Poor Jeff
You just don't understand any of it, do you, even what we are arguing about.
And you will look at it a dozen more times and still be bewildered.
It stems from an inability to admit you are mistaken.
This is the Townsend Letter reference--agaiin--a letter that you bitchily claimed Macnaghten destroyed, even though Anderson says in his memoirs that he did so.
'The public never realised what a marvellous escape Mr. Gladstone had in April, 1893, when the lunatic Townsend, with a loaded revolver in his pocket, lay in wait for him in Downing Street. A lunatic is often diverted from his purpose as easily as a child; and the man's own explanation of his failing to fire was that the Premier smiled at him when passing into No. io-a providential circumstance that, for Mr. Gladstone was not addicted to smiling. That case cost me much distress of mind. " Never keep a document," should be the first rule with a criminal. "Never destroy a document," should be an inexorable rule in Police work. But in this case I had destroyed a letter that would have proved an important piece of evidence. I always ignored threatening letters myself, and I have had my share of them ; and when one of my principal subordinates brought me a letter threatening his life, I felt so indignant and irritated at the importance he attached to it, and the fuss he made over it, that I threw it into the fire. That letter was from Townsend, and though no harm came of my act, I could not forgive myself for it.'
You cannot cope with the notion that limited and ambiguous material allows for multiple and competing interpretations.
Do you realise that you ahve boxed yourself in about that allaged March 1889 i.d., as the Seaside Home was not built until the following year?
I suppose not.
Whatever you do you cannot change the fact that you had never noticed that Macnaghten had a sense, correctly, that "Kosminski" was alive in thr asylum, and not deceased, and that Anderson (and Swanson--in 1895?)thouht his suspect was deceased and wasn't. It was actually Mac's Ripper that was dead--just a coincidence?
Think about that for a moment, if you are able.
In 1895 Swanson told a reporter that the best suspect was deceased.
In 1898 Macnaghten showed, or communciated verbally, the susepct contents of his Report to Major Griffiths, but it was data significantly different from the version he filed, for in this version it is clear that the Polish susopect is probably still alive. Which he was.
In 18945 Swanson says as he will write in 1910, or thereabouts, that the best suspect is long dead amd three years later Macnaghten communciates to Griffiths that this same suspect is probably alive--which he was.
It is not that you don;t agree with me that is the problem. The material is ambiguous enough to alllow for different interpretations.
It is that I am not permitted to have a differing line of interpretation.
To PaulB
Sorry, I missed a much earlier reply of yours on this thread.
That Macnaghten never directly denied the witness idnentification. That's true. It is my interpretation that he implies it in his memoir.
Inference is an important historical tool.
You use the same one to argue that Israel Schwartz was probably--not definitely--Anderson's Jewish witness.
There is no hard evdience that that is so, but soft evdience will do for a working theory.
How are we different?
You just don't understand any of it, do you, even what we are arguing about.
And you will look at it a dozen more times and still be bewildered.
It stems from an inability to admit you are mistaken.
This is the Townsend Letter reference--agaiin--a letter that you bitchily claimed Macnaghten destroyed, even though Anderson says in his memoirs that he did so.
'The public never realised what a marvellous escape Mr. Gladstone had in April, 1893, when the lunatic Townsend, with a loaded revolver in his pocket, lay in wait for him in Downing Street. A lunatic is often diverted from his purpose as easily as a child; and the man's own explanation of his failing to fire was that the Premier smiled at him when passing into No. io-a providential circumstance that, for Mr. Gladstone was not addicted to smiling. That case cost me much distress of mind. " Never keep a document," should be the first rule with a criminal. "Never destroy a document," should be an inexorable rule in Police work. But in this case I had destroyed a letter that would have proved an important piece of evidence. I always ignored threatening letters myself, and I have had my share of them ; and when one of my principal subordinates brought me a letter threatening his life, I felt so indignant and irritated at the importance he attached to it, and the fuss he made over it, that I threw it into the fire. That letter was from Townsend, and though no harm came of my act, I could not forgive myself for it.'
You cannot cope with the notion that limited and ambiguous material allows for multiple and competing interpretations.
Do you realise that you ahve boxed yourself in about that allaged March 1889 i.d., as the Seaside Home was not built until the following year?
I suppose not.
Whatever you do you cannot change the fact that you had never noticed that Macnaghten had a sense, correctly, that "Kosminski" was alive in thr asylum, and not deceased, and that Anderson (and Swanson--in 1895?)thouht his suspect was deceased and wasn't. It was actually Mac's Ripper that was dead--just a coincidence?
Think about that for a moment, if you are able.
In 1895 Swanson told a reporter that the best suspect was deceased.
In 1898 Macnaghten showed, or communciated verbally, the susepct contents of his Report to Major Griffiths, but it was data significantly different from the version he filed, for in this version it is clear that the Polish susopect is probably still alive. Which he was.
In 18945 Swanson says as he will write in 1910, or thereabouts, that the best suspect is long dead amd three years later Macnaghten communciates to Griffiths that this same suspect is probably alive--which he was.
It is not that you don;t agree with me that is the problem. The material is ambiguous enough to alllow for different interpretations.
It is that I am not permitted to have a differing line of interpretation.
To PaulB
Sorry, I missed a much earlier reply of yours on this thread.
That Macnaghten never directly denied the witness idnentification. That's true. It is my interpretation that he implies it in his memoir.
Inference is an important historical tool.
You use the same one to argue that Israel Schwartz was probably--not definitely--Anderson's Jewish witness.
There is no hard evdience that that is so, but soft evdience will do for a working theory.
How are we different?
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