I remember seeing a t.v. program featuring Vincent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Charles Manson, in which he said he viewed Manson as an aberration that could have occurred at any time but that the late 1960s in southern California was an atmosphere that was perhaps uniquely groomed for such a character to arise.
Applying that line of thought to Victorian Whitechapel, I also remember reading a quote somewhere (and I've posted here before asking if anyone remembers who said this and where, with no success) in which someone in an editorial on social conditions in the area before the Ripper murders began said, "Whitechapel is a hell, and mark my words, it will produce a devil." (Quote approximate.)
With conditions as they were in the East End at that time, a hellish pressure cooker that had already produced Bloody Sunday, does anyone think that a single individual rising up to personify all that was wrong in such a personal way was inevitable? In other words, if it hadn't been Jack, would it have been someone else?
Applying that line of thought to Victorian Whitechapel, I also remember reading a quote somewhere (and I've posted here before asking if anyone remembers who said this and where, with no success) in which someone in an editorial on social conditions in the area before the Ripper murders began said, "Whitechapel is a hell, and mark my words, it will produce a devil." (Quote approximate.)
With conditions as they were in the East End at that time, a hellish pressure cooker that had already produced Bloody Sunday, does anyone think that a single individual rising up to personify all that was wrong in such a personal way was inevitable? In other words, if it hadn't been Jack, would it have been someone else?
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