Originally posted by harry
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As Christer also noted, perhaps Kelly's downfall was drink, easy come - easy go. It wasn't that she couldn't earn it, her problem was she couldn't keep it.
Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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The phrase "the murdered woman" was common enough, check out the press articles.
Seriously, ask yourself, why should a liar need to have stolen this phrase (met the murdered woman) to what end? - it doesn't serve any purpose to suggest this, it doesn't make his tale any more believable.
He does claim to have met her, thats the whole point of the story, so why would anyone suggest that using this phrase makes him suspicious? - he met her....what else is he going to say?
What you are looking at Gareth is commonly classed as "faces in the clouds".
Here is another well known example of seeing something that isn't there.
Why is a Fire Engine Red?
Fire-engines have four men and eight wheels.
Eight and four make twelve. Twelve inches in a ruler. Queen
Elizabeth was a ruler. She sailed the high seas. Seas have
fish. Fish have fins. Finns fought the Russians. The Russians
are red. Fire-engines are always rushing. Therefore fire-engines
are red.
These suggestions that Hutchinson must have been inspired by press stories of a bag-carrying bogeyman (but wait....he missed out the all important 'bag' bit), and then use a phrase he recognised from a newspaper story is the same type of disjointed logic as we see in the Why is a Fire Engine Red.
C'mon Gareth, you are better than that.
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