Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Your earlier post worked from the faulty assumption that a rag is a piece of cloth used to wipe yourself on. I corrected you; a rag CAN be a piece of cloth used to wipe your hands on, but it does not in any way HAVE to be just that. The piece of cloth is a rag before you wipe your hands on it. If you do not wipe your hands on it, but instead drop it on the ground and walk away, does its status as a rag go away? Nope. it does not.
Does the piece of cloth actually have to BE a piece of cloth? If I wipe my hands on a discarded t-shirt, am I then allowed to say that I wiped my hand on a rag? Or must I say that I wiped them on a t-shirt, but NOT on a rag?
Let me take you a few years back to another discussion that took place back then. It was then said that I was NOT supposed to say that Lechmere was "found" standing all alone in the street by Robert Paul. "Found" was a LOADED word, inferring guilt - or so I was told. It was a sort of panic, coupled to the sudden insight that a factually correct word could look like it inferred guilt on Lechmeres behalf. I was banned from JTR Forums for writing that Lechmere was found standing close by the freshly killed body of Polly Nichols. It was too much for the administrators of the boards.
Luckily, we have moved on from that sad point of administrative evidence obfuscation.
It was ridiculous then, and it is ridiculous now. But there are matters that are even MORE ridiculous.
When the torso killer decided to dump a body in the East End of London, he settled on Pinchin Street. The exact street where Charles Lechmere grew up and spent his formative years.
There were hundreds and hundreds of streets to choose from. There were a thousand streets in Whitechapel. There were tens of thousands in the East End.
But the killer chose Charles Lechmeres boyhood street.
Is-that-not-an-ALMIGHTY-coincidence?
Moreover, he put the torso in a railway arch, and that railway arch was only erected after Lechmeres mothers and her bigamous husbands lodgings were torn down to give way for it.
IS-that-not-another-ALMIGHTY-coincidence?
And then, the day after the torso was dumped in that Pinchin Street railway arch, a bloody guess what was found in an EXACT line between the railway arch and Charles Lechmeres lodgings.
Surely-that-must-be-the-coincidence-to-end-ALL-coincidences?
And the man who is so coincidentally pointed at, is a man who JUST HAPPENED to stumble over the dead body of Polly Nichols, who JUST HAPPENED to be found there by Robert Paul, who JUST HAPPENED to be present there at a remove in time when the victim would go on to bleed for many minutes, who JUST HAPPENED to use another name with the police than the name he otherwise habitually used with all other authorities, who JUST HAPPENED to leave out his registered name, who JUST HAPPENED to disagree with a serving PC about what he had said on the murder morning, who JUST HAPPENED to come up only with disagreements that seemed tailor-made to take him past said police, who JUST HAPPENED to find the only Ripper victim where the clothing obscured the damage done, who JUST HAPPENED to have a working trek that took him right past the Spitalfields killing area, who JUST HAPPENED to have his mother staying a stones throw from the Berner Street murder site and who JUST HAPPENED to have an old working trek of many years standing that would have led him close by Mitre Square on a daily basis.
Me, I think that the circumstances surrounding the Pinchin Street murder and the incredible way they all seem to link up to Charles Lechmere makes for a much more interesting topic of discussion than the question about which fabrics can perhaps be described as rags and which can perhaps not.
Because THAT is where I perceive the semantic games are to be found. It is a matter that has plagued the debate about Lechmere long enough now.
He WAS found standing near by Polly Nichols by Robert Paul.
And a discarded piece of cloth - regardless if it is an apron, part of an apron or any other fabric or attire - IS a rag.
Now that I have taken all this time to explain the matter to you, how about YOU explaining to ME why the whole Pinchin Street drama was set on Charles Lechmeres boyhood street, and why it is that a bloodied rag was found in an exact line between the arch and 22 Doveton Street the day after the dumping of the body.
Are they just coincidences? R J?
AGAIN?
MORE OF THEM??
And guess what? When I ask this question, which answer do you think will surface? I will tell you: people will say that I should not use the term "coincidences", becasue they are not coincidences at all. I have misused the British language, see?
That is the methodology of the naysayers. It is a very obvious violation of commons sense, but hey - one does what one has to do when cornered, eh?
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