Seriously. His last 6 (SIX!!) in a row show the narcissism IHQ described exactly.Morley wrote: ↑Fri Oct 06, 2023 9:04 pmThanks for commenting on this, malkie. Though, unfortunately, I've never had the chance to meet MG, this assessment mirrors my experience with him on this board.malkie wrote: ↑Thu Oct 05, 2023 6:45 pmUnless he completely fooled me at the time, the MG I met about 8 or 9 years ago was quite different from the 2.0 version.
A year or two back I pointed out to him that he seemed to be becoming like some of the people he criticised for their meanness. If I recall correctly, his reply was to the effect that "they deserve it". This, in part, is what makes me much less likely to want to respond to him.
But, he says he's done, so we can get back to the topic. Although, he's said that at least twice before on this thread, so i'm only mildly hopeful.
In any case, i'll repost what i said about Kish's previous comments again about Smith's situation, his posts offer considerable insight into the discussion we were having, in my opinion:
Lem wrote: ↑Mon Jan 18, 2021 11:27 pmI recall several discussions on our previous site about whether plates, real or fake, actually existed. I always found them fascinating, mostly because when I grew up, they absolutely integral to a Mormon youth's testimony of the 'truthfulness' of 'the Gospel,' but now, it turns out they weren't even used! What a bizarre flip!
Anyway, I always felt that grindael's various discussions on the subject lent the most credence to the idea that the 'item' always under cloth, and conveniently never quite there to see with actual eyes, was sand, or at best, a brick or an odd piece of house décor.
In looking for grindael's post about sand(!), I found this excellent discussion by Kishkumen of the place the story of the plates has in our history, which I hope he doesn't mind if I re-post. It's too good to lose to the vagaries of internet forum upkeep:andkishkumen wrote: Mormonism is a very Western belief system. Indeed, every aspect of it you examine is easily interpreted as a manifestation of one or many currents of Western culture and history. It combines them in a unique way, but to say that Mormonism is simply phony is to ignore all of the ways it expresses those larger and older currents. Let's take, for example, the gold plates. Here is the single most obvious lie Joseph Smith ever told. It is also one of the most damning. Nothing about it is credible.
But the story of the discovery of the gold plates is rooted in narratives that go back to very ancient history indeed. This is what I was getting at in my last Sunstone talk that Taves neither liked nor, frankly, understood very well, as she pushed her own agenda about what "Religious Studies" is. Taves preferred to understand the gold plates through the lens of the Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation, when Joseph would have been much more familiar with folk magic and Freemasonry than Catholicism. She might still land on Catholicism if she were to understand Freemasonry and magic better, but that is a topic for another day.
So, yes, the gold plates were made up. But they were tailor made for a culture of sacred and magical books that was not only informed by the Bible (and this is the dominant influence, to be sure), but also by the Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, Letters from Heaven, the gold plate of Enoch, the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus, and the Books of Numa. Folk and esoteric religion was already open to the kind of claim Joseph was making, even if it did not actually happen in the way he said it did. For centuries people have been writing sacred or magical texts, putting the name of a famous person on them, and sending them out into the world to become someone else's scripture.
Is the Book of Mormon to be specially rejected while the fabrications and the forgeries of the Bible, circulated under names such as Daniel and Paul, are fine? Are scriptures to be rejected as important expressions of our history and culture because they were written by unknown priests, forgers, and men such as Joseph Smith? Do beliefs become bereft of value when their origins are as dubiously accurate as their contents are unhistorical?
[posted 12/2018]
Inserted from <http://mormondiscussions.com/viewtopic. ... l&start=21>
kish wrote:
...It seems to me that you are forgetting that he was an established trickster who was engaging in treasure-digging schemes. His skills and his subject matter come directly from that milieu. The Book of Mormon starts off as a treasure that he and other treasure seers were looking for. The translation springs out of that, and it cannot be divorced from it. He had first to convince others that he recovered the plates. Then he eventually commits to translating them himself. Knowing that this all originated in a ruse, we should instead think it would have been strange for him to do other than he did.
http://mormondiscussions.com/viewtopic. ... 7#p1223977