Religion? Faith?
And shaky pillars of faith, at that.
David, you have got that all round the wrong way.
You see, people who say that they cannot agree to disagree--no, no, no, it has to be agreement--are the ones exhibiting a doctrinaire attitude.
People who say they are 100% certain (about historical opinions at least) are sliding into faith-based ways of thinking or feeling. Because they were not there. How then can they be 100% if they were not there?
To use an old-fashioned designation you write like a whiz kid; e.g. somebody very talented and quite young. There's nothing wrong with youth. But there are disadvantages to it too. A rush to judgment, for one, and a difficulty with cohabiting with rival theories for another
I'm not doctrinaire. I believe in provisional opinions about incomplete material. I have advocated such an approach for years and frankly been pilloried here for it.
That's why I posted Calvin Trillin's "The Buffs", as a brilliant essay in itself but also a cautionary warning about falling into partisan, fetishistic and emotive modes of thinking that replace rational, objective analysis.
I think it is more likely that in 1888 Dew knew exactly what Andrews was up to, and maybe he chose to include Andrews in his memoir reference because of the Canadian trip (without indiscreetly saying so). It was very likely a mission that was improvised and perhaps doomed, due to being short on time, funds and opportunity. But in the great British tradition of we'll give it a go and see what turns up, Andrews went -- straight into a public relations buzzsaw. ****-ups by organizations (sir, what exactly am I supposed to find out in Toronto? You'll know when you get there) are par for the course. As it was, the Andrews trip was a public relations debacle on multiple fronts.
The primary sources of 1888 to 1891 show that Mary Jane Kelly was not believed at the time to be the Ripper's final victim e.g. an orgy of post mortem violence that cracked open Jack's mind like a warm, boiled egg. The killer was, in fact, assumed to be still out there poised to strike again. After a longer than expected interval, he did seem to kill again in July 1889.
Assuming Dew did not mean the Canadian fizzer, why would Anderson, who was under such tremendous pressure, take Andrews off the Whitechapel investigation in 1888--at the very height of the Terror? With no sense that it had concluded with the double event or Kelly. I do not think he would have, not unless escorting the prisoner gave them cover to deny they were doing a background check (I do not mean, however, the trip would have happened without Barnett). Andrews' alleged denial to a reporter in Canada is, for me, tellingly over-emphatic; a tremulous glimpse into the acute embarrassment that trailed the Irish-American absconder for CID.
You say I don't deal with certain aspects. But neither do you.
I warned you against defying common sense and the world of real people, and thus ending up in Buff-world, but you ignored all that. I warned you against the sterility of absolutes and you have ignored that too.
You have the right to ignore it.
But its a bit rich, young man, to then say I am ignoring stuff you bring up.
Logan's claiming that the murders stopped with the flight of the suspect abroad is not from newspaper accounts of 1888 and 1889. Quite the opposite, as ÚS newspapers were trumpeting Tumblety's innocence because subsequent murders in Whitechapel 'cleared' him. The short-lived 'autumn of terror' was a handy, retrospective myth invented by Macnaghten, who is pals with Sims, who knew Logan. This is a textual theme, or meme, that first appears many years later in the extant record (in 1898).
That's the second time I have written about this aspect, there will not be a third.
You allege that I have a spiritual need, or bias, or both, to have Andrews investigating Tumblety?
Another nonsensical mistake, mate.
I have written a book claiming that another suspect was believed by a contemporaneous police chief to be the fiend. That suspect had been deceased for several years. It does not really help my argument if there was a living, prime suspect who was so hot in 1888 that a top field detective was hunting his antecedents across the seas. Especially as my top copper did not even start on the Force until months after Tumblety had fled.
Better for my thesis that Tumblety wasn't much chop, and Andrews was just escorting Barnett (or digging up dirt on Parnell). Examining the evidence as best as I can I do not think, rightly or wrongly, that this was so. The argument put by Evans and Gainey and later refined by Palmer still holds sway for me.
Could be I wrong? Sure. I often am. Could you be?
And shaky pillars of faith, at that.
David, you have got that all round the wrong way.
You see, people who say that they cannot agree to disagree--no, no, no, it has to be agreement--are the ones exhibiting a doctrinaire attitude.
People who say they are 100% certain (about historical opinions at least) are sliding into faith-based ways of thinking or feeling. Because they were not there. How then can they be 100% if they were not there?
To use an old-fashioned designation you write like a whiz kid; e.g. somebody very talented and quite young. There's nothing wrong with youth. But there are disadvantages to it too. A rush to judgment, for one, and a difficulty with cohabiting with rival theories for another
I'm not doctrinaire. I believe in provisional opinions about incomplete material. I have advocated such an approach for years and frankly been pilloried here for it.
That's why I posted Calvin Trillin's "The Buffs", as a brilliant essay in itself but also a cautionary warning about falling into partisan, fetishistic and emotive modes of thinking that replace rational, objective analysis.
I think it is more likely that in 1888 Dew knew exactly what Andrews was up to, and maybe he chose to include Andrews in his memoir reference because of the Canadian trip (without indiscreetly saying so). It was very likely a mission that was improvised and perhaps doomed, due to being short on time, funds and opportunity. But in the great British tradition of we'll give it a go and see what turns up, Andrews went -- straight into a public relations buzzsaw. ****-ups by organizations (sir, what exactly am I supposed to find out in Toronto? You'll know when you get there) are par for the course. As it was, the Andrews trip was a public relations debacle on multiple fronts.
The primary sources of 1888 to 1891 show that Mary Jane Kelly was not believed at the time to be the Ripper's final victim e.g. an orgy of post mortem violence that cracked open Jack's mind like a warm, boiled egg. The killer was, in fact, assumed to be still out there poised to strike again. After a longer than expected interval, he did seem to kill again in July 1889.
Assuming Dew did not mean the Canadian fizzer, why would Anderson, who was under such tremendous pressure, take Andrews off the Whitechapel investigation in 1888--at the very height of the Terror? With no sense that it had concluded with the double event or Kelly. I do not think he would have, not unless escorting the prisoner gave them cover to deny they were doing a background check (I do not mean, however, the trip would have happened without Barnett). Andrews' alleged denial to a reporter in Canada is, for me, tellingly over-emphatic; a tremulous glimpse into the acute embarrassment that trailed the Irish-American absconder for CID.
You say I don't deal with certain aspects. But neither do you.
I warned you against defying common sense and the world of real people, and thus ending up in Buff-world, but you ignored all that. I warned you against the sterility of absolutes and you have ignored that too.
You have the right to ignore it.
But its a bit rich, young man, to then say I am ignoring stuff you bring up.
Logan's claiming that the murders stopped with the flight of the suspect abroad is not from newspaper accounts of 1888 and 1889. Quite the opposite, as ÚS newspapers were trumpeting Tumblety's innocence because subsequent murders in Whitechapel 'cleared' him. The short-lived 'autumn of terror' was a handy, retrospective myth invented by Macnaghten, who is pals with Sims, who knew Logan. This is a textual theme, or meme, that first appears many years later in the extant record (in 1898).
That's the second time I have written about this aspect, there will not be a third.
You allege that I have a spiritual need, or bias, or both, to have Andrews investigating Tumblety?
Another nonsensical mistake, mate.
I have written a book claiming that another suspect was believed by a contemporaneous police chief to be the fiend. That suspect had been deceased for several years. It does not really help my argument if there was a living, prime suspect who was so hot in 1888 that a top field detective was hunting his antecedents across the seas. Especially as my top copper did not even start on the Force until months after Tumblety had fled.
Better for my thesis that Tumblety wasn't much chop, and Andrews was just escorting Barnett (or digging up dirt on Parnell). Examining the evidence as best as I can I do not think, rightly or wrongly, that this was so. The argument put by Evans and Gainey and later refined by Palmer still holds sway for me.
Could be I wrong? Sure. I often am. Could you be?
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