Originally posted by anna
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Thanks for the welcome, Anna. So far I have found people on this site to be very tolerant of my insubordinate ideas. I am also very interested in theories - particularly other than the canonical five and the one killer because that theory is already well publicised. As I have mentioned, I'm not against this theory per se, I simply see two victims as standing out as being more the work of one man (I'm thinking Liz Stride & Mary Kelly) than the others. One might of course argue that he simply had more time with these women to do what he wanted in general or, as I feel, these were more likely to be crimes of passion ie the victim was known to the killer. The savagery could point this way. It could also point to two different men killing Stride and Kelly (with the others either random killings or not). The other thing that strikes me is that women were not particularly valued at this time. At best they were chatels and at worse, these unfortunates were not valued at all. Some men at the time would have no remorse in killing these women than they would in killing a rodent or insect if it suited them. Particularly if the women were drunk, insulting or feisty in the way they conducted business.
Again thanks again for your kind welcome and I look forward to your thoughts on this and other topics.
Sasha
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