Back to Hitler...
Palmer's argument that Mike was thinking about the Hitler Diaries fiasco when asking Martin Earl for Victorian paper, supposedly in order to create Jack the Ripper's diary and succeed where Kujau failed miserably, is risible. [Try saying that after a beer or two.]
What other steps is Mike meant to have taken?
Everything we know Mike did, and everything he claimed he did, strongly suggests he would not have given a flying one about Kujau's downfall - if he had given it any thought at all.
The handwriting flatly contradicts Palmer's argument about the paper, for starters. Why would Mike have worried about the paper being of the 'correct' period, if he had then taken the diary to London, knowing that no attempt had been made to imitate the 'correct' handwriting?
At least Kujau was able to do a fair imitation of Hitler's handwriting and understood this to be rather crucial. The funny part was that nobody at the time realised that when three handwriting experts declared the handwriting in the diaries to be authentic, they were comparing it with other fakes by Kujau, so they matched perfectly.
Palmer tried to claim elsewhere that Mike rightly predicted that he could safely sell whatever handwriting his wife might produce, because the people who bought it would all be either too gullible, greedy or dishonest to care any more than Mike evidently did.
So perhaps Palmer would now care to indicate which aspects Mike was hoping, at least initially, to get 'right' [apart from the paper]; which aspects he wasn't quite so bothered about by the time he and Anne were up to their armpits; and which aspects he couldn't give a flying one about in the end, because it suddenly dawned on him that down in London, in the book world, nobody would give a thought to the Hitler Diaries fiasco because, after all, they would all be fraudsters just like him.
Palmer's argument that Mike was thinking about the Hitler Diaries fiasco when asking Martin Earl for Victorian paper, supposedly in order to create Jack the Ripper's diary and succeed where Kujau failed miserably, is risible. [Try saying that after a beer or two.]
What other steps is Mike meant to have taken?
Everything we know Mike did, and everything he claimed he did, strongly suggests he would not have given a flying one about Kujau's downfall - if he had given it any thought at all.
The handwriting flatly contradicts Palmer's argument about the paper, for starters. Why would Mike have worried about the paper being of the 'correct' period, if he had then taken the diary to London, knowing that no attempt had been made to imitate the 'correct' handwriting?
At least Kujau was able to do a fair imitation of Hitler's handwriting and understood this to be rather crucial. The funny part was that nobody at the time realised that when three handwriting experts declared the handwriting in the diaries to be authentic, they were comparing it with other fakes by Kujau, so they matched perfectly.
Palmer tried to claim elsewhere that Mike rightly predicted that he could safely sell whatever handwriting his wife might produce, because the people who bought it would all be either too gullible, greedy or dishonest to care any more than Mike evidently did.
So perhaps Palmer would now care to indicate which aspects Mike was hoping, at least initially, to get 'right' [apart from the paper]; which aspects he wasn't quite so bothered about by the time he and Anne were up to their armpits; and which aspects he couldn't give a flying one about in the end, because it suddenly dawned on him that down in London, in the book world, nobody would give a thought to the Hitler Diaries fiasco because, after all, they would all be fraudsters just like him.
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