Popular Post Pyreaux Posted August 26, 2025 Popular Post Posted August 26, 2025 (edited) Cabot Phillips Really Stepped In It Cabot Phillips, a conservative political activist and media personality, currently serving as a writer and editor at The Daily Wire. Recently posted an anti-Mormon tweet because he believes a common conservative notion that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is harmful to society, aligning with his conservative views and political activism. A recent tweet while dunking on a normal LDS girl who claimed all churches have a shady past, the LDS church has the least shady past. She now has 1 million views on her tweet on X because of Cabot Phillips' reply to her: "Before founding Mormonism, Joseph Smith ran a scam business using a magical âseer stoneâ which he said directed him to buried treasure on people's property." In 1826 he was put on trial for ripping so many people off. In 1827 he just happened to dig up the "golden plates" that became the Book of Mormon. Totally not shady!!!!" (@cabot-philllips, X [formerly Twitter]) Mormon Stories I asked AI to search into this, it couldn't find the tweet, however the AI largely agreed with it. When I asked where the source for its information came from, it was all links from Mormon Stories webpages, with a blend of other primary sources that said no such thing. What I see as happening is, there seems to be a resurgence inspired by The Joseph Smith Papers and Gospel Essays in which critics say the church changed its official tone from a denial that Joseph engaged in any Treasure Hunting, to supposedly admitting Joseph Smith operated a scam business, implying intentional deception and fraud. He used a seer stone (a folk-magic object) to locate buried treasure on other peopleâs land. The discovery of the âgolden platesâ in 1827 is insinuated to be just another 'treasure' story. Because that is more or less what Ex-LDS say about every Gospel Topic. As for AI, I'm sure like many non-LDS do, just thinks Mormon Stories is a source for information. Was there a Shift? In the 2010s with the Joseph Smith Papers and Gospel Topics Essays, the Church supposedly shifted to acknowledge Josephâs treasure-digging and seer stone use in a more open, contextualized way. But I don't see any past denials of treasure hunting nor mining, just not "money-digging", always distinguishing "treasure seeking" from "money digging." B.H. Roberts (early 1900s, LDS General Authority) in Comprehensive History of the Church (1902â1932), Roberts described "money-digging" stories but framed them as hostile exaggerations of his manual labor. Joseph "hired out to Mr. Stowell ⌠to dig for the silver mine ⌠for something like a month ⌠they vainly sought to find the 'hidden treasure.'" Joseph Fielding Smith (Apostle, 1950sâ60s) in Doctrines of Salvation acknowledged Joseph's participation in treasure-seeking, Joseph F. Smith emphasized that it was a cultural phenomenon and not indicative of fraud. âJoseph Smith never was a money-digger. The whole story is a fabrication.â âInformed people do not dispute the fact that Joseph Smith searched for buried treasure. The disagreement is about what it means.â The only "shift" as I read it, is the church officially calling out most arguments against all treasure hunting, as the Presentist Fallacy it is: Judging 1820s folk practices by 2020s standards of scams or devilry, instead of understanding them in their own cultural and religious context. In the early 1800s, many respectable American people (not just Joseph) engaged in treasure-seeking. To dismiss it as âscammingâ ignores the wider cultural acceptance and reduces it to a modern insult. Critics proceed to exaggerate the evidence (Hasty Generalization) and misrepresent the church's admissions (Strawman). They also twist ambiguous facts into hostile certainty. There isn't hard evidence he scammed folk. Joseph in 1822 finds a Seer Stone as a Youth Historical sources (both friendly and hostile) agree Joseph found a brown seer stone while digging a well around 1822. Itâs clear he experimented with it; looking for things, trying to find objects underground, and sometimes telling neighbors what he "saw." And before the Book of Mormon, he developed a positive reputation of success. The important note: this was as a teen - long before he organized the Church. Early American folk practices werenât unusual in rural New York. Joseph Knight Sr. (an early, faithful believer) wrote in his reminiscences: âYoung Joseph ⌠looked in the stone and told them there was a treasure.â (Dean Jessee, Early Mormon Documents, vol. 4, p. 15) Josephâs Mother, Lucy Mack Smith's memoir, she acknowledged Josephâs reputation for looking into a stone and that the neighbors sought him for it. She framed it positively: he was known for âhaving the gift of seeingâ - not as a fraud, but as someone with a spiritual gift. (Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations (1853)). Josephâs 1826 Court Hearing as a Glass-Looker Surviving bills and notes from Justice Albert Neelyâs 1826 Bainbridge, NY examination calls Joseph Smith a "glass-looker" under his name, thought not his crime but rather to distinguish between all other Joseph Smiths. âGlass-lookingâ itself wasnât a chargeable crime under New York law in the 1820s. What could be a chargeable offense was the much broader âdisorderly personâ statute in New Yorkâs Laws of 1813, which allowed local justices to prosecute anyone who: pretended to tell fortunes or otherwise made money by deception. He was never sent to trial, as we see there were no credible witnesses against him, but the documents show Joseph was at least publicly known as a glass-looker. Glass-looking: A clairvoyant looking into a stone or glass, or other medium to try to see hidden things - often underground objects, lost items, or distant events. (Wesley Walters, âJoseph Smithâs Bainbridge, N.Y., Court Trialâ (1971), reproduces the actual bills and notes.) Joseph was Not a "Money Digger" Lucy Mack Smith (Josephâs mother, in Biographical Sketches) said "Joseph ⌠endeavored to divert [Stowell] from his vain pursuit ⌠laboring for about a month. It was from this ⌠that the very prevalent story arose of Josephâs being a money-digger." In Joseph Smith History, Joseph said that him being a "money digger" was a "rumor" started he was hired to dig for a Silver Mine. He was accused of being a "money digger" as a âcharge brought against himâ by critics, but he denied being what that implied: a fraudulent swindler. Thereâs a big difference between occasionally participating in digging for a mine (a normal cultural activity) and being a professional âmoney diggerâ or scam artist. In early 19th-century New England, a "money digger" was generally understood as someone who: Claimed to locate buried treasure (often Spanish gold or pirate loot). Using any modernly non-conventional or supernatural means (peep stone, divining rods, astrology, etc.) to do so. They usually accepted payment or promised a share of the treasure if found, in exchange for their services. This practice was widely mocked and stigmatized. By the 1820s, a âmoney diggerâ was as a derogatory label, similar to calling a psychic a fortune teller. How it applied to Joseph Smith Joseph had a Seer Stone he found in a well as a child, and by his 20s had a positive reputation for occasionally helping people find things with his gift. An Ensign article states Stowell arrived in the Susquehanna area âcarrying a purported treasure mapâ with a digging crew. A Church History Department interview transcript (Legacy radio) says Stowell âhad a map of some kindâ pointing to a Spanish silver mine. The silver-mine idea and location was already on Stowellâs radar, via a map, before Joseph got involved. He hoped Joseph would join. Promising nothing, Joseph just wanted to be paid as a digger, while Josiah may have hoped by just having him around would give him an edge. The title of âmoney diggerâ was applied by critics to paint him as a fraud or charlatan, triggered by the events surrounding the 1826 Court Hearing. Semantics Matter - Key Nuance There is no source I've seen, that Joseph regularly took money just 'find' treasure, how do we know he wasn't just helping out of curiosity or folk faith, without payment, then he wasnât technically a "money digger" in the economic sense - heâd just been part of a folk religious/mining activity that was common in his community. Mining isn't money digging. Joseph could truthfully say he wasnât a âmoney diggerâ if by that, he meant âI wasnât a fraud who lived off of deceiving people,â even if he once helped a man search for a silver mine. He became absolved of any wrongdoing by both the law and even Josiah himself, against accusations of Josiah's nephews. 1830 Palmyra Reflector (Newspaper) It seems the neighbors only started sharing the 'negative' rumors in 1829 after Joseph found the golden plates. In 1830, the Reflector began publishing mocking reports about Joseph as a âmoney diggerâ. Abner Cole (using the pen name Obadiah Dogberry) disliked Joseph and in the newspaper parodied the Book of Mormon before it had officially released. Example: âThis work [Book of Mormon]⌠is said to be a history of the first settlers of America, written by one of their prophets⌠translated from the golden plates by Joseph Smith, Jr., who has been known as a money-digger." 1834 Eber D. Howeâs Mormonism Unvailed Eber D. Howe was a newspaper editor in Painesville, Ohio. In 1831â32, right after the Churchâs move to Kirtland, Ohio, apostates and outsiders in Ohio and New York were compiling negative accounts from New York neighbors about Joseph Smith. Howe collected these reports and in 1834 published Mormonism Unvailed, the first major anti-Mormon book. Mormonism Unvailed leaned heavily on affidavits gathered by Doctor Philastus Hurlbut, a disaffected Mormon. These affidavits came from Josephâs Palmyra and Manchester neighbors; Chase, Stafford, and Stowell families (of course not Josiah Stowell). They claimed Joseph was a âmoney diggerâ and âlazy", alleged that Joseph deceived people into believing he could find buried riches. I've seen nothing yet about being paid for just looking for treasure. Howe was also the origin point of the debunked "Spaulding Manuscript theory" that the Book of Mormon was plagiarized from a lost unpublished romance by Solomon Spaulding. The dominate anti-Mormon argument for decades, though it has since collapsed (once the actual Spaulding manuscript resurfaced and bore no resemblance to the Book of Mormon). It was Mormonism Unvailed that cemented the "money-digger" narrative in public discourse. Joseph himself pushed back: in his 1838 history he called such stories "folly and lies" used to discredit him. The critic kept the âmoney diggerâ stigma alive for decades. 2007 John Foxe and Wikipedia Editing Wars As early as July 2007, John Foxe was a pseudonymous editor on Wikipedia was actively editing multiple LDS-related pages, including the First Vision article, pushing for sections on "treasure-seeking" to be included as the lead paragraph, even when other editors argued it was undue detail. Foxe created secondary accounts, like Hi540, later exposed as sock puppet accounts used in the editing wars. The masquerade led to a two-week Wikipedia suspension. In the 2000s, Wikipedia became the first stop for casual research. Because Wikipedia ranks so high on Google, their framing disproportionately influenced journalists, students, and even lazy "scholars". The "money digger" gets "locked in" as neutral fact. 2010-2020 Ex-Mo Media Era Platforms like Mormon Stories, CES Letter, and ex-Mo Reddit all take the âmoney diggerâ framework and lean hard into ridicule - and strangely they become a source, creating another loop: Where mainstream journalists and editors like Cabot Phillips are Googling Joseph Smith, find ex-Mo takes, then amplify it in their own articles and X feeds. What make Cabot Phillips tweet striking is that even someone outside from Mormonism parrots this Ex-Mormon ridicule narrative as if itâs settled fact. That shows how effective the ex-Mo content machine has been. Cabot probably didnât dig into the early sources, he likely picked it up secondhand through the ex-Mo ecosystem that dominates search and social media. Ex-Mo echo chambers, each retelling added more certainty. What began as âSmith was accused of glass-lookingâ slowly became âSmith was convicted of the fraud of glass-lookingâ (though no conviction exists). Each loop hardened the language and erased nuance. First it was Anti-Mormon books making exaggerated claims and quoting from and sourcing other Anti-Mormon books. Ex-Mormon forums, and YouTube amplified these recycled claims. Since digital platforms reward volume and repetition, these old, exaggerated claims got repeated thousands of times - giving the impression of being overwhelming facts. Oh, The Irony Ex-Mormon Critics often accuse the Church of lying to control the narrative but in reality the anti-LDS narrative has thrived through uncritical repetition rather than fresh evidence. Only when scholars, including the Joseph Smith Papers team, emphasize the need to go back to original documents because so much of the narrative was built on secondhand and thirdhand claims. The critics uses the documents the church published to claim the Church was hiding documents about Joseph Smithâs past because theyâre too embarrassing or proves Joseph was a fraud. The Church funded, compiled, edited, and published the Joseph Smith Papers Project, making documents like the 1826 hearing record publicly available. Thatâs the opposite of a cover-up: If the Church wanted to bury them, they easily could have. Yet the documents still donât support the criticsâ most pointed claims. The hearing transcript doesnât prove fraud or scam. It shows a subset of neighbors arguing, a second-hand testimony, and a justice letting Joseph walk without a conviction. Critics contently misstate it as a trial (it wasnât), saying Joseph was convicted (he wasnât), and claiming he profited by scamming (no evidence). The documents failed to condemn Joseph, yet ex-Mormon influencers accuse Joseph of fraud with no proof anyway and blame the Church for "lying" if they do not agree with their interpretation, and the Church "controls the narrative" through censorship. When it's them who clearly controls the wider non-LDS public narrative that dominates public perception. They rely on lying exaggerations that the actual documents donât support. If anyone is controlling a narrative by omission and distortion, itâs the critics, not the Church. The only reason we even know about these documents is because the LDS Church made them public. That undermines the very conspiracy claim that the Church lies and hides evidence. And the documents themselves donât prove the fraud claim, so the critics are left propping up their narrative with recycled accusations. Edited August 27, 2025 by Pyreaux 5
InCognitus Posted August 26, 2025 Posted August 26, 2025 26 minutes ago, Pyreaux said: What I see as happening is, there seems to be a resurgence inspired by The Joseph Smith Papers and Gospel Essays in which critics say the church changed its official tone from a denial that Joseph engaged in any Treasure Hunting, to supposedly admitting Joseph Smith operated a scam business, implying intentional deception and fraud. He used a seer stone (a folk-magic object) to locate buried treasure on other peopleâs land. If the church has "changed its official tone", it would have needed to be from before Joseph Smith wrote his 1838 history: "In the year 1823 my fatherâs family met with a great affliction by the death of my eldest brother, Alvin. In the month of October, 1825, I hired with an old gentleman by the name of Josiah Stoal, who lived in Chenango county, State of New York. He had heard something of a silver mine having been opened by the Spaniards in Harmony, Susquehanna county, State of Pennsylvania; and had, previous to my hiring to him, been digging, in order, if possible, to discover the mine. After I went to live with him, he took me, with the rest of his hands, to dig for the silver mine, at which I continued to work for nearly a month, without success in our undertaking, and finally I prevailed with the old gentleman to cease digging after it. Hence arose the very prevalent story of my having been a money-digger."Â Â (Joseph SmithâHistory 1:56) 3
Pyreaux Posted August 27, 2025 Author Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) Cool, global consciousness. Few hours later Cardon also says Cabot "stepped in it": Â Edited August 27, 2025 by Pyreaux
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 And how does he know itâs âhundredsâ? Â Have hundreds written him or posted to daily wire comments? 1
Pyreaux Posted August 27, 2025 Author Posted August 27, 2025 22 minutes ago, Calm said: And how does he know itâs âhundredsâ? Â Have hundreds written him or posted to daily wire comments? They are looking through the Twitter replies to Cabot that are claiming they are canceling.
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 35 minutes ago, Pyreaux said: They are looking through the Twitter replies to Cabot that are claiming they are canceling. I hope they actually look like hundreds. Â I donât do twitter or even X (are they still called tweets?), so canât see for myself, so it comes across as hyperbole, but maybe it is really going viral. Got to admit itâs funny given itâs the Daily Wire guy who said stop giving your money to corporations who hate you. Â Doubt it will affect their bottom line much though.
Popular Post SeekingUnderstanding Posted August 27, 2025 Popular Post Posted August 27, 2025 6 minutes ago, Calm said: are they still called tweets? They will always be called tweets đ 5
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) By the way, either itâs a joke by them or someone is pranking themâŚ.I donât understand the humor either way, his name is pronounced Kabot, not Sabot or Shabot (he says it himself) (see 11:20ish, he is pronouncing Cabot wrong as well, itâs Cab-ot, not Ca-bot).  Added:  for accuracy itâs âKAB-Étâ, but I can never remember what the upside down e sounds like.  AI says KAB is pronounced like the word âcabâ and the upside down e is like u in but.  Why is an upside down e called a schwa symbol if it sounds like uh?  Pronunciation rules never make sense to me. This mispronunciation of his name bugs me because they trash him for accuracy.  It took a few seconds for me to find out how to pronounce his name correctly (which I did from the beginning, but still doublechecked). Edited August 27, 2025 by Calm
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 2 minutes ago, SeekingUnderstanding said: They will always be called tweets đ Definitely by me.
webbles Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 7 hours ago, Pyreaux said: Josephâs 1826 Court Hearing as a Glass-Looker Surviving bills and notes from Justice Albert Neelyâs 1826 Bainbridge, NY examination calls Joseph Smith a "glass-looker" under his name, thought not his crime but rather to distinguish between all other Joseph Smiths. Glass-looking wasn't a crime. He was never sent to trial, as we see there were no credible witnesses against him, but the documents show Joseph was at least publicly known as a glass-looker. Glass-looking: A clairvoyant looking into a stone or glass, or other medium to try to see hidden things - often underground objects, lost items, or distant events. Critics will later continuously blur âglass-lookingâ into âmoney-diggingâ and âfraudâ even though they are distinct. And Joseph was never convicted, nor did he have any known victims testifying against him at this time. (Wesley Walters, âJoseph Smithâs Bainbridge, N.Y., Court Trialâ (1971), reproduces the actual bills and notes.) It was a trial. Witnesses were called and it was before a judge. We don't know if he wasn't convicted. There is evidence either way. The bill doesn't mention any conviction but Stowell testified in 1830 that Joseph "escaped" from the officer in the 1826 trial which would be odd if he wasn't convicted in some manner. And "glass-looking" for the purpose of discovering lost goods (such as hidden treasures) was a crime. In his 1830 trial, Joseph Smith's lawyer called it "the crime of Glass Looking". You can see actual bills and notes on line at https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/introduction-to-state-of-new-york-v-js-a/1. Makes it easier instead of tracking down a fairly rare book. 2
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) 44 minutes ago, webbles said: It was a trial. Witnesses were called and it was before a judge. Why do you believe it was a trial and not a pretrial hearing? (Not challenging, I know only what little I have read, not gone into details on the differences.) I believe pretrial hearings may call witnesses and are before a judge. If it was a pretrial hearing, it is reasonable to say he escaped if it was before the trial where he would be convicted.  It doesnât make sense to say he escaped if he was acquitted at the end of the trial.  That would be releasing him most likely. Edited August 27, 2025 by Calm
webbles Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 6 minutes ago, Calm said: Why do you believe it was a trial and not a pretrial hearing? I'm going off of Joseph Smith Papers. I'm assuming that they've done the research. They call it a trial, not a pre-trial. 1
Pyreaux Posted August 27, 2025 Author Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) 3 hours ago, webbles said: It was a trial. Witnesses were called and it was before a judge. We don't know if he wasn't convicted. There is evidence either way. The bill doesn't mention any conviction but Stowell testified in 1830 that Joseph "escaped" from the officer in the 1826 trial which would be odd if he wasn't convicted in some manner. And "glass-looking" for the purpose of discovering lost goods (such as hidden treasures) was a crime. In his 1830 trial, Joseph Smith's lawyer called it "the crime of Glass Looking". You can see actual bills and notes on line at https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/introduction-to-state-of-new-york-v-js-a/1. Makes it easier instead of tracking down a fairly rare book. I understood the event was an examination before a justice of the peace under New Yorkâs âdisorderly personsâ statute, not a formal criminal trial. The exact outcome remains unknown due to missing records. The docket lists him as "Joseph Smith the Glass-looker" a descriptor used to differentiate him from other people with the same name, not a charge or judgment of guilt. But both could be true. âGlass-lookingâ itself wasnât a chargeable crime under New York law in the 1820s. What could be a chargeable offense was the much broader âdisorderly personâ statute in New Yorkâs Laws of 1813, which allowed local justices to prosecute anyone who: pretended to tell fortunes or otherwise made money by deception. They are thinking he's pretending to be a glass-looker to scam money from Josiah. Josiah Stowell in 1830 supposedly gave testimony according to the Boston Christian Herald (Sept. 19, 1832), Stowell said that about three years earlier (1827-ish), Joseph had been arrested in Bainbridge, Chenango County, for âbreaking the peace,â but had escaped from the officer and returned to Palmyra. That'd be a year late. Escaping custody would have been a serious matter, leaving more traces in the record. Nothing contemporary supports it. Historians think the Christian Herald mixed up the 1826 examination with later 1827 hostile rumors. There is doubt Josiah Stowell said Joseph was allowed to "escape", unless he was just saying Joseph was allowed to ârun offâ or "flee town." John S. Reed letter (1861) later confirmed that Joseph was charged under the "disorderly person" statute for âthe crime of glass looking.â However, Reed is clear that Joseph was acquitted or discharged - not convicted. This matches the records that donât prove conviction. Most likely scenario: Joseph was examined, the case dismissed, and he left freely. The âescapeâ story mostly comes from later hostile accounts, often second- or third-hand reminiscences written decades after 1830. Like, William D. Purple (1877, Chenango Union newspaper) claimed Joseph was âcondemnedâ but let go because of his youth. It is not a trial transcript - as Joseph was never formally convicted of a crime based on this record. It does not provide any evidence that Joseph profited from treasure hunting or engaged in fraudulent schemes to be found guilty. Even Josiah's testimony absolves him. Those who call it a âtrialâ or âconvictionâ are exaggerating or misrepresenting the facts. Edited August 27, 2025 by Pyreaux 2
webbles Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 41 minutes ago, Pyreaux said: It does not provide any evidence that Joseph profited from treasure hunting or engaged in fraudulent schemes to be found guilty. Even Josiah's testimony absolves him. Those who call it a âtrialâ or âconvictionâ are exaggerating or misrepresenting the facts. I agree that anyone who says Joseph was convicted is exaggerating. But I also think anyone who says he was exonerated or just dismissed is exaggerating. The evidence is extremely unclear. So I prefer saying that it is unknown and to show both sides. You spoke so absolute ("He was never sent to trial") and I wanted to correct that. There is evidence that it was a trial. And the scholars behind Joseph Smith papers say that it is a trial. 2
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) 57 minutes ago, webbles said: I'm going off of Joseph Smith Papers. I'm assuming that they've done the research. They call it a trial, not a pre-trial. People refer to it as a trial.  Maybe the researchers just did it as well because that was how it was talked aboutâŚthough thatâs not a strong argument.  I do believe we should be careful drawing conclusions on limited info and be more âitâs unknownâ where it is. Edited August 27, 2025 by Calm 1
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 57 minutes ago, Pyreaux said: Joel K. Noble letter (1842) is written 12 years after the 1830 event, not contemporaneous. Noble was the justice of the peace in Bainbridge, NY, and remembered Joseph Smith being brought before him. It was Neeley though. Quote On 20 March 1826, JS appeared before Albert Neely , a justice of the peace in Bainbridge , Chenango County, New York, on charges of violating the state âs disorderly persons statute. JS was most likely arrested and tried as a disorderly person because he was employed using a seer stone in the area in late 1825 https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/introduction-to-state-of-new-york-v-js-a/1#transcript-0-1826
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 9 minutes ago, webbles said: And the scholars behind Joseph Smith papers say that it is a trial. It does say âtriedâ: Quote JS was most likely arrested and tried as a disorderly person because he was employed using a seer stone in the area in late 1825. Â
Pyreaux Posted August 27, 2025 Author Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) 14 hours ago, Calm said: It does say âtriedâ: First notice the phrasing: "most likely" means they are hedging because the surviving documentation is incomplete. Second, they can also say "tried" in a generic sense, to meaning he went through an examination or judicial proceeding. They donât have a record of a formal trial, conviction, or verdict. One could say the accused was âtriedâ in the loose, non-technical sense, but it wasnât a trial by jury or a criminal conviction. Because the original records are fragmentary (docket entries, bills, letters), the editors canât confirm the exact type of proceeding. Using âtriedâ communicates that he went before a judicial authority but does not imply a trial as we understand it today. It looks exactly like an examination. In early 19th-century New York, a âdisorderly personâ charge often began with a preliminary examination before a justice of the peace, where the justice would hear witnesses, assess whether a formal prosecution was justified, and decide whether to issue a warrant or dismiss. JSP is just cautious, they are not definitively saying Joseph Smith faced a formal criminal trial. That is very different from how hostile ex-Mormons would inflate "tried" at a first appearance with a criminal jury trial in a higher court, and further that merely being at a court for the first time means you are guilty or shady would be misleading. Edited August 27, 2025 by Pyreaux 1
ZealouslyStriving Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 6 hours ago, Calm said: By the way, either itâs a joke by them or someone is pranking themâŚ.I donât understand the humor either way, his name is pronounced Kabot, not Sabot or Shabot (he says it himself) (see 11:20ish, he is pronouncing Cabot wrong as well, itâs Cab-ot, not Ca-bot).  Added:  for accuracy itâs âKAB-Étâ, but I can never remember what the upside down e sounds like.  AI says KAB is pronounced like the word âcabâ and the upside down e is like u in but.  Why is an upside down e called a schwa symbol if it sounds like uh?  Pronunciation rules never make sense to me. This mispronunciation of his name bugs me because they trash him for accuracy.  It took a few seconds for me to find out how to pronounce his name correctly (which I did from the beginning, but still doublechecked). Jonah was obviously joking by giving his name a French sounding accent. 1
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 3 hours ago, Pyreaux said: In early 19th-century New York, a âdisorderly personâ charge often began with a preliminary examination before a justice of the peace, where the justice would hear witnesses, assess whether a formal prosecution was justified, and decide whether to issue a warrant or dismiss. CFR please. 1
Calm Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 (edited) 55 minutes ago, ZealouslyStriving said: Jonah was obviously joking by giving his name a French sounding accent. What does French or the French have to do with the topic? Like I said I donât get the humor.  I think if he had just done the first mispronunciation at the beginning, it might lead one to assume he thought Cabot Phillips was acting a snob (thatâs the only thing I can think of why they were mispronouncing and talking weird), but the way they did both, stumbling around, especially the second one, simply made them sound uneducated and uninformed and lacking in civility if they were intentionally mispronouncing it as thatâs juvenile and very petty mocking and I donât see much difference there with many anti Mormon attacks that mock and ridicule. Not civil behavior at all. I feel ashamed by them acting as representatives of the Church in this way. Just confirms again for me Ward Radio is not something I believe contributes in positive ways to the discussion.  If you are going to be aggressive, do so with intelligence.  If you are going to have fun, then do it lightheartedly, not petty ridicule that ends up making you look the opposite of clever. Pyreauxâs criticism was done well, leading those who paid attention to be more informed. If Ward Radio had stuck with pointing out the hypocrisy, using their own weapon, the Boering quote against the Daily Wire, pushed for canceling subscriptions to underline that statement of âstop giving money to corporations that hate youâ, that would have been witty, attention getting; a good soundbite. The rest was too much mindless clutter.  Not impressive in the least. Edited August 27, 2025 by Calm
Tony uk Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 A Christian Church (various doctrine), that is built on a firm Foundation, doctrine, organisation, leadership and so on. Will unfortunately be aimed at by people who feel the need to find fault. Over the centuries, there have been biblical people who may have had dubious backgrounds before committing to God. And people during the rise of Christianity, may have had dubious lifestyle, before committing themselves to God. And people will try and fault find in these people, just to make what they feel to be a point. 2
ZealouslyStriving Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 2 hours ago, Calm said: What does French or the French have to do with the topic? Like I said I donât get the humor.  I think if he had just done the first mispronunciation at the beginning, it might lead one to assume he thought Cabot Phillips was acting a snob (thatâs the only thing I can think of why they were mispronouncing and talking weird), but the way they did both, stumbling around, especially the second one, simply made them sound uneducated and uninformed and lacking in civility if they were intentionally mispronouncing it as thatâs juvenile and very petty mocking and I donât see much difference there with many anti Mormon attacks that mock and ridicule. Not civil behavior at all. I feel ashamed by them acting as representatives of the Church in this way. Just confirms again for me Ward Radio is not something I believe contributes in positive ways to the discussion.  If you are going to be aggressive, do so with intelligence.  If you are going to have fun, then do it lightheartedly, not petty ridicule that ends up making you look the opposite of clever. Pyreauxâs criticism was done well, leading those who paid attention to be more informed. If Ward Radio had stuck with pointing out the hypocrisy, using their own weapon, the Boering quote against the Daily Wire, pushed for canceling subscriptions to underline that statement of âstop giving money to corporations that hate youâ, that would have been witty, attention getting; a good soundbite. The rest was too much mindless clutter.  Not impressive in the least. Alright.
webbles Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 12 hours ago, Calm said: It does say âtriedâ:  It says trial in lots of places: Quote Later written accounts of the trial Quote New Yorkâs disorderly persons statute, combined with an 1825 justice of the peace manual, provides a general overview of how trials before justices of the peace in such cases were to proceed. Quote Sometime after the trial concluded  3
webbles Posted August 27, 2025 Posted August 27, 2025 11 hours ago, Pyreaux said: First notice the phrasing: "most likely" means they are hedging because the surviving documentation is incomplete. Second, they can also say "tried" in a generic sense, to meaning he went through an examination or judicial proceeding. They donât have a record of a formal trial, conviction, or verdict. One could say the accused was âtriedâ in the loose, non-technical sense, but it wasnât a trial by jury or a criminal conviction. Because the original records are fragmentary (docket entries, bills, letters), the editors canât confirm the exact type of proceeding. Using âtriedâ communicates that he went before a judicial authority but does not imply a trial as we understand it today. It looks exactly like an examination. In early 19th-century New York, a âdisorderly personâ charge often began with a preliminary examination before a justice of the peace, where the justice would hear witnesses, assess whether a formal prosecution was justified, and decide whether to issue a warrant or dismiss. JSP is just cautious, they are not definitively saying Joseph Smith faced a formal criminal trial. That is very different from how hostile ex-Mormons would inflate "tried" with a âtrialâ, and that would be misleading. I think the "most likely" is talking about the fact that we don't know why he was tried. The "most likely" reason is for being a disorderly person but no court documents tell us what law he supposedly broke. They do use the term "trial" multiple times (see my above response to Calm). 3
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now