DRoy:
Haha Fish, try again. He testified at the inquest as Cross. That is in evidence. This is evidence he thought of himself as Cross otherwise he wouldn't have gave evidence as Cross.
You never learn, do you?
You wrote - and I am quoting you ad verbatim - "We have evidence he was known as Cross because that is what he called himself."
Now you want to tell me that you meant that he himself thought of himself as Cross, and that such a thing makes you right.
That is just sad. The issue at hand was whether OTHER people did so - if he was locally known as Cross. Not if he in the moment he gave his name at the inquest did so. Such a thing has no bearing at all on the overall question of deception or not.
And at the end of the day, he need of course not even have thought of himself as Cross at all, in spite of giving that name. If I wanted to con the police and give them a false name, I could choose any name at all, like, say, Clemence. If I used that name, it would not equal me thinking of myself as Clemence. I would still think of myself as Holmgren. The Clemence name would be a lie, not something I thought of myself as.
You need to give the whole issue up, DRoy. The only thing you are doing is to embarras yourself with faulty perceptions.
Show me anyone (including himself) calling him anything but Cross. You have he signed his name as Lech, that's it. I've told you these are two different things.
And I told you that is wrong. When the tax authorities write to you, they are naming you on the envelope. They are calling you by a name.
Besides, if you are saying that a written name is not something that somebody is called, then you can forget about Thomas Cross signing Charles as Cross in 1861. Then you ONLY have himself using the name Cross. And that really is not much of a guarantee that he used that name otherwise, since we have 120 signatures that tell us he didnīt.
How about the Hyams/Mitchell rot, by the way? Any progress on that one?
The best,
Fisherman
PS. A word of advice: Donīt do it! Even if you are tempted, donīt.
Haha Fish, try again. He testified at the inquest as Cross. That is in evidence. This is evidence he thought of himself as Cross otherwise he wouldn't have gave evidence as Cross.
You never learn, do you?
You wrote - and I am quoting you ad verbatim - "We have evidence he was known as Cross because that is what he called himself."
Now you want to tell me that you meant that he himself thought of himself as Cross, and that such a thing makes you right.
That is just sad. The issue at hand was whether OTHER people did so - if he was locally known as Cross. Not if he in the moment he gave his name at the inquest did so. Such a thing has no bearing at all on the overall question of deception or not.
And at the end of the day, he need of course not even have thought of himself as Cross at all, in spite of giving that name. If I wanted to con the police and give them a false name, I could choose any name at all, like, say, Clemence. If I used that name, it would not equal me thinking of myself as Clemence. I would still think of myself as Holmgren. The Clemence name would be a lie, not something I thought of myself as.
You need to give the whole issue up, DRoy. The only thing you are doing is to embarras yourself with faulty perceptions.
Show me anyone (including himself) calling him anything but Cross. You have he signed his name as Lech, that's it. I've told you these are two different things.
And I told you that is wrong. When the tax authorities write to you, they are naming you on the envelope. They are calling you by a name.
Besides, if you are saying that a written name is not something that somebody is called, then you can forget about Thomas Cross signing Charles as Cross in 1861. Then you ONLY have himself using the name Cross. And that really is not much of a guarantee that he used that name otherwise, since we have 120 signatures that tell us he didnīt.
How about the Hyams/Mitchell rot, by the way? Any progress on that one?
The best,
Fisherman
PS. A word of advice: Donīt do it! Even if you are tempted, donīt.
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