Originally posted by Jonathan H
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But you use 'break cover' because you do picture Macnaghten like some Moriarty in the centre of his web spinning misinformation and pulling the strings of Griffiths and Sims. To 'break cover' is pejorative writing, it is intended to give a slant to your reader's interpretation. It's no a big thing in itself, but it is part of your theory about Macnaghten.
The simple fact is that in Days of My Years Macnaghten for the first time publicly and in print expressed his opinion that an unnamed Thames Suicide was Jack the Ripper. No 'breaking cover', just an opportunity to write of his career, experiences and thoughts.
Originally posted by Jonathan H
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I was, in a round about way, saying that the evidence on which Macnaghten based his conclusions in 1894 must have been pretty convincing because he had not been persuaded from it by anything that came along in the next two decades.
Originally posted by Jonathan H
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The bottom line is that you don't really have any idea at all of the evidence on which Macnaghten based his beliefs about Druitt. Nor do you have any idea of the evidence against Kosminski. Neither do I. Neither does anybody else. So Anderson doesn't trump Macnaghten, Macnaghten doesn't trump Anderson, and nobody trumps either of them. Nobody trumped.
The only thing that happens is that you decided where your research hour and research dollar is going. You spend it on Macnaghten, Rob House spends it on Anderson. You then share it with other people. Thank goodness. But the point is that you are both looking for that Holy Grail that explains why Druitt and Kosminski were ever suspected in the first place.
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