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< Criticism of Mormonism | Books | One Nation Under Gods | Use of sources(Redirected from One Nation Under Gods/Use of sources/Rockwell admitting to shooting Boggs)
D and C 98 justifies murder | A FAIR Analysis of: One Nation Under Gods, a work by author: Richard Abanes
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Debauchery and despotism at Nauvoo |
The author of ONUG claims that Porter Rockwell admitted that he had tried to kill Lilburn Boggs.
The author of the critical book One Nation Under Gods claims that Porter Rockwell admitted that he had tried to kill Lilburn Boggs. [1] He offers the following sources:
The author does not tell us that his source, Schindler, was criticized for giving credence to anti-Mormon sources on this issue:
Anti-Mormon testimony is given free rein in relation to the shooting of Governor Boggs, especially in an effort to link Joseph Smith with it through the death "prophecies" which Rockwell tried to fulfill. Evidence of these predictions of Boggs's early and violent demise unravel into loose ends as the whole affair becomes unfinished business. After an accumulation of anti-Mormon charges convinces one of Rockwell's guilt, a contrary court decision such as that of Judge Pope (p. 88) throws the whole question back to where it has been for over a century--a state of uncertainty in which each reader decides the case for himself according to his personal prejudices.[2]
A review of the second edition of this work noted the same difficulties:
The late Gustive O. Larson reviewed the first edition of the Rockwell biography for Dialogue (Winter 1966) and objected primarily to the "over-abundance of irresponsible testimony and sensationalism represented by such names as William Daniels, Bill Hickman, Joseph H. Jackson, Swartzell, Achilles, Beadle, and . . . Kelly and Birney's 'Holy murder' . . ." I feel that Larson's criticism is still valid and see little effort on the part of the author to rectify this tendency.[3]
The author does not mention McLaws' paper, which examined the evidence and found it insufficient to assign blame to anyone.[4]
One Nation Under Gods also fails to account for the fact that Rockwell was acquitted by a Missouri jury, after being held captive for more than a year—if a jury in hostile Missouri would not condemn him, how good could the evidence have been?[5]
Notes
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