Originally posted by Sally
View Post
I am able to envisage the concept, through crystal clarity, but the verbiage that is necessary, for its effective communication, has eluded me.
~~~
If a person has just committed a murder, and he wishes to implicate 'others', can he effectively do so, by producing a piece of crime-scene evidence, e.g. a bloody apron, and then exclaiming that he did not commit the murder, as it was, in fact, the 'others' that had done so?
If that person is able to produce the aforementioned piece of crime-scene evidence, then it is clearly he that has just committed the murder, regardless of his assertion that it was the 'others'.
I don't see how anyone could expect to get away with such shenanigans. Hence, my suggestion ...
Originally posted by Colin Roberts
View Post
¹ The object of his chalk-written proclamation, i.e. "Nothing", being that, for which the "Juwes" should be blamed.
This is why I believe that 'Jack the Ripper' was attempting to deflect 'moral blame' - as opposed to 'outright responsibility' - for, specifically, the murder of Catherine Eddowes, away from himself, and toward the "Juwes" that had disturbed him, in Dutfield's Yard.
Obviously, I murdered her. But, it is the "Juwes" that should be "blamed".
~~~
Originally posted by Colin Roberts
View Post
If he had his own reasons for doing what he did, then so be it!
And, if those reasons were driven by a psychosis that entailed an underlying obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, then all bets regarding whether he would have done 'this', or whether he would have done 'that', are plainly and simply ... off!
Now, Abby Normal has established the notion that 'Jack the Ripper' did, in fact, write the so-called 'GSG', as an underlying premise, for all discussion, within this thread.
Accordingly, he has asked that we not debate this notion.
And, accordingly, I am not!
I am simply making note of the fact that we cannot successfully rationalize the actions of a hitherto unidentified serial-killer that operated a century past.
But, we can attempt to conceive of certain scenarios that we believe fit nicely, into the sequences of events that are under our scrutiny.
That is what I am attempting to do.
I would not presume, as do many, to be able to read the mind of 'Jack the Ripper'.
But, I would presume that reasonable and seemingly 'fitting' scenarios are attainable, ... on both sides of the debate, as to whether he did, or did not write the graffito.
Of course, in this particular thread, we are compelled to limit our discussion, to just one side of that debate.
Comment