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If There Were Multiple Killers Wouldn't We Expect to See More Killings?

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Nic1950 View Post
    Hi

    I'd love to think he was a stand up figure of the community by day and by night a blood thirsty, depraved maniac. Maybe not, but I'd be interested to know how many people who lived locally were mentally ill? I think that would be too tricky to find out?.?
    Would it?
    Thanks
    Nic
    Rob House, in his excellent book on Kosminski, points to a five-fold or so increase in mentally ill people between, if I remember correctly, 1850 and 1890. It demanded the building of many new asylums, some of the biggest in Europe.
    Kosminski was admitted to Colney Hatch as number tenthousand, or something like that, and when he reached Leavesden, he was listed as inmate seventhousand-something.

    That should give you a general idea. If you can lay your hands on the book, you will get it all in more exact figures.

    The best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Nic1950
    replied
    Hi

    I'd love to think he was a stand up figure of the community by day and by night a blood thirsty, depraved maniac. Maybe not, but I'd be interested to know how many people who lived locally were mentally ill? I think that would be too tricky to find out?.?
    Would it?
    Thanks
    Nic

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    vague

    Hello Nic. Thanks.

    "As deranged as he needed to be unless cutting people up is normal behaviour?"

    Indeed. But difficult to form any judgment based on it; too loose.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    Mrs

    Hello Greg. Thanks.

    "I personally think she was a cold, calculating Prussian agitator"

    Good heavens! That's my wife! (heh-heh)

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • GregBaron
    replied
    Thesis requested...

    Originally posted by Observer View Post
    Whose that Greg? Looks like Red JimMcDermott in drag. And whats that on the red pillow, it looks as though The Ochrana Have supplied him with a Fabrege bomb.
    I think you're on to something Observer. Please submit your thesis in the next Ripperologist...


    Greg

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  • Observer
    replied
    Whose that Greg? Looks like Red JimMcDermott in drag. And whats that on the red pillow, it looks as though The Ochrana Have supplied him with a Fabrege bomb.

    Leave a comment:


  • Nic1950
    replied
    Hi

    As deranged as he needed to be unless cutting people up is normal behaviour?
    Thanks

    Leave a comment:


  • GregBaron
    replied
    Prussian Princess...

    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Nic.

    "I wouldn't have thought someone as deranged as JTR . . ."

    Hmm, how deranged was he?

    Cheers.
    LC
    Good question Lynn. I personally think she was a cold, calculating Prussian agitator...


    Greg
    Attached Files

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    deranged

    Hello Nic.

    "I wouldn't have thought someone as deranged as JTR . . ."

    Hmm, how deranged was he?

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Nic1950
    replied
    [QUOTE=Nic1950;253984]Hi

    I know, maybe my thinking is too straight forward for some but that's that! I wouldn't have thought someone as deranged as JTR would have followed a strict pattern.


    This was meant to say would not have followed a strict pattern!

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Urging people to study up on serial killers to better understand the Ripper crimes will only help mislead the next generation of Ripper students...
    Hi Mike,

    I should have thought the best way to mislead the next generation of ripper students would be to discourage them from educating themselves about serial killers and making their own comparisons with the Whitechapel murders. You must have done this yourself in order to identify the glaring differences between the two, so how come you were not misled? Why do you fear that even the dimmest new student would not grasp what you did? If it is indeed a 'fantasy' that Spitalfields unfortunates were being murdered by a serial mutilator, then surely the more we study documented cases of genuine serial murder, the more evidence we should find that you are right about the 'reality' down in Whitechapel being something very different.

    Fantasy vs Reality is an ongoing battle in Rippeology,... so its clear, in general, it is fantasy to believe that there is any proof that Jack the Ripper was a serial killer, as it would be to believe that the 5 women were killed by any individual. Sure...youre allowed to feel whatever you like about these cases, but to continually suggest serial murders without one single scrap of evidence to support it isnt really helping anyone learn anything.
    And yet your advice to new students is to learn nothing at all about serial killers, so they will begin by believing Jack the Ripper was one, and will go on believing it, because they won't have your remarkable insight into why the comparison is invalid. Or are you expecting them to take your word for it? How would that be less misleading than encouraging them to study all the evidence on which your word is presumably based?

    All Im suggesting is look at the evidence in these cases, all some others are suggesting is that the answers lie in the data of serial killers in the modern era.
    All I'm suggesting is that we look at both, because if you have the fantasy and the reality the right way round it should become all too screamingly obvious to the rest of us.

    I prefer to look in the directions that the evidence suggests are probable, but to each their own I suppose. If its probable within serial killer dogma that a serial mutilator kills without even a mutilation attempt...then I guess I can see an argument for Stride. However, its not probable...its merely possible.
    No - your serial killer dogma seems to be that no serial mutilator is ever unwilling or unable to attempt mutilation, no matter how many victims he attacks during his lifetime and no matter what may be going on around him on each occasion. Since you must have read up about every known serial mutilator to arrive at this conclusion, and would discourage others from doing the same, perhaps you could list these serial mutilators with a 100% success record.

    But why would you see 'an argument for Stride' if only you could find a serial mutilator who hadn't managed to mutilate every single victim? I thought you didn't believe in a serial mutilator on the streets in 1888, with or without Stride.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Nic1950 View Post
    I wouldn't have thought someone as deranged as JTR would have followed a strict pattern
    Have a look at the range of serialists, Nic. What has them caught every now and then is their way of clinging to a locked MO and sometimes also a locked choice of women. And some of these killers are "deranged" whereas others are not so, but instead quite clever people, able to blend in anywhere.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Nic1950
    replied
    Hi

    I know, maybe my thinking is too straight forward for some but that's that! I wouldn't have thought someone as deranged as JTR would have followed a strict pattern, what I would like to know is what followed?? After MJK what next? Or was there a next?
    Just to add a comment about the focus on the uterus, this is another target for women, to mutilate/ remove it again is another sign of his hatred for women (women of that profression maybe). Even facial mutialtion is a female thing really!!

    Thanks

    Leave a comment:


  • RivkahChaya
    replied
    Originally posted by Errata View Post
    All I'm saying is... If you saw a unicorn prancing towards you in your middle years, wouldn't you be so frozen with shock and flabbergastery that it could canter right up to you and slash your throat with it's horn?

    I'm warming to the idea.
    Maybe you could corner a woman, and go on a Jeff Goldblum rant, until she slits her own throat.

    Leave a comment:


  • bolo
    replied
    Hello Lynn,

    thank you!

    Hello Errata,

    Originally posted by Errata View Post
    I disagree about keeping the fantasy stuff out. Well, unless we're talking vampires or blood lusty unicorns or some such. Thats just silly. But I think the what-ifs are important. Constructing a narrative is important. Blind guesswork and assumptions pulled out of thin air are important. In every group there is a guy who is not high on the totem pole. He doesn't get a lot of respect, he is often wrong, can be distracting, sometimes even foolish. And he is absolutely the catalyst for original thought. An omega wolf, if you will. An example from fine cinema would be Shaggy from Scooby-Doo. Shaggy says something dumb, but it makes Velma think of something very smart, and they solve the case. Massive assumptions are useless in court, but between investigators can trigger connections between two seemingly disparate pieces of information. In other words, a total lack of academic rigor can inspire logical thought. It's not more important than fact, but it can be as important.
    I agree with you to some extend, that's why I wrote "...and try to keep the fantasy stuff out of it...". Even boundless theorizing can be worthwhile because ideally, it makes people think outside the box. On the other hand, it may also lead to rather silly suspects such as Vincent van Gogh, Lewis Carrol or Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec if you don't know where to stop. The line between inspiring creative thinking and downright nonsense is quite thin, at least that goes for authors who try to sell their fiction as non-fiction. That's not the way to go, inspiring or not, as hilarious as it may seem to picture Monsieur Toulouse-Lautrec roaming the streets of Whitechapel in 1888 with an expensive overcoat and extra-large top hat... ...Mini-Astrakhan Man?

    But I'm a storyteller by trade, so maybe I'm a bit biased
    It's quite noticeable, and I must say that I enjoy reading your posts. I'd like to know more about your work if possible.

    Regards,

    Boris

    Leave a comment:

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