Hi all,
No this isnt about the TV Series.
Ive been trying to reconcile the fact that the blend of suspects that we have all studied do not fit easily into a category of "Madmen". The blend of Suspects in the Memorandum is a perfect example of what I mean, juxtaposed with a man who is evidently in control of himself enough to maintain a career and a normal public social life, is a pathological thief and petty criminal and a man with identified mental disorders.
I started to think that there were 2 very distinct types of Madmen within the suspects of the investigators and suspects we have since added to the list.
Some seem to have severe metal disorders that would prevent them from living normal productive lives. They seem to be lacking in the emotional and intellectual controls all of us have, and as such are capable of actions that are socially and legally unacceptable and were potentially aggressive and dangerous.
There are also some men that would have had the ability to consciously suppress "evil" thoughts or fantasies to be able to function in the relatively normal way that we see many of them did.
Take Druitt for example. Or Chapman. Neither of those men are obviously "mad", but we know one was "mad" enough to kill people and just go on with his life as if nothing happened, and we suspect that the investigators believed that Druitt lost his ability to keep his "dark side" in check, and killed himself in order to stop from killing again.
We see the word "mad" all over the press coverage and for I think many of us we assume that this madness the Ripper had must have been one that he was unable to suppress or hide. Like a Pizer. Or Kosminski, or Bury, or Cutbush, or Cohen, or Puckridge, or a Fogelma.
Well.....this thread was created to suggest that I think the Ripper we should be looking for is among the men that could suppress their desires or impulses, men that could work and function "normally". Perhaps with normal social lives. Not monied men, but one of the faceless men that went to work each day in the East End, and in Jacks case case, spent at least a few nights a month out at night walking the streets.
Im beginning to believe that the only way to reconcile the fact that the first few murders seemed to the authorities done by a man with some anatomical skill and surgical type knowledge is to assume that the man we seek was to some degree, educated. That would rule out most identified mentally ill men right there. I believe the physical evidence shows that he was cognizant of leaving traces of himself which he then ensured he did not....I think his coolness and daring, if he just stepped back out into the streets after a kill shows self control, and I think the only possible communications from the killer, the GSG and the Lusk Letter...in my opinion, back up the supposition that he may even have had superior intellect to many of those that chased him.
That Druitt is even mentioned as a very viable suspect should indicate that the police were open to the notion that the killer was 90% of the time perfectly normal and that he chose when to kill....he wasnt compelled to do so whenever a desire crossed his mind, lacking the ability to censure his subconscious.
Any thoughts?
Best regards all.
No this isnt about the TV Series.
Ive been trying to reconcile the fact that the blend of suspects that we have all studied do not fit easily into a category of "Madmen". The blend of Suspects in the Memorandum is a perfect example of what I mean, juxtaposed with a man who is evidently in control of himself enough to maintain a career and a normal public social life, is a pathological thief and petty criminal and a man with identified mental disorders.
I started to think that there were 2 very distinct types of Madmen within the suspects of the investigators and suspects we have since added to the list.
Some seem to have severe metal disorders that would prevent them from living normal productive lives. They seem to be lacking in the emotional and intellectual controls all of us have, and as such are capable of actions that are socially and legally unacceptable and were potentially aggressive and dangerous.
There are also some men that would have had the ability to consciously suppress "evil" thoughts or fantasies to be able to function in the relatively normal way that we see many of them did.
Take Druitt for example. Or Chapman. Neither of those men are obviously "mad", but we know one was "mad" enough to kill people and just go on with his life as if nothing happened, and we suspect that the investigators believed that Druitt lost his ability to keep his "dark side" in check, and killed himself in order to stop from killing again.
We see the word "mad" all over the press coverage and for I think many of us we assume that this madness the Ripper had must have been one that he was unable to suppress or hide. Like a Pizer. Or Kosminski, or Bury, or Cutbush, or Cohen, or Puckridge, or a Fogelma.
Well.....this thread was created to suggest that I think the Ripper we should be looking for is among the men that could suppress their desires or impulses, men that could work and function "normally". Perhaps with normal social lives. Not monied men, but one of the faceless men that went to work each day in the East End, and in Jacks case case, spent at least a few nights a month out at night walking the streets.
Im beginning to believe that the only way to reconcile the fact that the first few murders seemed to the authorities done by a man with some anatomical skill and surgical type knowledge is to assume that the man we seek was to some degree, educated. That would rule out most identified mentally ill men right there. I believe the physical evidence shows that he was cognizant of leaving traces of himself which he then ensured he did not....I think his coolness and daring, if he just stepped back out into the streets after a kill shows self control, and I think the only possible communications from the killer, the GSG and the Lusk Letter...in my opinion, back up the supposition that he may even have had superior intellect to many of those that chased him.
That Druitt is even mentioned as a very viable suspect should indicate that the police were open to the notion that the killer was 90% of the time perfectly normal and that he chose when to kill....he wasnt compelled to do so whenever a desire crossed his mind, lacking the ability to censure his subconscious.
Any thoughts?
Best regards all.
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