them when they produce a book and tell you how it was produced. Why would you draw the line then and not believe the rest of what they tell you?
If any became disgruntled, or disillusioned, I would some of them to lash out at Jeffs, and if they had observed Jeffs participating in a fraud, they would tell the tale, pointing all of the blame on Jeffs.
Really? Even if doing so would also expose their own participation in the fraud and cover-up? Even if doing so would mean their own testimony is untrustworthy? It's sort of like Anthony Weiner saying, well I lied before but I'm telling the truth now. How do we know what to believe? So there is a lot to lose by admitting your previous guilt in a fraud. BUT you need to realize that I am using this "fraud" terminology for your benefit, because you are thinking of it in terms of "fraud." THEY would not have thought of it as fraud. So they would not even have had to come to the point where they consciously think to themselves: I can't ever admit I participated in a fraud. It would never come to that since in their mind, there never was any fraud, hence, no need to come clean and/or expose Jeffs/Joseph Smith.
Coincidentally there were several of the witnesses who did become disgruntled and never returned to the church, yet affirmed even on their deathbeds that the story of the coming forth of the Book of Mormon that they had told all their lives was true.
Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, Martin Harris, John Whitmer, Sidney Rigdon (although not a witness) all were excommunicated.
Any of those people could have become famous, maybe even rich by producing an exposition of that process. There are some who have benefited financially by writing such sensational books and pamphlets.
Of that group, the only ones who were in a position to know more than they admitted, were Oliver Cowdery and Sidney Ridgon. Possibly Whitmer, but I think he was probably a dupe.
Rigdon, of course is a unique situation in that while, as you say, he was not a Book of Mormon witness, he made wild claims like pretending to know what was in the sealed portion of the Book of Mormon and in fact even producing a revelation exposing what was in it. The fact that Rigdon did these kinds of things gives us "conspiracy theorists" plenty of ammo.
For Cowdery it is obvious he knew more than he admits. Like Emma, he never publicly acknowledges polygamy. Dan speculates that he copied the Bible for Smith inserting the changes Joseph had made. But he never acknowledges doing so. Instead he implies that he was there to record it all as it fell from the prophet's lips. No mention of a Bible--to the point where you, a loyal LDS, even wonder whether a Bible was actually used or not.
It was certainly not in the interest of these men to acknowledge what they knew (but had not previously mentioned) about the Book of Mormon production. Joseph Smith even publicly reinforced that by refusing to give details even when asked by Hyrum to do so. In the first place, after excommunication their lives could be in danger. In the second place it ruins their credibility, just like Anthony Weiner now has zero credibility even though he might now be telling the truth. And in the third place it ruins any chance of capitalizing on this in any way in the future--which Rigdon clearly attempted to do. In the fourth place, I am convinced they never thought of it as fraud to begin with. Like Dan says, if Joseph asks Cowdery to copy the Bible with the changes he's made to the text by revelation, then in Cowdery's mind there is no fraud to cover-up. It's just not pertinent information that the public needs to know, because it might confuse the public who do not understand that this truly is a work of God. In exactly the same way, the public has no need to know about manuscript pages coming from Rigdon or any other source, since it would only serve to confuse the public about the genuine work of God in the Book of Mormon.
Now please provide your evidence that any of the witnesses lied about the method of translation.
We've just been over Emma Smith as a classic example. What she described could not have happened unless God was actively participating. That works for you, but not for me or Dan. So Dan concludes she was embellishing. He stops short of actually saying she was lying, but what difference is there? She was lying, plain and simple. Here is what Dan's source--that he cited in support of his position on Emma--says... that they:
consistently omitted crucial details, added others, changed the order of events, and otherwise supplied reports that would make it impossible for any reader to account for what was described by normal means.
This is exactly what Emma was doing. Dan just seems to think she did this unwittingly or unconsciously(!) Nonsense. She was lying, plain and simple.
The case of Oliver is more subtle. He lies more by omission. A Bible was used and yet he never mentions it and implies otherwise. He makes up stories about seeing angels to support the cause.
But again, in terms of method of translation that was to be given out to the public, I do not think they are lying when they say Joseph put his head in a hat and rattled off a few sentences. The lie is more subtlely located in the implication that the whole thing was produced that way.