Wayne May on Ancient American Archaeology

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • ScriptureNotes.com/ancient-am... - Wayne May is one of the foremost experts on North American archaeology related to the Book of Mormon peoples. He has worked on a number of projects and loves sharing his research. In this interview, I got to ask Wayne some questions I hope you'll find fascinating.
    Links to sites:
    ancientamerican.com/
    www.ldsarchaeology.com/events/ (June 2024 conference registration)
    www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted... (Donate to Wayne's Research)

Komentáře • 98

  • @kdeltatube
    @kdeltatube Před 2 měsíci +17

    Great interview, Oak. Wayne's a walking encyclopedia. Also, love seeing all the "stuff" in Wayne's room, looks like Indy Jones' stash😂

  • @stephenbrown9370
    @stephenbrown9370 Před 2 měsíci +11

    Good stuff. As for Zarahemla being under 30 feet of sand/ dirt, the New Madrid quake in 1811 alone created lakes and sank towns.

    • @Borkybaby
      @Borkybaby Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yup. Was thinking the same thing. Surprising how many Americans don’t know about that event. Even ancient Israel now, is super buried as well.

    • @MrRickb75645
      @MrRickb75645 Před měsícem

      Thank for this information. I had no idea as well. I love learning things of history. I was sent like this when. I was younger. My father always told me. Once you start learning history, your hooked. Man was he telling the truth. I can't get enough. ​@@Borkybaby

  • @Borkybaby
    @Borkybaby Před 2 měsíci +6

    Just wondering when lds church will throw a bone to our hearlanders. Give them a check, say “hey for a year, let’s invest and go ahead and dig, let’s see what we find” worse comes to worse… we uncover history of our ancient native Americans here. Which finding more of their artifacts is great for those people everybody wins. Let all the information be presented, allows us to pray and be taught the truth. Love ya Wayne!! Can’t wait to see ya at the conference 😊

  • @RustySpur
    @RustySpur Před 2 měsíci +12

    Like so many others I’m sure, I’m deeply saddened by how there is a large faction in the church who totally ignore and even discredit the idea, (I would use the word truth here, but that would automatically brand me as a wacko or heretic, etc), that the Book of Mormon setting is the heartland of the United States of America…and east to the upper Great Lakes region.
    For the life of me I can’t understand why Deseret Book would refuse to sell materials connected with this study. Some day I might eventually understand why, but not now. Is there that much hatred lurking in the church? I wonder, do they who decide these policies think Hartman Rector is a nut case?
    You could say, “follow the money” …..I truly hope this isn’t the case. Do the ‘experts’ just not want to eat crow?
    I’ve concluded that the Second Coming will solve this dilemma….or D&C 112:25

    • @Adobe150
      @Adobe150 Před měsícem

      Even church leaders are not immune to temptation. In this case, they lean more on their traditions than on facts. I can feel their necks getting stiff.

    • @chris8pc
      @chris8pc Před 26 dny

      Your bashing church leaders?

  • @mikeedwards3323
    @mikeedwards3323 Před měsícem +4

    What a great presentation! It adds a whole new insight on the historical panarama of the Book of Mormon. Having grown up around Canton, Ohio and having seen some of these mounds - even in the woods - leads to a new appreciation of the whole area.

  • @JJBrown-lw1dv
    @JJBrown-lw1dv Před měsícem +3

    A Cherokee tribe had a village named Tennessee. That’s where the state’s name came from. that was early enough in Nephite history that they may have still used Egyptian and Hebrew names for places.

  • @tgak116
    @tgak116 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Add 3 Nephi 20,21 to Wayne’s list of scriptures at about the 45 minute mark about anything in the Book of Mormon pointing more to Christ. Christ Himself is speaking at Bountiful, He speaks of the Promised Land, and ties it to the New Jerusalem. I do not know if these is a direct answer in the book itself to the question Oak’s son expressed. But in concert with other revelations that followed, it seems clear to me.
    We must remember that the Lord raised up the men and women who would fight for freedom with their lives in order that a land of freedom could be established for the very purpose that the Gospel of Jesus Christ in its fullness could be restored. That was the Lord’s purpose, not necessarily theirs, but the Lord’s hand has been in the work from the beginning. The Restoration could not have begun anywhere else. Even then, we know how the adversary raised up forces to try to destroy the work. It was extremely difficult, even here in this land, at that time, when a divinely inspired Constitution had been recently established by people seeking freedom to worship as they chose. I speculate too that if it were to happen here today, it could not succeed.
    To me, the text of the Book itself trumps all other academic studies, including archaeology, geography, linguistics, DNA, etc. I just cannot ascribe the “Promised Land” scriptures to someplace else. I have had this opinion for half a century, even after graduating from the MTC (Meso-America Training Center) in Provo, and though that narrative permeates our culture, I have never accepted it. It just doesn’t match what I read in the book.

  • @b-rad3013
    @b-rad3013 Před 2 měsíci +7

    Love me some W.May! Great interview

  • @k.l.hancock8683
    @k.l.hancock8683 Před měsícem +3

    Wayne is a hero!

  • @charlesgarrett2717
    @charlesgarrett2717 Před 2 měsíci +4

    My own gravel driveway has been covered in leaves, pine needles, dust from fields, and rain. Weeds take hold, capturing more debris. I experimented with this for a year. If i hadn't cleaned it up with in five years, it would have been covered over with vegetation. Civilizations fall into ruin the same way.

    • @binmyrtmind
      @binmyrtmind Před 2 měsíci

      It’s amazing how quickly the earth covers cities. The hills in Central America are actually ruins and you would never know it. Buildings are covered with trees which have grown up through buildings in all the ruins. It’s a bit different here in America but I think our ruins look more like the Middle East than anything I’ve seen in Central America. Those ruins look like ancient Asian architecture.

  • @robwheeler7283
    @robwheeler7283 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Wow! Loved the interview with Wayne May!! I will attend the Land of Promise conference in June next month, I'm looking forward to it.

  • @juliabendixen2184
    @juliabendixen2184 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I had no idea your wife helped you publish your magazines. How fun your get to work together! :)

  • @jeffreybernson7978
    @jeffreybernson7978 Před 2 měsíci +3

    You missed out on a great conference with Rod Meldrum … it would be nice if you and porter were there … too much time to go to both .. sorry we missed you

  • @popper1772
    @popper1772 Před 15 dny

    ive looked at the mag for years. one of my favorite.

  • @user-uu6sq1cn9v
    @user-uu6sq1cn9v Před 3 dny

    Bro. Norton, I'm thinking xou may be the grandson of the Patriarch who gave my husband and I our patriarchal blessings! We were converts and two of his earlier members. He was a great man. I had a very testimony building experience with my blessing. So neat to see his name! There probably aren't a lot of people with the first name of Oak. Loved the podcast. I've been a heartlander for many years. I really want to get to Ohio and see the mounds!!
    D.Gated

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před 2 dny

      I'm actually his son. :) So glad you got to have your blessing through him.

  • @kellerclements8059
    @kellerclements8059 Před měsícem +2

    Purple dyes may be part of the valuable things they were missing. That comes from some ocean snail that is extremely valuable because the dye is more set when exposed to sun rather than being bleached. Also Solomons temple had the entire complex. The place of the high priest spoken of in Mosiah seems to be in accord with the chamber of hewn stone at solomons temple.

  • @TheCooperScoop
    @TheCooperScoop Před měsícem +2

    You have to listen to The Ancient Tradition podcast!!! It will answer your question about the tree of life stone.

  • @shawndiebold
    @shawndiebold Před měsícem +1

    Gotta love Wayne May!

  • @maryannstout7600
    @maryannstout7600 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Several years ago I read a book about the history of the Nephites and Lamanites being in the same area just south of the Great Lakes. The book was written by a woman named Phyllis Olive (Olive Phyllis). I can’t remember the name of the book. Have you ever heard of it? When I first learned of your work I thought maybe she was involved with you in your work. However, she has never been mentioned. Are you familiar with her name and book?

    • @brucelloyd7496
      @brucelloyd7496 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Phyllis Olive has a different geography model, 1 of over 250 models. She believes it happened only in the state of New York--a very limited model.

  • @rbwbehrmann
    @rbwbehrmann Před měsícem +3

    So my father tried to purchase tickets to the event at maple mountain in June and when he tried to pay he got a weird error after he entered in his credit card info. I had sent the link for the website from an email I had received. My dad is getting emails from Wayne but I’m skeptical if it’s really Wayne may or if it’s a scammer pretending to be him. Is there a way to reach Wayne to make sure it’s actually him? Does he have a contact email somewhere?

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před měsícem

      Becky, please contact me through the Scripture Notes contact page. Someone has been trying to reach you to help with this but is having issues posting here.

  • @westho7314
    @westho7314 Před 23 dny

    A couple of young MoMo missionaries come by my place almost every friday for chat. Because i'm a socially adjusted & welcoming person i take the time in my life to listen and ask questions. I realize how many people simply slam their door shut or won't even answer the door with people soliciting religion. I am interested in world history & archeology, especially in the western hemisphere, so i ask the missionaries about their own views on early old world occupation of the Americas.They talk about wars between the lamanites, nephites but nothing about the indigenous people other than being apostates or savages, unless converted, Being young men under 20 i asked them why they were considered as "elders" in their church at such a young age, obviously with so little knowledge about their own history much less the long history of actual world around them. In more current history i asked them what they thought about Trump, they replied he's a good business man, Then i asked what they thought about Mitt Romney suggesting to President Biden to Pardon Trump from his 94 felonies, when not long ago before all Trumps legal problems Romney was one of the only republicans to vote for impeaching then President Trump. so there you have it elders that know little or nothing about their own history or the older cultures they co exist with today. Being Native American i understand why the people do not want to share with the fair and delightsome white people. they are not to be trusted.

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před 23 dny

      Being an elder is both a calling and an office in the priesthood. It does not mean the same thing as a tribal elder who is full of wisdom and experience. That said, young men and women who serve missions in faith and obedience to their calling, carry a special spirit with them to assist in their labors and to help those with open hearts and minds to feel the truth of the message that God once again spoke to man and restored his gospel with priesthood authority to the earth.

  • @dlfranklin5524
    @dlfranklin5524 Před měsícem

    So glad you guys cracked the code, I have Muskogee Creek in me so now I know I'm a blossoming rose!

  • @godsoffspring4195
    @godsoffspring4195 Před měsícem +1

    Thanks fellas! The Holly Ghost approves of this message! 😇

  • @roryjones6483
    @roryjones6483 Před 2 měsíci +2

    It’s a little painful to watch people that interview Wayne May begin their paradigm shift. repetition is good, and Wayne is patient. I could see the light bulb start to get brighter “Wait, you mean not all Jaredites died in battle?” Or even “you mean the Nephites (or any other culture or nation for that matter) just didn’t stay in the same place for 1000 years?”
    Expanding one’s mind is fun.

  • @jamesgill9723
    @jamesgill9723 Před 17 dny

    Really impressive

  • @Kristy_not_kristine
    @Kristy_not_kristine Před 2 měsíci +4

    ❤❤❤

  • @rkn2800
    @rkn2800 Před měsícem +1

    Does your research approach begin with the idea that the BOM is historically correct, therefore things you find prove it, or do you do archaeology for the sake of archaeology and let the findings reveal themselves, whether they resemble BOM geography, culture, language, DNA (for people) or not?

  • @JoshuaTGray
    @JoshuaTGray Před měsícem

    If they do get to test the Zelph bones for DNA, I hope they test both the Y-chromosome haplogroup and the mitochondrial haplogroup. Both would be very fascinating to know.

  • @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth
    @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth Před 2 měsíci +3

    The archaeology speaks

  • @cdmbcgm
    @cdmbcgm Před měsícem

    Tennessee is believed to come from the ancient village/city named Tanasi.

  • @baref1959
    @baref1959 Před měsícem +1

    seems like most ancient sites are on a promintory out into the river or lake. too bad you can not go to the east of the site/south of navoo.

  • @shanandkyleSau
    @shanandkyleSau Před měsícem

    Can you post links to Wayne May in the description box for the viewers please?

  • @troymitchell1747
    @troymitchell1747 Před 2 měsíci +1

    What does "Tennessee" mean?
    The name "Tennessee" evolved from Creek and Cherokee words (many state names originate from Native American languages). All State Name Origins
    Exact details for the origin of "Tennessee" have been lost over time, but Spanish explorer Captain Juan Pardo was the first to record the name in 1567; at some point he and his soldiers encountered a Native American village called "Tanasqui" in Cherokee country.
    Historical accounts (maps, documents, letters) refer to "the land of the Tannassy" with many spellings, such as: Tennassee, Tunasse, Tanase, Tunesee, Tonice, Tinnace, Tanasee, Tannassie, Tannessee, Tannasie, Tenessee, Tenesay, Tenasi, Tansai, Tunissee, Tanase, Tanasqui Tenesee, Tanisee, Tanei, Tunese, Tinassee Tunnissee, Tennisee, Tennesy, Tennecy, Tunassee, Tanasee.
    The first known historical record using the modern spelling of "Tennessee" is an official correspondence from the Governor of South Carolina in the 1750's. Tennessee became the 16th state on June 1, 1796.

  • @brentgeddes
    @brentgeddes Před 15 dny

    By the looks of it. This video absolutely dwarfs your other videos. Heartland is where the B of M took place.

  • @shanandkyleSau
    @shanandkyleSau Před měsícem +1

    Also, does brother Wayne May ever come to Missouri for lectures?

    • @tcatt222
      @tcatt222 Před měsícem +1

      Yes, he's been here a few times meeting mostly at RLDS buildings with other believers. I've attended one and it was packed.

    • @MelHeartlander
      @MelHeartlander Před měsícem +1

      Yes, Wayne does.
      I am LDS and have visited Independence Missouri to support my RLDS-Restorationist friends who have held conferences with their Heartland Group. In fact they are having a conference this coming November. I just asked my friend, who is organizing that conference to comment here about that.

    • @cherylclute4981
      @cherylclute4981 Před měsícem +1

      The Independence, MO “The Land of Promise Heartland” group will be having a conference on Friday November 1 & Saturday November 2, 2024. There will be more information coming about our conference towards the end of the summer. We’ve got so far Wayne May, Michael Stahlman, and Phill Wright as presenters but more to come.

  • @DestroyerOfWords
    @DestroyerOfWords Před 21 dnem

    I don't know why this is so difficult. The Lamanites lived South of the Nephite line most of the time. The Lamanites had access to the Aztecs, but the Nephites didn't -- except for a few times when the borders were opened. We don't have a record of the Lamanites. The Book of Mormon is about the Nephites written FOR the Lamanites, not about.
    Maybe reading the BoM with intent and not just reading titillating commentary is the difference.

  • @nancywhitten2585
    @nancywhitten2585 Před měsícem

    I have a question about Hagoths groups?

  • @R.E.A.P
    @R.E.A.P Před měsícem

    How do I donate?

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před měsícem

      Go to www.ldsarchaeology.com/ and in the top banner area either wait for the view to change to the 2nd panel and you'll see a donate button, or look for the 2 tiny white dots in the bottom area of the image and click the 2nd one and you'll see it.

  • @brucelloyd7496
    @brucelloyd7496 Před 2 měsíci +1

    At 1:08 in this YT video, Oak incorrectly states that the Ancient American magazine has been published for 16 years. Actually, it's over 30 years.
    Also, Wayne mistakenly said that Zelph's bones were found on the banks of the Mississippi. No, that us where Joseph wrote the June 4, 1834, letter to Emma about "wandering over the plains of the Nephites, recounting occasionally the history of the Book of Mormon, roving over the mounds of that once beloved people of the Lord, picking up their skulls and their bones, as a proof of its divine authenticity." Sadly, this letter was cited 3 times in Saints Vol 1, but this powerful testimony of the Book of Mormon was censored. The Zelph mound was located on the west bank of the Illinois River.

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci

      thank you Bruce for correcting the location

  • @eveelane2806
    @eveelane2806 Před 2 měsíci

    Yay 🤗

  • @Adobe150
    @Adobe150 Před měsícem

    It's funny that the Church Bookstores won't carry his books.

  • @SmilingOutdoorGrill-np3xp
    @SmilingOutdoorGrill-np3xp Před 2 měsíci

    Hello Wayne, I would love to know why in the Book of Mormon the land of Nephi is north but Tennessee is south, so I really want to know!! 😊

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci

      Misunderstanding here of sorts?? Lehi arrives on coast of Florida, some time later he leaves the older brothers for a new place, he has to travel north of north west out of Florida. He settles (my call) in what would become east Tennessee my choice for Land of Nephi. They will reside there for about 400 years when the Lord tells Mosiah , He will guide him to Zarahemla at present day Iowa.

  • @JJBrown-lw1dv
    @JJBrown-lw1dv Před měsícem +3

    Didn’t know Deseret Books was squashing this work. We should speak out against that.

  • @charlesgarrett2717
    @charlesgarrett2717 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Ohio means beautiful or does it also mean bountiful.

  • @ThomasSmith-os4zc
    @ThomasSmith-os4zc Před 19 dny

    There is no continuity in the stratigraphy of America. Look at the stratigraphy of the Koster Site and Joffre Lanning Coe's excavations of the Carolina Piedmont. There is a catastrophe that ended Clovis.

  • @davden965
    @davden965 Před 2 měsíci

    I wonder if the earthquake at Nee Madrid will expose some Nephite artifacts

  • @laynapalmer837
    @laynapalmer837 Před měsícem

    Hugh Nibley stated once that there was nothing of historical significance to the Book of Mormon in South America.

  • @DerGlaetze
    @DerGlaetze Před 2 měsíci +2

    What about all of the mesoamerican accounts of worshipping “the great white god”, whenever explorers like Cortez, Pizzaro, captain John Cook, etc. first landed on mesoamerican shores? Those players were certainly not in the heartland. Just saying.

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci +4

      The Book of Mormon knowledge would have been taken to Central America after Christ visited the Nephites at the Bountiful Temple, He went all over the Western Hemisphere

    • @rodhjelm1571
      @rodhjelm1571 Před měsícem +4

      Jesus also told the Nephites that he had more people to see.

    • @JJBrown-lw1dv
      @JJBrown-lw1dv Před měsícem +1

      There’s no question that Jaredites and Lamanites made their way to mesoamerica and that there was interactions between people of S America, Meso and N America. The cultures and myths would have been shared. The question is where did the events of the BOM occur.

  • @troymitchell1747
    @troymitchell1747 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Holy cow. Censorship from Deseret book?
    Sounds personal. How can you read the BOOK OF Mormon and not know it took place in the United States?
    Do some people it doesn’t really matter where the book of armor took place, but in my head geography is everything. I’m a land surveyor by trade. I am not doubting at all that Jesus Christ visited the people of Central and South America and I would almost bet my bottom dollar they also have record somewhere. But there is no way you can read the book of Mormon and say it is anywhere in the heartland.

  • @lukeslc-xd8ds
    @lukeslc-xd8ds Před 10 dny

    My opinion: The Church has MAJOR issues. Does my saying that make me an apostate?

  • @garyrawlings3209
    @garyrawlings3209 Před měsícem

    Nephites landed in Chili and the Jaredites in eastern U.S. Mulekites somewhere in Mexico. It's interesting that the Jaredites took off with eight barges and the Mayan records and writings tell of the seven little boats. one apparently didn't make it.

    • @JJBrown-lw1dv
      @JJBrown-lw1dv Před měsícem

      Nothing could be further from Nephi’s description of abundance than Chile’s stark mountainous coast.

  • @hollayevladimiroff131
    @hollayevladimiroff131 Před měsícem +1

    Where are the artifacts? You should be able to relate the ancient civilization to the artifacts with DNA. Why doesn't the church fund you if your work is valid.

    • @chupacabraatx9574
      @chupacabraatx9574 Před měsícem

      Exactly. If the church thought there was a way to validate the Book of Mormon, they would throw billions of dollars at it.

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před měsícem

      Artifacts don't contain DNA. However, the Hopewell civilization has a DNA connection to Israelite lineage. The Hopewell also lived in the Northeast Americas from around 550 BC to 400 AD according to archeologists which is the time frame of the Nephite civilization.

    • @ScriptureNotes
      @ScriptureNotes  Před měsícem

      The Book of Mormon is constantly being validated. There is a lot of physical evidence to support it, yet that's not the treasure. The treasure is inside the book. If you haven't read it, don't condemn it.

  • @AlbertJLouie
    @AlbertJLouie Před 25 dny

    Wayne May, a member of the Mormon church, who does not have any kind of degree in the field of Archeology.
    His books on Archeology is certainly not recognized in the academic world, only "Mormons" blindly follow and quote him as reference.
    Being a member of the Mormon church puts in a position to be influenced and mulipuated by the Mormon church.

    • @bryanpons6585
      @bryanpons6585 Před 18 dny

      Thank you Albert for saving us from ourselves. Yes we are all stupider and more gullible than you.
      You keep putting your faith and trust in the Smithsonian Etc. This is corroborating evidence. The Book of Mormon itself can not be rationally explained away. Are you the guy who can look at a flower and not see evidence of God? Happy contrarianism.

  • @davidstout6051
    @davidstout6051 Před měsícem

    I buy enough stuff from Deseret to pay the CEO’s salary. Perhaps I should threaten to boycott until they start putting the Heartland stuff back on the shelf. More seriously, I don’t see why they would discontinue your material. Any historian would start there given that Palmyra is the only place that can be positively identified. Ergo the Heartland or upstate New York theories have at least as much credibility as Central America. Since the Church has no official stance, all possibilities should be available through Deseret. This is a simple matter of fairness.

  • @jeffreybernson7978
    @jeffreybernson7978 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Why did you and PORTER .. Ditch Rod Meldrum…

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci +2

      We are focusing on Scriptures, history and archaeology that is Book of Mormon oriented. Firm Foundation is a melting pot of numerous comings and goings in the Salt Lake Valley, not focused enough on BoM in our opinion

    • @godsoffspring4195
      @godsoffspring4195 Před měsícem +1

      @@waynemay3404 Hello Wayne. This has nothing to do with this upload but I'd like to share with you what I bumped into regarding what a curelom and cumom is. Cureloms and cumoms were more than likely crossbred beasts of burden such as mules(Jack and Hinny). If so, I believe the two words used in the BoM stem from the Adamic language that could have still lingered in the Jaredite language. Since Ancient times, Elephants and Mules have been known to be superior beasts of burden above the donkey and the horse.
      "and there were elephants and cureloms and cumoms; all of which were useful unto man, and more especially the elephants and cureloms and cumoms"
      "Mules were known in Egypt since before 3000 BC and for some 600 years - between 2100 BC and 1500 BC - - the Pharaohs sent expeditions into the Sinai to mine turquoise. The miners marked their route with carvings on rocks showing boats and mules (not camels!). Mules were, at that time, the preferred pack animal. Also in ancient Egypt, while the Pharaohs were carried about in fancy litters by servants, the common people often had the use of mule drawn carts. An Egyptian monument from Thebes depicts mules yoked to a chariot. Mule remains are frequent in the archaeological record, suggesting that mules had become a "mainstream" animal early on, used primarily for pulling wagons or transporting burden.
      To the north in Asia Minor, the Hittites were the most powerful of the early horse-people - - but they ... considered the mule to be at least three times more valuable in price than even a good chariot horse ."
      For a short 10 min. read... Google History of the mule by DAVE BABB. :>)

  • @robertleinbach6016
    @robertleinbach6016 Před 2 měsíci

    I believe this is the same man who has publicly stated that he believes the so called Kinderhook Plates were authentic.
    This alone invalidates any other ideas he has.
    When it’s time for us to know the locations and disposition of the Book of Mormon, it will come from authorized sources, not a pseudo explorer.
    Save your money.

    • @bryanpons6585
      @bryanpons6585 Před 2 měsíci +7

      I Would love to hear the WHY of your statement. To be a contrarian and to expect such a level of perfectionism is so easy. Are you a Monday morning quarterback also? with no skin in the game? You will notice that Wayne May ends all his presentations with the statement. I REPORT YOU DECIDE Give him the same respect even if you are a smarty pants.
      Charity never faileth brother

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci +2

      List all your reasons for Kinderhook to be fake and I will meet you on all points with list to validate the plates. So lets do it Bob?

    • @waynemay3404
      @waynemay3404 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Well Bob, list your reasons for Kinderhook as fake items and I will meet each one of your statements with reasons for authenticity. Lets do it Bob.

    • @scottbjohnson6646
      @scottbjohnson6646 Před měsícem

      Gordon B Hinkley participated in the Church’s purchase of documents forged by Mark Hoffman …..maybe you question his credibility?

    • @robertleinbach6016
      @robertleinbach6016 Před měsícem

      @@waynemay3404 This is akin to debating whether the earth is round or flat. A flat earth and those fake plates are bogus.