Originally posted by The Baron
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One incontrovertible, unequivocal, undeniable fact which refutes the diary does not exist despite the endless inane and incomplete claims about language or historical error. If the author had talked about Liverpool Football Club, we'd all agree it was a hoax. But what we get are claims of error and chronology which are just convenient to cite but do not disprove the case. We get 'Poste House' when 'post house' was a perfectly acceptable term (then and now) - yes, even for a pub! But we don't get the impossible - we don't get Maybrick drinking in the Philharmonic Dining Rooms not then built but later famous for James McCartney's brilliant Carpool Karaoke with James Corden. And if anyone thinks I've just made a typo, they've got another think coming ... look it up - things are never as obvious as they first appear!
On the other hand, there is one incontrovertible, unequivocal, undeniable fact which proves the diary to be authentic, and that is the statement by Maybrick in his scrapbook that he left his wife's initials in Kelly's room, a claim which is evidenced by the rare but very welcome photograph of Kelly in death whose photographer's flash briefly illuminated the clue which has finally solved the case.
As we know, this clue is so catastrophic to the arguments of those who claim the diary is a hoax that they have to resort to one or even both of two scurrilously inept claims:
1) The author of the diary does not claim Florrie's initials were left in Kelly's room (the author just randomly mentioned them during just over four pages of ceaseless reflection on his worst destruction); and - and this is the best one! -
2) The letters are not actually there!
Feel free to wave your silly slogans - they appear like white flags of surrender as your argument becomes less and less sustainable ...
Ike
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