The problem is Brigham didn't specify the "measures" in the economic proclamation and so this would only be an assumption on our parts. You don't specify the measures either besides trust busting in past conversations on hacks.
In the speech including the grain confiscation quote he says he'll give them a price he considers fair. The co-op idea is another measure that requires actions by the people instead of by the government.
Other things I like: Interest rate policy goes a long way to distribute wealth evenly while respecting property rights and low taxation. Wall Street goes to great lengths getting special policies and protections in place designed to reverse this democratic effect.
Most deductions and subsidies in fact favor the rich at the expense of the poor. Some 75% of all mortgage interest write-offs go to citizens of the richest 3 cities. The charitable giving deduction needs to go as well. Outdated farm bills can go. I think the Cargill family will do just fine without subsidies considering they do over $100 billion annually in revenue. Government can either own the buildings they occupy or could sell them into social security as a way to start solving the ponzi issue with the program. Same goes for utilities and toll roads. There's no reason to privatize this stuff when we have pools of money to buy it all, and could manage it all under a government program designed to operate as a private enterprise would by incentivizing contracted management companies.
I've also gone on about how excessive welfare enriches the guys at the top and squeezes the people in the middle. Profit margins go up when you pay people to consume while not producing. Welfare has the opposite efffect of helping families when it results in more people needing it.
Redistribution is a term with ugly connotations attached to it. I look at things more in terms of distribution and how things can be achieved without government tax and spend policies.
I need to clarify that I meant modern Mormons most likely agree with Lincoln's assessment of polygamy as the twin plague with slavery so they have no problem venerating the man.
This does bring up another point about Brigham. He was a polygamist, and Benson wasn't.
I think you're out in left field here.