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Rating The Suspects.
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'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
An opinion based on absolutely nothing but your attitude toward me. Everything that you post is riddled with bias and your personal dislikes. I’ve produced evidence of the seriousness of Gull’s strokes, and there’s undoubtedly more out there, but if you want to argue with a man that was Gull’s son-in-law then that’s up to you.
You do tend to post then run away don’t you Baron? Perhaps that’s why you never manage to respond to awkward questions. I’ll remind you for a third time.
A bit too tricky are they.'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
I haven’t ‘promoted’ him as the son of a surgeon because, again if you’d actually read what I’d written elsewhere, all that I said was that while we have no evidence of Druitt having any medical/anatomical knowledge, more than most he’d have had easy access to it. Thats all that I said. No more than that and I certainly awarded him no points for that entirely harmless and fair suggestion.
Is it a habit for you to withdraw from what you say whenever you get caught?!
"Exactly. If a 71 year old man who had 3 strokes isn’t an unlikely in the extreme ripper then who is? He’s only mentioned in regard to a crazy theory involving Royalty and the Freemasons. And yet a physically fit, 31 year old son of a surgeon whose mother is committed to an asylum weeks before the first murder and who killed himself just after the Kelly murder and is mentioned as a likely suspect by the Chief Constable of the Met, is somehow a non-starter. Where’s the sense of balance"
Promoting a mere son of a surgeon against a doctor with an Honour in Surgery and an Anatomy lecturer at medical school
And eating your own words, that the 71 years old Gull who had 3 strokes...
Had he 3 strokes when he was 71 during the ripper murders?!
The Baron
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Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
You were shown links, and or #post on both the threads i mentioned ,so another misconception on your behalf . What you called ''reason'' i and others call a total lack of other posters opinions based on the evidence as they interpret it .Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
Exactly. ''If a 71 year old man who had 3 strokes isn’t an unlikely in the extreme ripper then who is?''
Still you cant see how you yourself play word games, your clearly implying that as the ripper , that he had 3 strokes . , Nice try . but youve fail on that one .
You clearly cant except what i posted herlock so i wont bother going over it again. Just dont go on and on about how i dont reply to your questions or that i completely ignore them . Its wearing thin, seriously give it rest . I suggest sticking to the evidence, speaking of which Wilks and Bettanys Biographical Histoy of Guys Hospital 1892 Edition .
''While enjoying himself in Scotland he was seized with ''SLIGHT'' paralysis the right side in october 1887. He recovered in ''Great Measure'' and returned to London''.
We,ve been down this road before havent we herlock? you quote from one source while ignoring another . You must accept the evidence from all sources when debating a topic and not just the ones your convinced are correct when clearly they are contradictory . A another misconception on your behalf.
or….. “he had the attack in Scotland mentioned here and from which TD Acland said that he never wholly recovered (10 months before the murders remember) and then he had 2 more resulting in his death in 1890.“
1 + 2 = 3.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by FISHY1118 View PostFirsty im not attacking anyone im debating a point ! ,so back off with that wording. Second he did say it, look at it again closely and you see what it meantRegards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by The Baron View Post
Is it a habit for you to withdraw from what you say whenever you get caught?!
Im not wrong. You are.
"Exactly. If a 71 year old man who had 3 strokes isn’t an unlikely in the extreme ripper then who is? He’s only mentioned in regard to a crazy theory involving Royalty and the Freemasons.
If a 71 years old stroke victim who was forced by his stroke to retire from practice isnt a poor suspect then no one is a poor suspect. The fact that you have suddenly become Gull-Defender number 2 shows that you are again allowing personal feeling to cloud your judgment.
And yet a physically fit, 31 year old son of a surgeon
I described Druitt as ‘son of a surgeon’ because he was the ‘son of a surgeon.’
whose mother is committed to an asylum weeks before the first murder and who killed himself just after the Kelly murder and is mentioned as a likely suspect by the Chief Constable of the Met, is somehow a non-starter. Where’s the sense of balance"
Promoting a mere son of a surgeon against a doctor with an Honour in Surgery and an Anatomy lecturer at medical school
Again, if you think like that then you should accept that Gull is a better suspect that Kosminski. But you won’t will you because you are only obsessed with Druitt.
And eating your own words, that the 71 years old Gull who had 3 strokes...
Which I’ve provided evidence for.
Had he 3 strokes when he was 71 during the ripper murders?!
I’ll set you the same challenge that I’ve given to Fishy. Please provide evidence that I did that. Or I can save you the trouble….i never said it. I guess that you’ll just have to persist in making things up.
The Baron
…and for the 200th time…I’m not ‘promoting’ Druitt because I’m capable assessing a suspect without bias (as are most posters on here)Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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I started this thread for one reason only. To assess suspect-types in line with certain criteria. That’s all. But it’s been derailed by two people who cannot get past their own biases and personal dislikes.
Thread ruined. Well done Fishy and The Baron.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI started this thread for one reason only. To assess suspect-types in line with certain criteria. That’s all. But it’s been derailed by two people who cannot get past their own biases and personal dislikes.
Thread ruined. Well done Fishy and The Baron.
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Originally posted by John Wheat View Post
I agree. It's a shame Herlock. I have nothing against The Baron or Fishy mind. Ive found some of there comments about the non suspect Lechmere amusing in the past.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Btw, from C.J. Morley’s Jack the Ripper Suspects:
“Gull, while walking at his home in Scotland, suffered a minor stroke in the autumn of 1887, which left him slightly paralysed in the right side. Over the next couple of years, he suffered three further epileptiform attacks and two strokes.”
Whilst Gull looked and sounded the same to friends he certainly admitted that he wasn't the same man and this caused him to retire from a job that was hardly strenuous or taxing.
So…three strokes and three attacks between the ages of 69 and 71. And although the suggestion that I’d claimed that Gull had strokes during the period of the murder is clearly untrue (and of course no evidence has been produced, surprise, surprise) we have no way of knowing when these other strokes and attacks occurred. So it’s not impossible that he did suffer strokes or attacks during that period. The point of course is this - how can anyone who is professing to be unbiased and serious not accept that a 71 year old man in poor health is hardly the type one would expect in a serial killer, or that it would be dishonest to award him any points on this particular criteria.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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I did a final check in Kevin O’Donnell’s book which can hardly be described as an anti-Gull book but there’s little said about Gull that hasn’t been mentioned in other sources.
Gull had his stroke in Scotland when he became paralysed but didn’t lose consciousness. He fell to one knee but could walk back to the house with assistance. He wasn’t completely incapacitated as he took part in public/committee work but he felt unable to continue his medical practice. He remained on the Medical Register of 1888 and 1889 but saw no patients. He later had three epileptiform attacks which he recovered from (but we don’t know how long it took to recover from each one - and his death certificate only records two attacks) On January 29th 1890 he had a seizure and fell into a coma and died.
So to sum up - I’ve seen suspects of around 50 considered to have been too old. The upper age of an average serial killer appears to be 34 so this would make Gull more than double the upper age. This fact alone can’t but fail to put him on the outer edges of likelihood. Gull would be considered an old man in 2024. In 1888 he was a very old man.
Then when we add his strokes and attacks which didn’t completely debilitate him (and I have never suggested that they did) then I have absolutely no problem with restating that if Gull doesn’t deserve the lowest score possible on age and health then no one does.
There should be no need for further comment.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
I suggest sticking to the evidence, speaking of which Wilks and Bettanys Biographical Histoy of Guys Hospital 1892 Edition .
''While enjoying himself in Scotland he was seized with ''SLIGHT'' paralysis the right side in october 1887. He recovered in ''Great Measure'' and returned to London''.
Thanks for posting this Fishy.
The Baron
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