"In the grand scheme of things, how were those people hurt? If Dunn's stories uplifted them, and inspired them to live righteously, or have hope, how were they hurt?
"How was their comfort or strength in getting through a difficult time any less real?
"I can understand someone feeling tricked...but I can also see that same person weighing things out from a big picture perspective as well. If Dunn's story inspired that person to do good, then how is the situation all that horrible?"
People can get uplifted, no doubt, even when pseudo prophets tell lies during the Uplift Moment.
People can also get deflated when they later discover those lies. Any "inspirational high" they may have felt simply means that some people can be emotionally manipulated by a story that they thought was true in all respects (and that was presented by the fabricator/exaggerator as true in all respects).
It also means that this fabricating/exaggerating "prophet of God" simply lied or played loose with the so-called "events" in order to achieve the desired emotionally reactive result.
Your defense of the indefensible does not come across as much of an inspiring fight song for purported "prophets" who peddle fabrications in order to build faith, hoping that in the process they won't be discovered (but then, as in Monson's case, who resort to changing their story when they are eventually exposed. Exhibit A: the differences between his first failed run at it in 1969 and his second in 2007, when he went back, changed the script and didn't bother to tell anybody).
That speaks volumes for trying to get away with it.
Maybe when the Mormon Church realizes the problems with Mr. Monson's myth making, his 1969 version will disappear from the archives or will be changed again. It has happened many times before in the course of rewriting and/or deleting inconvenient Mormon history. Anything goes, it seems, when it comes to defending or justifying a Mormon "prophet"-leader--even when he's been unmasked. One would expect more from cheerleaders for a Church that not only claims to be "true," but declares that it is "the one and only true Church."
Since when does posing fables as facts advance "truth"? In the end, Mormons do not seem all that concerned about truth. They seem much more concerned with protecting their wavering faith from unwanted assault by the facts.
And, again, why lower the bar for "prophet" Thomas S. Monson to the level for non-Mormon fiction writer Napolean Hill? Monson is supposed to be telling the truth for and in behalf of God. At least Jesus gave a heads-up to his listeners by informing them when he was about to deliver a parable. Why shouldn't Monson do the same?