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On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 08:47:35 -0800, "C J Campbell"
wrote: You're. I want reparations for the perpetuation of this slander, too. The actual history of the Mountain Meadows massacre is that a bunch of Missourians headed to the California gold fields tried to cross southern Utah in the middle of a drought. Brigham Young had tried to persuade them to take the safer northern route but they were in a hurry (odd behavior for a man supposed to be trying to kill them, but conspiracy theorists were never known for their logic). The Missourians, who bragged about their treatment of the 'Mormons' in Missouri, quickly ran out of supplies and resorted to stealing what they needed from local settlers and Indians, most of whom were on the point of starvation themselves. They killed several Indians in cold blood and stole their horses, enraging the local Utes and Paiutes. All the while they bragged about their murders and how they were going to rape women, etc. The band was finally attacked by Indians who surrounded the wagon train. Local settlers, not all of them Mormons, negotiated a cease-fire and then treacherously slaughtered all the adult members of the group, despite pleas from Church leaders, including Brigham Young, to let them go. While the behavior of the local settlers was out and out murder, you have to wonder just how much any group that was as isolated, persecuted, and hounded as they were by these people is supposed to take. The perpetrators of the massacre were tried and convicted and some of them were hanged, which is far more justice than the mobbers in Missouri and Illinois ever got. Hmmm, your version is distinctly at odds with this one found at http://www.utlm.org/onlinebooks/meadows3.htm Brigham Young is not even mentioned as being present. Corky Scott |
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![]() "Corky Scott" wrote in message ... Hmmm, your version is distinctly at odds with this one found at http://www.utlm.org/onlinebooks/meadows3.htm Brigham Young is not even mentioned as being present. Where did I say he was present? |
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![]() "Corky Scott" wrote in message ... Hmmm, your version is distinctly at odds with this one found at http://www.utlm.org/onlinebooks/meadows3.htm Brigham Young is not even mentioned as being present. I never said he was present. That book, by the way, is fairly typical of the insane drivel printed by conspiracy theorists. It has about as much credibility as the moon landing hoax theorists. It claims to know the exact conversation of numerous participants of a supposedly secret conspiracy. Yeah, right. Where are the author's sources? He offers nothing credible. The author admits that the history of the massacre is distorted by embittered apostates, but then he uses those apostates for his primary sources and admits that he is one such himself. Note also that it completely omits the numerous atrocities committed by the so-called emigrants. It contradicts itself constantly. The page you point to, for example, says the emigrants were unprepared for an attack, but then notes how Lee passed through the fortifications. I have no idea where the book gets the idea that the Indians were promised anything by the settlers -- it is made up of whole cloth. The book also claims that the settlers had three years' food on hand -- completely untrue. The settlers were in fact starving and many died. It talks about a non-existent 'Mormon Reformation,' offering no evidence whatsoever that there ever was such a thing and without addressing just what doctrines or practices might have been 'reformed.' The author asks us to imagine the 'death march' up the valley. We have to imagine it, because the massacre actually took place only a short distance from camp. This author also likes to use bold face when he interjects his own wording to make it seem that people are saying something other than what they did. I would agree with the author that John D. Lee did not receive a fair trial and that the some of the actual perpetrators of the massacre got away with it. In fact, I think some of the descendents of those people, who generations ago left the Church but who are still living in the area, are equally dangerous. I would also agree with the author that the Indians who launched the attack probably encountered considerably more resistance than they expected. Nevertheless, I am considerably less sympathetic toward Lee than the author is. Maybe Lee was not as culpable as prosecutors claimed, but he did not do all he could to prevent the massacre, either. The author claims a climate of lawlessness in the territory, despite the basic articles of faith, Church scriptures, and endless speeches by Church leaders on the importance of "honoring, obeying and sustaining the law." He claims that Church members were taught to murder enemies of the Church, calling it the doctrine of blood atonement. In fact, the doctrine of blood atonement is nothing more nor less than the Church's stated support of capital punishment for murderers. The truth is, any Church member who engages in any act of civil disobedience to the law of the land is subject to Church discipline, and this has been the case from the very beginning. This is not the sort of religious atmosphere that would encourage wholesale murder. I cannot imagine what desperate straits the settlers must have been in that they would finally perpetrate such an act. Many other wagon trains of emigrants passed through the territory during that same period, one even including the former Governor Boggs of Missouri who had ordered the extermination of all Church members in his state. All of these groups went through without harassment and even considerable assistance from the Church. The author claims that during this time the Church was preparing for war with Johnston's army. He neglects to mention that these 'preparations' were for an exodus to Mexico, not to fight a battle. He also neglects to mention that this army met absolutely no resistance other than to find that the 'Mormons' were prepared to leave immediately and leave no trace of their presence behind them, as well as no way for the army to re-supply itself. He probably knows, but does not mention, that Church agents within the army knew that the army commanders planned to loose their men on the helpless inhabitants of Utah to plunder, rape, and pillage. He fails to mention that despite this the meeting between President Brigham Young and the army commander was cordial and that the army was permitted to camp on the outskirts of Salt Lake City without any harassment, that the Church helped the army replenish its supplies and that the new territorial governor was installed without any resistance. He also fails to mention that the army commander found that the story of a 'Mormon' rebellion that was concocted by a group of professional gamblers and con-men, including a Federal judge who was running the largest brothel in Salt Lake City, was completely unfounded. (This judge was noted for allowing prostitutes to sit on the bench with him while he lectured defendants about the evils of polygamy. This idiot's memoirs are a favorite source material for people writing anti-Mormon literature.) This web site is word for word the same material found on other web sites claiming to help 'Mormons' free themselves from a cult. They constantly use offensive and provocative terminology to describe the Church, including 'cult,' 'the Mormon god,' 'non-Christian,' etc. In fact, these sites are generally run by the real neo-cons -- conservative religious fundamentalists who have little tolerance for anything that disagrees with their distorted world view. They follow the Jerry Falwells and Pat Buchanans. They don't like 'Mormons,' who tend to be better educated and more liberal politically than they are, particularly on such issues as abortion and gay rights, nor were they particularly happy that some 'Mormon' Senators voted against their own political leadership in order to acquit President Clinton when he was impeached (but then, a lot of 'Mormons' weren't particularly happy about that, either). The people who write these tracts are the same sort of people who support Al Qaeda or the Ku Klux Klan. They print the same material over and over, using each other as sources, but never anything that can actually be authenticated. These are the same people who write tracts like "The Godmakers." That people could actually write stuff like this and expect it to be credible makes my hair stand on end. I have had real neo-cons tell me to my face that I have horns and a tail. I have seen them vandalize our chapels, including smashing windows, stealing audio-visual equipment, and smearing excrement on the walls. I have had them threaten me with firearms, vandalize my car, and threaten to kill me. Yet you have the unmitigated gall to ask me to accept their version of the Mountain Meadows massacre. Pardon me, but I think I will pass on this wonderful opportunity. |
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