Originally posted by erobitha
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A better example of a mantra would be your frequent observation that the watch has stayed in the Johnson family, which avoids mentioning that they tried to sell it to a Texan for tens of thousands of pounds.
I don't know--you'll have to ask Chris Jones--but I think what he meant is that if the diary is a modern hoax, then the watch must be, too. He does, after all, seem to be arguing that the diary was a recent hoax in 1992.
Do you find this illogical? If so, how so?
Do you think it is possible that Barrett or the Barretts came up with the idea of Maybrick-as-Jack, hoaxed the diary in 1992, and then by a sheer bit of good luck they stumbled onto the fact that Maybrick really was the Ripper? And that Maybrick really had made a confession--only on a watch?
And then by another stroke of luck, Johnson discovered, for the first time in over 100 years, confessional scratches on the inside back cover within days or a couple of weeks of Barrett's recent hoax being mentioned in the local papers?
If you recall, the timing was so outlandish that Shirley Harrison nearly "panicked."
Or do you think Albert Johnson lied, and he had already known about the scratches on the watch and somehow told Mike Barrett of all people, who then created a recent hoax based on this information?
Do you see why nobody finds these ideas credible?
No; I agree with Jones. If the diary is a modern hoax, it strikes me as entirely logical to assume the watch must be one, too, but I'd be interested in hearing your explanation how this need not be the case.
An old hoax would be a different matter, but that's a different argument. I think he means a modern hoax.
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