Ben: But I’m suggesting the precise opposite; that you shouldn’t do that, not that you “should”!
And I once again suggest that you let me take care of my posting myself.
Why have you nothing to say on the “surgical skill” thread? Crossmere had no “surgical skill”, and yet there are people posting there, right now, insisting that the real ripper must have had some. That won’t do, surely? Hadn’t we better go over there and put them right? Or is the real enemy anyone who suggests the ripper might been a local itinerant from the same social group as his victims, despite that type of suspect being much closer to Crossmere than a “surgeon” could ever be?
Has nothing to do what we are discussing here. Here we are discussing your proposition that prostitutes belong to the lower middle class. Or that the lower middle class is on par with prostitutes, socially.
Neither applies.
Tesco is a "huge and renowned company"; that doesn’t make the man who stacks the canned fruit at Orpington a “very competent and skilled worker” necessarily, any more than the “hugeness” or “renown” of Kenworth made Gary Ridgway one. He might have been a veritable Picasso with his spray paint for all I know, but that doesn’t negate the fact that spray-painting a truck is a relatively menial task (and that’s not to impugn the worth of spray-painters or shelf-stackers).
There are spray-painters and there are spray-painters. The "menial" ones end up in a back-street workshop for crashed cars. The better ones get the jobs at the large and important car manufacturers. They make decent money and they live a relatively comfortable life. They are nowhere near the rock bottom of society.
So you didn’t read a single word I wrote about the huge different between a working class labourer in 1980s west coast America, and his direct equivalent in 1880s east London?
Yes, I did. It was all wrong.
A truck painter like Ridgway would probably have found himself in a doss house at some point if he had lived and worked in the east end of London in 1888; ditto Shawcross, ditto Rifkin, ditto Wright, ditto Sutcliffe. Conversely, many of the women who found work as prostitutes, either regularly or temporarily, in the Victorian east end would probably not have had recourse to such work if they lived 100 years later in a less $hitty, less crowded part of the world. We’re talking about a time and place where “rock bottom” was relatively normal, which it would not have been in the times and places in which Ridgway committed his crimes.
Why would we move Ridgway to 1888 and start conjuring up what he would or would not have made there? How does that apply to his REAL status: that of a middle-class truck painter with a decent income and a house?
THAT was where I said many serialists come from, and these serialists killed prostitutes who live at the rock bottom of society TODAY. That was my example, that was my comparison.
If we are to move to 1888, then you need to look at the homeless vagrants, the down-and-outs, those who turned drunkenbolts whenever they could afford it, the unemployed and poor, if you are to find people back then living at the same level as the street prostitutes.
Then there were people like Lechmere, like Robert Paul, like William Marshall, like Cadosh, like James Kent, like James Mumford, who all had a work and who all had an address where they lived and where most of them raised families. These people would have been a much better comparison with Ridgway and Hansen. They would have been the lower middle class of their day, striving people, eking out a better existance for themselves than those who occupied the same rock bottom as the prostitutes.
And I once again suggest that you let me take care of my posting myself.
Why have you nothing to say on the “surgical skill” thread? Crossmere had no “surgical skill”, and yet there are people posting there, right now, insisting that the real ripper must have had some. That won’t do, surely? Hadn’t we better go over there and put them right? Or is the real enemy anyone who suggests the ripper might been a local itinerant from the same social group as his victims, despite that type of suspect being much closer to Crossmere than a “surgeon” could ever be?
Has nothing to do what we are discussing here. Here we are discussing your proposition that prostitutes belong to the lower middle class. Or that the lower middle class is on par with prostitutes, socially.
Neither applies.
Tesco is a "huge and renowned company"; that doesn’t make the man who stacks the canned fruit at Orpington a “very competent and skilled worker” necessarily, any more than the “hugeness” or “renown” of Kenworth made Gary Ridgway one. He might have been a veritable Picasso with his spray paint for all I know, but that doesn’t negate the fact that spray-painting a truck is a relatively menial task (and that’s not to impugn the worth of spray-painters or shelf-stackers).
There are spray-painters and there are spray-painters. The "menial" ones end up in a back-street workshop for crashed cars. The better ones get the jobs at the large and important car manufacturers. They make decent money and they live a relatively comfortable life. They are nowhere near the rock bottom of society.
So you didn’t read a single word I wrote about the huge different between a working class labourer in 1980s west coast America, and his direct equivalent in 1880s east London?
Yes, I did. It was all wrong.
A truck painter like Ridgway would probably have found himself in a doss house at some point if he had lived and worked in the east end of London in 1888; ditto Shawcross, ditto Rifkin, ditto Wright, ditto Sutcliffe. Conversely, many of the women who found work as prostitutes, either regularly or temporarily, in the Victorian east end would probably not have had recourse to such work if they lived 100 years later in a less $hitty, less crowded part of the world. We’re talking about a time and place where “rock bottom” was relatively normal, which it would not have been in the times and places in which Ridgway committed his crimes.
Why would we move Ridgway to 1888 and start conjuring up what he would or would not have made there? How does that apply to his REAL status: that of a middle-class truck painter with a decent income and a house?
THAT was where I said many serialists come from, and these serialists killed prostitutes who live at the rock bottom of society TODAY. That was my example, that was my comparison.
If we are to move to 1888, then you need to look at the homeless vagrants, the down-and-outs, those who turned drunkenbolts whenever they could afford it, the unemployed and poor, if you are to find people back then living at the same level as the street prostitutes.
Then there were people like Lechmere, like Robert Paul, like William Marshall, like Cadosh, like James Kent, like James Mumford, who all had a work and who all had an address where they lived and where most of them raised families. These people would have been a much better comparison with Ridgway and Hansen. They would have been the lower middle class of their day, striving people, eking out a better existance for themselves than those who occupied the same rock bottom as the prostitutes.
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