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I realize that you can read it on a PC, or, probably a Mac. We only have desktops, except for the boychik's tablet, which has a tiny memory, and has to stream everything, and is wireless only (well, it has a USB port, so I could probably hook it up, but I have other things to do).
I don't relish reading something on the desktop, and I don't relish trying to bypass what I'm sure is anti-printing software with screencapture and paint.
I also really like being able to flip back and forth through a book. I have a very good memory for where something was in a book, how many pages thickness back, top or bottom of page, which leaf, and electronic media fails me. Or, I fail it. When I try to "page back" with a mouse, or a touch-screen, I don't know where I'm going. It's frustrating.
I'm 46. I can probably hold out for books until I die.
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Originally posted by RivkahChaya View Post
I also really like being able to flip back and forth through a book. I have a very good memory for where something was in a book, how many pages thickness back, top or bottom of page, which leaf, and electronic media fails me. Or, I fail it. When I try to "page back" with a mouse, or a touch-screen, I don't know where I'm going. It's frustrating.
There is something distant, unnatural and remote about this media that seems so temporary, whereas a book will last me a lifetime. I can underline, circle, make marginal notes, bookmark pages with sticky's, photocopy anything for future reference, I hope they never replace the 'book'.
I'm 46. I can probably hold out for books until I die.
Anyway, back to the topic...
Regards, Jon S.
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Can I presume you have nothing against the basic idea of a higher class killer, and can acknowledge that it must be equally possible, physically and biologically, on a one-to-one basis, but you just think it is statistically far less likely because higher class men make up a far tinier proportion of the population as a whole? You don't think there is anything about a working class man that makes him more likely to offend repeatedly than a higher class man - do you?
Without wishing to get too profiley about it, the propensity of men (from any class) to commit violent crime later in life is often connected to experiences in childhood, and it's no coincidence that many known serial offenders came from broken homes, with alcohol and physical abuse often being present during those impressionable, formative years, as well as petty crime. I would suggest a greater likelihood of encountering such a domestic predicament in the slums of the East End than in the drawing room of Lord Snooty's mansion.
It's certainly not a case of working class men being inherently more inclined towards violence than anyone else. Rather, it may have considerably more to do with negative experiences in childhood that are often encountered where poverty is a central theme.
In the ripper case in particular, we're dealing with a series of crimes committed in an area of London in which the vast majority population was comprised of the working class poor. What rational objection could there be to accepting that the killer was likely to have been one of these, especially when we know that marauder killers are considerably more common than "commuters"?
All the best,
Ben
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Hi Jon,
Apparently, when the 'shoe is on the other foot' you advise against rejoicing over a singular contrary news article, how opinions change.
It also provides the perfect explanation to the hitherto unexplained "mystery" of the police's evidently discontinued interest in Isaacs as a suspect. Something must have put them off the scent, and now we have a reason for it. Realistically speaking, it can't have been anything other than an alibi that prompted police to ditch him as a suspect.
Of course, that applies to everyone, but it does not require him to have been locked up - he could have been at a Jewish meeting, among his friends, any number of reasons could have got him off the hook.
The Lloyds Weekly Newspaper had no reason in the world to invent such a story, and it is perfectly consistent with Isaacs' known thieving ways. Incidentally, I have no problem with "unverified newspaper stories" provided they were not contradicted by more reliable evidence, and were not discredited by the police.
The important point is, she claims Isaacs was pacing his room on the night of the murder, unless you are gunning for that old "mistaking the day" argument
Isaac's disappeared for 3 weeks, after the murder, only showing up at his room on Dec. 5th. Why run IF the police were his alibi for the night of the murder?
That's the whole point. He was thought to have been on the run following the murder, whereas actually he was under lock and key until, presumably, early December for the offence of stealing a coat. In light of Lloyds' revelation, it was evidently the case that his absence was especially noted after the murder. He'd clearly been nicked before then. In fact, it's tempting to speculate that if Isaacs' return to Little Paternoster Row on the 5th December coincided with his release date from prison, he might have sentenced to a month in the clink, in which case he would have "disappeared" on 5th November, shortly before the Kelly murder.
All the best,
Ben
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Originally posted by Ben View PostNot at all, Caz.
Without wishing to get too profiley about it, the propensity of men (from any class) to commit violent crime later in life is often connected to experiences in childhood, and it's no coincidence that many known serial offenders came from broken homes, with alcohol and physical abuse often being present during those impressionable, formative years, as well as petty crime. I would suggest a greater likelihood of encountering such a domestic predicament in the slums of the East End than in the drawing room of Lord Snooty's mansion.
It's certainly not a case of working class men being inherently more inclined towards violence than anyone else. Rather, it may have considerably more to do with negative experiences in childhood that are often encountered where poverty is a central theme.
In the ripper case in particular, we're dealing with a series of crimes committed in an area of London in which the vast majority population was comprised of the working class poor. What rational objection could there be to accepting that the killer was likely to have been one of these, especially when we know that marauder killers are considerably more common than "commuters"?
All the best,
Ben
I would just like to add that the lack of a father figure during the formative years is also something that carries a lot of weight on these particular scales.
All the best,
FishermanLast edited by Fisherman; 03-02-2013, 03:43 PM.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostWithout wishing to get too profiley about it, the propensity of men (from any class) to commit violent crime later in life is often connected to experiences in childhood ... with alcohol and physical abuse often being present during those impressionable, formative years
Children with very violently abusive parents are at high risk for a closed head injury, so abused children ended up over-represented in the group of people with head-injuries, but there were also people who had committed violent felonies, and had a record of being "difficult," in school, having minor brushes with the law, having substance abuse problems, who came from non-abusive families, where none of the other children had problems, and the very interesting thing was that in case after case, the researcher found that the person had, in childhood, fallen out of a tree, been in a car accident, been hit in the head with a baseball while not wearing a helmet, and soforth.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAll useful points, Ben! Letīs just add that there ARE serial killers who had good childhoods too, like for instance Dahmer and, I believe, Bundy. That does not, however, detract from the value of your reasoning.
Bundy had a fake normal childhood. His birth mother got pregnant when she was a teenager, and her parents (his grandparents) covered it up by pretending he was their child. He found out about it when he was a teen himself, if I recall the story correctly. He reacted rather badly, and wrote his family off after the incident.
I'm not really sure how "normal" his family really was, and how much it was a facade, and they may have been emotionally distant (not that that gives a person free reign to murder women), but his was not the only family that did this: it was one of a handful of "normal" solutions to the pregnant teenaged daughter "problem" up until about 1960. (The other two most often used were "private [read: shotgun]" wedding, and "premature" baby, and "visiting an aunt" for the summer, and then putting the baby up for adoption. There was also "coathanger," but that wasn't usually used by teenagers, who often didn't admit they were pregnant until it was too late. If you had a doctor in the family, there was also "appendectomy.")
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostThere is something distant, unnatural and remote about this media [kindle, et al.] that seems so temporary, whereas a book will last me a lifetime. I can underline, circle, make marginal notes, bookmark pages with sticky's, photocopy anything for future reference,
I also got to see a friend's great-aunt's copy of Testament of Youth (just about my favorite book) that had belonged to her great aunt, who had also been a nurse in WWI, and had written "yes! just like that!" and such in the margins.
I have also seen and held the copy of Limehouse Nights that DW Griffith and Lillian Gish both made notes in when they were filming Broken Blossoms, a movie based on one of the stories in the book.I hope they never replace the 'book'.
But, I love using the computer to write. Anyone who have ever had to use a manual typewriters knows that whoever invented word processing should get a Nobel prize.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostYes indeed, after the murder, as soon as they interviewed Mrs Cusins during the House-to-house (which we have no date for), likely over the weekend - but who knows.
"During the whole of yesterday Sergeant Thicke, with other officers, was busily engaged in writing down the names, statements, and full particulars of persons staying at the various lodging-houses in Dorset-street. That this was no easy task will be imagined when it is known that in one house alone there are upwards of 260 persons, and that several houses accommodate over 200."
Times, 12 Nov.
So Isaac's (Astrachan?) disappeared only hours after the murder, the house-to-house was conducted over the weekend, and he had already gone (confirming Cusins).
So why did he go?Regards, Jon S.
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