Joseph Smith and the Trojan War

 

Although on the surface it does not seem like Joseph Smith and the Trojan War have anything at all to do with each other, the truth is they have dozens if not hundreds of common variables.

The first thing to know about the Trojan War is the Trojans were Jews, the second most important thing to know about the Trojan War is that Agamemnon and his Dorian Army were descendants of the Hyksos.

 

The next most important thing to know about the Trojan War was that the city of Troy or whatever it was called when the Hyksos conquered it a few centuries back placed one of their Jewish Slave Shield Wall Armies in charge of the place. Under the strict conditions that when the next Hyksos or descended army arrive, they were to give both taxes and soldiers to fight any war the Hyksos demanded.

Achilles and his army were one such Jewish Slave Wall Army. Achilles was a Jew, so were several of the low level War Lords in the Agamemnon Army.

 

The next issue to know is that the story of the Trojan War was written down by Legend the Grandson of Odysseus telling about the War to his impressionable Grandson Homer.

For the next several centuries the family made incalculable money on every generation rewrote the story and republished it. No printing presses, so every generation would hire new “Scribes” to hand wright new copies of the story to publish. Story bias is an Absolut guarantee both based on the fact that is was Odysseus who told the story, Odysseus was the equivalent rank of a Captain or a Major. He was not a general in any way. He was the go between the Generals and the Jewish Slave Shield Wall commanders, which Achilles was one of those commanders.

 

But the story served the purposes of the Dorians, and the first century Greeks, so the leaders of the cultures involved allowed the reprinting of the story. Because it highlighted all the good things about the Dorians and hide all the “unacceptable” aspects of the Trojans.

 

The events in the life of Joseph Smith are all too close to that of the War between the Trojans (Joseph Smith) and Agamemnon (Brigham Young).

B.Y. could not tolerate any questioning of this authority, even though he did not write the book, meet with the angle Maroni, or see the plates first hand.

He was not allowed access to any of it. Which pushed him to the brink of almost Paranoid Psychosis. But he also demanded with every ouch of violence he could muster to be in charge of the church. He had not interest in the direction Joseph Smith wanted to take his church, B.Y. was only interested in the power of the church and being the leader of the Church. He demanded the power and it made zero difference to him how it got the power. Up to and including killing Joseph Smith to get it.

 

Agamemnon wanted to be the Next Pharaoh of Egypt, ruling from the new capital city of Troy. Agamemnon’s new Pharaoh name could have been Ay. But he did not count on the fact that the Avaris were ready willing and more than able to rise up and seize the thrown of Egypt from the 18th dynasty.

Just because B.Y. was a member of the Great Awakening Movement, does not mean after he was in charge of the Church the overall Great Awakening Movement did not outright reject the book of Mormon on general principles.

B.Y. hated the direction Smith wanted to take the Church, he hated the FreeMasonic Organization. He hated the degree process. He hated even more the fact that he could not rise in the ranks of FreeMasonry and be the Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England. He was not a Royal so he would never qualify.

Smith on the other hand was a fully trained FreeMason in the line of the British Grand Lodge, which when B.Y. found that out he was so angry he was beside himself with homicidal rage. The Ogles of Tiffin did not like B.Y. in any way, shape, or form. He was not invited onto their property. As opposed to Smith and Cowdrey who had open invitations to drop by at any time for any reason.  

The Great Library which B.Y. used to start his university were stolen books from the Ogle family. The ogle family gave the books to Smith, but Young stole them, without so much as an acknowledgement of where he got the books from.

The Ogle family were not Mormons, but they did appreciate Smith’s work. Assisting as the needs arose.

Young found himself the Ruler of a territory and a religion which was almost exactly the same position Agamemnon found himself after he breached the walls of Troy. He was in charge of a city with a very small population, his own religion, and his new pharaonic name. But the population was too small to create an army fast enough to truly defend against any large threat.

 

 

 

 

 

TR Welling