Originally posted by rjpalmer
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And do you exclude Alan Davies who told the story to Alan Dodgson who passed the story to Tim Martin-Wright, all confirming that the story was being discussed long before the Battlecrease provenance was on the table?
Do you just conveniently ignore the testimony of all three - perhaps because it just doesn't work with your playbook?
Surely - as a balanced and reasonable thinker - you should be struck by the fact that these three men were discussing the diary of Jack the Ripper being sold in a pub in Liverpool almost a year before the first book on the subject was published? Does it not make you pause for a moment and wonder exactly how that comes to pass?
The "fourth, fifth, or possibly even sixth-hand information" of which you speak so disparagingly just happens to take us back to Battlecrease House and a light-fingered electrician lifting an old book from - almost certainly - under Maybrick's old floorboards on the same day that we know for certain that a fellow drinker from The Saddle Inn was seeking to gain interest in - drum roll, please - a diary of Jack the Ripper purportedly written by James Maybrick?
That's the thing about Chinese Whispers - the "fourth, fifth, or possibly even sixth-hand" version does not crystallise the original truth - it progressively distorts it until it no longer simulates even a vague version of the original. And yet this 'Chinese Whispers' does exactly what it shouldn't be doing - it focuses down on the very possibility which Keith Skinner (and Coral Atkins) uncovered in 2004 and which could not be revealed until Bruce Robinson gave the green light to in 2017. Extraordinary. The truth was out there in Liverpool in 1992, and finally it was evidenced in 2017.
As a rational and well-intended researcher, you should want to understand this better not worse.
It's your choice what sort of researcher you wish to be.
Ike
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