Originally posted by StevenOwl
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Yes, I admit that your name immediately came to mind (you clearly lurk in the shadows, and I strongly suspect that there are only about three or four people still reading this thread and cheering for the diary no matter how bad the arguments) but what fun is there in pointing out your misguided subservience when I can lay it at Ike's doorstep?
It's not as if Ike doesn't slap his friend Ero on the back every chance he gets and does so openly in the body of his posts.
After all, Ike has been falsely accusing Melvin Harris of being 'evil' and 'viperous' and 'villainous' for weeks, so I thought it was appropriate to give him a dose of his own medicine.
I wonder if Ike has ever stopped to think how Melvin's widow (if she is still alive) or his friends like Stewart Evans (who is still very much with us) or his old colleagues who worked on the Arthur C. Clarke program would react if they saw some anonymous person on the internet (be it 'Ike' or 'Mitchell' or 'Soothsayer') calling their dead friend a 'viper' and a 'villain' and 'evil'?
Isn't it an extremely low and cowardly thing to do?
Alan Gray was attempting to expose the diary as a modern fake (which it is) and he was consulted by Melvin Harris, who lived in another city.
Paul Feldman was attempting to prove the diary was genuine, and he was consulted on various levels by Keith Skinner, Paul Begg, Martin Fido, Martin Howells, Anne Graham, Carol Emmas, Robbie Johnson, Colin Wilson, and others. Using Ike's silly and destructive vernacular, are these people similarly viperous?
From what I've read on this thread over the years, Keith Skinner is still stung by being called "Feldman's henchman" nearly twenty-five years ago. I can appreciate why these were painful words. Ike is now retaliating by calling Harris's motives 'evil' and 'villainous,' but Ike's accusations are so obviously partisan and overblown and stupid and strained that they are a poison that contains its own antidote.
Why does Ike pick at these old scabs like a little schoolboy, hoping to make them bleed again?
Are his arguments for the diary's authenticity so weak and ridiculous that he must resort to ad hominem attacks?
Answer: yes, yes they are.
In the end, there is a lot of water under the bridge, so why not let bygones be bygones and argue on the merits of the evidence rather than revisit ancient history?
In the words of George W. Bush, let us seek a "kinder and gentler" examination of the Maybrick Hoax as we approach September and Mr. Jones's book launch, and in this spirit I will indeed apologize to Ike, even though in the same breath I must chide him for his silly attacks on a man no longer here to defend himself.
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