Hi Lars,
I complimented you for starting a potentially interesting thread, but now I'm going to have to growl at you: Growl!
Ah, now don't you get me stroppy, Lars. The double event murders were both committed in close proximity to two Jewish clubs, and in Mitre Square you had a synagugue not far away to boot (anyone unfamiliar with the distance between Mitre Square and Duke Street ought really to consider the negigible distance - try a 25 second walk!) Now, although you had Jewish establishments dotted around the locale, it wouldn't be at all true to say that Jewish clubs were all over the place. Clubs are significant in that, unlike many Jewish establishments, they were active in the small hours; the killer's hours, which means that a Gentile committing murders in close proximity to Jewish clubs would enable the obvious inference that the killer might have been one of the club attendees, which wouldn't have been feasible if a Jewish ecclesiastical establishment or a Jewish shop was targetted, for instance.
Already, this is militating very heavily against "random coincidence", but when taken in conjunction with the fact that a Jewish-related message was found in the most most concentrated Jewish hotspot in the district and accompanied by Eddowes' apron remnant, the "coincidence" angle is rendered even more unlikely.
I'm afraid it's a little bit fallacious to argue that if the killer didn't implicate the Jews in a ludicrously over-the-top and blatent manner, then he wasn't implicating the Jews at all. Clearly this isn't the case. It wasn't subtle anyway, but to expect anything less subtle is to expect the unreasonable.
I want to argue that he would have been pretty churlish to bypass the opportunity to take advantage of the prevailing animosity against the Jews, and I'm sorry, but anti-Jewish sentiment was far greater than anti-Irish or anti-police views, and it was Jewish Leather Apron that had kick-started all the association between the killings and Jews.
I complimented you for starting a potentially interesting thread, but now I'm going to have to growl at you: Growl!
1. between a tenuous victim and a club that catered for everyone
2. between a victim a Jewish club/whatever beside a prime whore killing spot
3. between a shitty apron fragment and a vague graffiti
2. between a victim a Jewish club/whatever beside a prime whore killing spot
3. between a shitty apron fragment and a vague graffiti
Already, this is militating very heavily against "random coincidence", but when taken in conjunction with the fact that a Jewish-related message was found in the most most concentrated Jewish hotspot in the district and accompanied by Eddowes' apron remnant, the "coincidence" angle is rendered even more unlikely.
I'm afraid it's a little bit fallacious to argue that if the killer didn't implicate the Jews in a ludicrously over-the-top and blatent manner, then he wasn't implicating the Jews at all. Clearly this isn't the case. It wasn't subtle anyway, but to expect anything less subtle is to expect the unreasonable.
Unless you want to argue that the prevailing animosity against Jews was such that he couldnt fail to use it as a smoke screen?
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