SReed wrote:Here in this 1924 book by RLDS Louise E Hills: https://babel.hathitrust.or...
It’s a total fraud created by the RLDS Church. Page 131, Hills mentions a Elder HA Stebbins, who was born in 1844, the year Joseph Smith was murdered. This is Stebbins autobiography: http://www.latterdaytruth.o...
See page 194 where Stebbins came up with his Central America theory from John Lloyd Stephens’s book. This was in 1894 or so. Stebbins Book of Mormon lectures are here wherein he mentions his Central America theory: https://babel.hathitrust.or...
Then the RLDS Church created a Committee on American Archaeology about the same year. This is its report: https://babel.hathitrust.or...
And the map from that report, created by a RLDS member residing in Michigan, based on Stebbins’s lectures, is here:
https://www.worthpoint.com/...
Then in the 1920s when the RLDS Church couldn’t afford to purchase the New York Hill Cumorah, RLDS Louise E Hills came up with the original Hill Cumorah in Mexico, noted in his 1924 book, p. 131
https://babel.hathitrust.or...
Thus the fraud, to keep the RLDS legit, since it also believed in The Book of Mormon but didn’t own the Hill.
Dr. John L. Sorenson mentioned RLDS Hills, in his 1991 publication: “The Geography of Book of Mormon Events, A Source Book,” noted in the archive below:
https://archive.bookofmormo...
Thus, Sorenson, Welch, Magleby, Peterson, know the source of the Mesoamerica Two-Cumorah geography theory for The Book of Mormon, is a RLDS fraud, but they promote it anyway.
Wow! Quite a provocative claim! DCP's initial response is intriguing:
DCP wrote:SReed: "Thus, Sorenson, Welch, Magleby, Peterson, know the source of the Mesoamerica Two-Cumorah geography theory for The Book of Mormon, is a RLDS fraud, but they promote it anyway."
I don't know whether an RLDS person originated the idea or not, and (as I've said to SReed several times before) I don't especially care.
I care whether the theory fits the facts. And, in my judgment, it does.
Its origin makes no difference to me at all. If I were to find out that the first person to assert that 2+2=4 was a mass-murdering Mesopotamian tyrant, I wouldn't abandon the idea.
So, Sorenson *knows* about this fraudulent RLDS theory at least as far back as 1991, and yet.... They ran with it? So, did they look at this and say, "Well, yes, *they* said it was a hoax. But just because they said that, doesn't mean it's not true!" Is that really the logic that took place? At minimum, a fascinating conspiracy theory is shaping up:
SReed wrote:Louis E Hills is mentioned by Alan C Miner in his blog here
https://stepbystep.alancmin...
“1917^ Louis Edward Hills The Geography of Mexico and Central America from 2234
B.C. to 421 A.D. (Independence, Missouri)
A member of the RLDS Church, Louis Edward Hills is credited with being the first to develop a Book of Mormon geography model that was strictly limited to Mexico and Central America (see illustration below).
“For him the hill Cumorah was in central Mexico, the first place ever suggested other than New York.”
The illustration is the yellow map I’m using for my profile.
Alan C. Miner, Dentist, sold his Springville, UT building to Kirk Magleby, which is now the headquarters of “Book of Mormon Central” co-owned by Jack Welch, you’re good friend. This is publicly available on Utah County land records, even for those residing outside of Utah. Should I bore you with the details? Ok. http://www.utahcounty.gov/L...
Whoa! So, the idea is that the Mopologists wanted to steal this "hoax theory" from the RLDS, and then try to take ownership of anything that would trace this back to the RLDS? I would say that this is far-fetched and out of some bizarro-world take on things, but we are dealing with Mopologetics--a world so thick with webs of lying, dishonesty, and fabrication, that anything is possible. Steve Smoot, at least, is troubled by this:
Smoot wrote:"Alan C. Miner, Dentist, sold his Springville, UT building to Kirk Magleby, which is now the headquarters of “Book of Mormon Central” co-owned by Jack Welch, you’re good friend. This is publicly available on Utah County land records, even for those residing outside of Utah. Should I bore you with the details?"
Besides the unsubtle attempt to dox those who work at Book of Mormon Central (including yours truly), what, precisely, does this information have anything to do with anything?
SReed responds:
SReed wrote:To prove an association between Dan Peterson, Jack Welch, Kirk Magleby, Alan C Miner; despite Dr. Peterson’s feigned ignorance, that these gentlemen knew, before you were born, of RLDS Louis E. Hills’ Two-Cumorah Mesoamerica geography theory and that they’ve been promoting it.
Yes, he *has* shown it: Sorenson, and presumably all the other Mopologists around at the time--as minimum, those who edited and "peer reviewed" his work--knew about the hoax. And then, strangely, we've got Magleby and Welch buying up property that is connected to the hoax. The dead give-away that this thing has legs is this post from DCP:
Peterson wrote:My "feigned ignorance"?
I would respond that I'm quite capable of ACTUAL ignorance; I don't need to fake it.
But such pretense is pointless now. SReed has penetrated our defensive perimeter.
SReed has uncovered our fiendish conspiracy to impose RLDS Louis E. Hills's Two-Cumorah Geography Theory upon the Church and its leaders. Hail Louis E. Hills! All glory to Louis E. Hills! Victory to the thought of Louis E. Hills!
However, SReed is too late. There's nothing he can do now. Our triumph is assured and inescapable.
The whole world must submit to the views of Louis E. Hills!
Bwahahahahaha!
No, actually--I don't think anyone was suggesting "victory" or an attempt to "impose" anything (though that, too, is debatable). Instead, SReed seems to have located the "source" for the LGT, and in that respect, this is reminiscent of the discovery of The Late War and its parallels to the Book of Mormon. Critics for more than a century have accused Joseph Smith of pilfering the text of the Book of Mormon from other sources. How fitting would it be if the Mopologists took that criticism to heart, and decided to "steal" an idea for their own movement? Whatever the case may be, DCP appears to realize the corner he's been painted into:
Peterson wrote:The origin of true ideas is less important to me than their truth.
Even if those "ideas" originated as a hoax?
Absolutely stunning.