Hindsight is good enough for me to avoid dropping it, at any rate, Monty. I think we need to couple that hindsight to the material we have, courtesy of police and press mainly, from 1888, and we will be fine.
In fact, that is what I do when I say that I think that the police were of the meaning that they probably needed to look for a maniac. My hindsight tells me that there is a difference inbetween how we look upon serialists and how they perceived them - and then I add an article from the Dublin Express, dated in December 1888, saying that "detectives have recently visited all the registered private lunatic asylums and made inquiries as to the inmates recently admitted." I then couple this to Andersonīs statement from 1892 that it was "impossible to believe" that the killings could be those of a sane man, and that they must instead be those of a "maniac revelling in blood". What Anderson says here is that although there were both sane people and maniacs around, there was no need to fear that a sane man lay behind the murders.
As for your excellent friend and you and your agreement on the superior knowledge of the police as opposed to us, Iīd like to join that club if I may. However, it should be weighed in that the knowledge the police amassed about people, was a knowledge that stretched only to the ones they saw reason to look into. I therefore have no hesitation to say that we may well know a lot more about the people they did NOT decide to look into. In hindsight, thatīs not a bad thing.
Ergo, there is no hindsight to maintain. It cannot be done.
Monty
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