Originally posted by Iconoclast
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I didn't "try to shift the source to Anne." That's a false allegation.
I was responding to your unsourced and unproven claim that the Barretts were under no financial strain in 1992.
Knowing that the authors of Inside Story were working closely with Anne, I wrote that "presumably" Anne was the source for saying the exact opposite, or at least Anne had been consulted--with presumably being an admission that it wasn't entirely clear.
I then further noted, in a second post, that the authors also appear to have been working, in part, from statements made by Barrett to Alan Gray, in the tapes that are still off-limits to anyone not in the inner sanctum.
By contrast, you have insisted most vigorously--without a single citation--that all of this is nothing but a falsehood that Barrett told to Shirley Harrison. If you didn't pull this out of thin air, where did you pull it?
Meanwhile, your colleague Caz writes:
"We do have Anne complaining that Mike was sent out with money to do the food shopping and came back with little to show for it and that, together with his increased drinking, while she was paying the mortgage, home insurance and other household bills, would undoubtedly have caused friction. If he spent money as soon as he got it, and was resentful when he didn't get it, one can imagine the financial pressure on Anne to try and keep everything on an even keel."
There's that pesky phrase again: financial pressure.
Or as Linder has it: crippling financial pressure.
I think you'll be hard-pressed to convince your readers that an unemployed and heavy-drinking Barrett, having lost his audience when Celebrity went under, and with a new mortgage hanging over his head, wouldn't have been under financial pressure in the late 1980s and early 1990s when the economy wasn't exactly booming and when the interest rates were going up.
It now appears you were wrong; the house was purchased in 1988 and not 1989. What does that do to the interest rates?
RP
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