Well Sooth, you're confident. I'll give you that much.
The problem is that you've got nowhere to go in terms of rehabilitating the diary.
Science won't help. All further testing could do is to once again suggest that it might be old. There's no way to test for when the ink hit the paper. It could however demonstrate (again) that the diary contains non-period materials.
A new provenance story wouldn't help at this point. Those waters are too muddy and it would take an extremely strong piece of independent evidence to prove that it existed for any significant period of time prior to its public appearance. And all that would demonstrate is that it's not a modern forgery.
The handwriting is (and will remain) a problem. The arguments that can be made to try and discredit the will have been made, they're not getting any stronger with time.
The factual errors in the text aren't going away. I can't imagine a convincing argument being made for the killer getting details blatently wrong in his own diary. If you start with the belief that it's geniune and work backwards from there you can come up with a thin explination that might satisfy a believer, but the "he must have read it in the paper and became confused" tale isn't going to win any converts.
And no amount of argument will make the basic tale the diary tells believable in any way, shape or form. The overall premise is absurd and inconsistent with how serial killers behave.
The non-believers however DO have hope. Science might not save the diary, but new tests can surely wound or kill it. The notion that it would be impossibly difficult to make the thing or that you would have to be 5 kinds of "expert" has been losing traction for years.
By all means Sooth, enjoy the discussion. But if you think that there will one day be a glorious victory when all will acknowledge the truth of the diary I fear you'll be sorely disappointed. For that to happen would take not one, but several game changing events. A period photo with a demonstratable provenence of James Maybrick holding MJK's heart in one hand and the diary in the other might work, but words, no matter how convincing they are to you personally, will not. The scales have tipped too far for that.
The problem is that you've got nowhere to go in terms of rehabilitating the diary.
Science won't help. All further testing could do is to once again suggest that it might be old. There's no way to test for when the ink hit the paper. It could however demonstrate (again) that the diary contains non-period materials.
A new provenance story wouldn't help at this point. Those waters are too muddy and it would take an extremely strong piece of independent evidence to prove that it existed for any significant period of time prior to its public appearance. And all that would demonstrate is that it's not a modern forgery.
The handwriting is (and will remain) a problem. The arguments that can be made to try and discredit the will have been made, they're not getting any stronger with time.
The factual errors in the text aren't going away. I can't imagine a convincing argument being made for the killer getting details blatently wrong in his own diary. If you start with the belief that it's geniune and work backwards from there you can come up with a thin explination that might satisfy a believer, but the "he must have read it in the paper and became confused" tale isn't going to win any converts.
And no amount of argument will make the basic tale the diary tells believable in any way, shape or form. The overall premise is absurd and inconsistent with how serial killers behave.
The non-believers however DO have hope. Science might not save the diary, but new tests can surely wound or kill it. The notion that it would be impossibly difficult to make the thing or that you would have to be 5 kinds of "expert" has been losing traction for years.
By all means Sooth, enjoy the discussion. But if you think that there will one day be a glorious victory when all will acknowledge the truth of the diary I fear you'll be sorely disappointed. For that to happen would take not one, but several game changing events. A period photo with a demonstratable provenence of James Maybrick holding MJK's heart in one hand and the diary in the other might work, but words, no matter how convincing they are to you personally, will not. The scales have tipped too far for that.
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