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The 'Suckered!' Trilogy
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostI am sorry to all but I do have another pair of minor questions to ask - they are linked.
1) When was the legal idea of "workers compensation" adopted in the United Kingdom?
2) If I am right in my timing and the U.K. began using workers compensation in the 1880s, when was it begun for the British police, in particular Scotland Yard.
Jeff
Technically,English Police still do not have "compo".
Over here,I have a niece (Academy Instructor/First Line of Response) and a cousin who died in the Line of Duty.
Very different.My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account
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Originally posted by DJA View PostYou probably seek the 1880 and 1897 Acts.
Technically,English Police still do not have "compo".
Over here,I have a niece (Academy Instructor/First Line of Response) and a cousin who died in the Line of Duty.
Very different.
Jeff
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostYou mean because I think that Wolf's and Simon's perspective on the present matter shouldn't be dismissed off hand as conspiracist fantasies just because it poses a problem to police apologists?
1. #22 - You accused me of calling Simon Wood's work "garbage" when I had done no such thing (and you have still never retracted this or apologised for it).
2. #50 – You wrongly claimed that "official persons" have suggested or outrightly stated that Jarvis was in the States digging up Parnell material.
3. #208 – You referred to Labouchere's admission that he was mistaken as a "forced admission" but then could not justify that unqualified statement.
4. #241 – You stated, without any supporting evidence, that "80%" of what officials say or do is face-saving and pandering, the implication being that 80% of official statements are untrue.
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostYou're the only one screaming that you have proof! proof! proof! that will demolish his opponent
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostThank you for the answers to my question - I really thought Lewis & Lewis were not Labouchere's solicitors (being that Sir George Lewis, despite his impeccable reputation as a solicitor for the wealthy and powerful happened to be Jewish - and we know what Labouchere thought of Jews).
As for your other questions, I have absolutely no idea and can't add to what DJA has posted.
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Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostHe certainly makes a very good case using new sources, and has found a doozy -- a Canadian newspaper quoting Andrews to the effect that he is not after Tumblety and saying that the latter is not a Ripper suspect.
The simple reason for this is that if Andrews was in Toronto on Tumblety business, due to Tumblety being the prime suspect for the JTR murders, I wouldn't necessarily expect him to tell the truth to a reporter (although, of course, I do think he was telling the truth in this instance).
In a nutshell, my case against the argument that Tumblety was in Toronto on Tumblety business is as follows: It does not make any sense, there is no evidence to support it and all the documentary evidence shows that Andrews' mission in November/December 1888 was to safely escort an extradited prisoner to the judicial authorities in Toronto. It would be exactly the same with or without the Andrews newspaper interview.
I might add that I am very sceptical about Mike's apparent claim that some further evidence exists to challenge this conclusion but, obviously, one can only wait and see what he comes up with.
Many thanks, incidentally, for your other comments in your post about my trilogy.
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Originally posted by David Orsam1. #22 - You accused me of calling Simon Wood's work "garbage" when I had done no such thing (and you have still never retracted this or apologised for it).
In my opinion, when you say something can be 'consigned to the garbage', you are in effect calling it garbage, because garbage is what one tends to consign to the garbage. My point - which I barely remember because it was made so long ago, but which you're choosing to hang onto - was that it's rude to mention an author's name in the same context as 'garbage'. if you want to call someone's book garbage, write a damn book review, but it shouldn't be in something passing as an objective scholarly study.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostFirst of all, asking someone to apologize is really lame.
Here is what you said in #22:
"They [Wood and Vanderlinden] also put a lot of time and work into their publications, so for you to come along later and call their work 'nonsense' and 'garbage' because in 2015 you have new material and resources is unfair and undermines your own work."
My response in #24 was:
"I did not call Simon Wood's or Wolf Vanderlinden's work 'garbage'. I said of the (clearly false) Boston Sunday Globe report of 23 December 1888 that 'the entire thing should be consigned to the garbage'."
Until today you have never even acknowledged my response to you in #24. For that reason I had no idea if you absorbed or understood what I said and did not know if it was a reason for your continued inaccurate comments in this thread. As far as I am concerned, your initial claim, made without reading my article properly, was poisonous and, as you have never retracted the claim or apologized for making it, quite possibly misled others into thinking I had described the work of the two named authors as "garbage" when I had done no such thing"
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIn my opinion, when you say something can be 'consigned to the garbage', you are in effect calling it garbage, because garbage is what one tends to consign to the garbage.
"Despite the obvious implausibility of the story, Simon D. Wood does not describe it as 'hokum' (one of this favourite words), which is what he usually says about newspaper reports containing blatant inaccuracies, but accepts it as basically genuine. According to Wood, 'cross-checking other non-agency press reports suggests that the events described are fundamentally correct' but, as he does not let us know what those other reports are, or how they can possibly corroborate the fantastic yarn spun by the Boston Globe, the entire thing should be consigned to the garbage".
So the paragraph starts off by talking about "the story", which is the Boston Sunday Globe story, and is in the context of a detailed discussion of the Boston Sunday Globe story, and concludes by saying that the "entire thing should be consigned to the garbage". If you misunderstood what I was saying then fine but if you now read that paragraph again you should appreciate that I am clearly talking about the newspaper report not the work of Simon Wood or Wolf Vanderlinden.
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Postit's rude to mention an author's name in the same context as 'garbage'.
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Postif you want to call someone's book garbage, write a damn book review, but it shouldn't be in something passing as an objective scholarly study.
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David,
Just to be clear, what you're saying is that you were calling Simon's sources garbage but you consider the conclusions he draws from them to be viable. In other words, the conclusions he draws from them are not garbage and are to be given serious consideration by his readers. If that's what you meant, my apologies for misunderstanding you.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostI might add that I am very sceptical about Mike's apparent claim that some further evidence exists to challenge this conclusion but, obviously, one can only wait and see what he comes up with.
I don't have additional evidence, just a clear cut correction and a clarification. What I've found certainly helps Roger's claim (and definitely supports Stewart Evans'), but your argument will stand; just not on as solid ground as you want. The only reason I've added my posts (I apologize for them being cryptic for the moment) is because some seem the Andrews/Tumblety connection can now be erased off the list ...at least that's my perception.
Sincerely,
MikeThe Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
http://www.michaelLhawley.com
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Originally posted by mklhawley View PostHi David,
I don't have additional evidence, just a clear cut correction and a clarification. What I've found certainly helps Roger's claim (and definitely supports Stewart Evans'), but your argument will stand; just not on as solid ground as you want. The only reason I've added my posts (I apologize for them being cryptic for the moment) is because some seem the Andrews/Tumblety connection can now be erased off the list ...at least that's my perception.
Sincerely,
Mike
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by mklhawley View PostI don't have additional evidence, just a clear cut correction and a clarification.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostHi Mike, you'll have to forgive me but I remain sceptical that you (or others) are going to come up with a clear cut correction of any significance to something in my trilogy, although, of course, I'm not saying it's impossible. When are we going to find out what it is?
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostJust to be clear, what you're saying is that you were calling Simon's sources garbage but you consider the conclusions he draws from them to be viable. In other words, the conclusions he draws from them are not garbage and are to be given serious consideration by his readers. If that's what you meant, my apologies for misunderstanding you.
And while you are at it, why not also ask him how Labouchere was coerced into a volte-face and who coerced him. This was something you couldn't explain to me when I asked you a similar question so I'm surprised you haven't already asked Simon for assistance on this matter.
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