Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post
Hi Caz,
That's exactly what happened though. Her unprovable narrative was believed by many rational and intelligent people. Mike was a shambles, no one believed a thing he said, so Anne's story worked a treat. Dim or otherwise, Anne's made up provenance was accepted, until it wasn't.
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Those who were fooled by Anne for years and now arguing that there is no way Anne could have believed she could have fooled them.
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Just to add...
In my experience, Keith Skinner is the kind of fastidious researcher who wouldn't accept his own birth without seeing the birth certificate to prove it.
The idea that Keith of all people would have entertained a 'silly belief' in a Battlecrease provenance with no more evidence for it than there is for Mike's auction claim [which is precisely none] is - well - one of the silliest I have ever come across. When there only appeared to be a choice between Anne's family claim and Mike's fakery claim, it wasn't so much a case of entertaining a 'belief' in one or t'other as being unable to disprove one, while not being able to believe the other.
When new evidence came along for a third possibility, it needed to be taken into account but constantly tested against the alternatives, to try and find the fatal flaw that would rule it out. Rejecting this evidence unseen in the wider context and untested, in favour of an unproven belief or claim, or someone else's unproven theory, would have been very silly indeed.
But RJ can't seem to get his head round this.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post
Hi Caz,
That's exactly what happened though. Her unprovable narrative was believed by many rational and intelligent people. Mike was a shambles, no one believed a thing he said, so Anne's story worked a treat. Dim or otherwise, Anne's made up provenance was accepted, until it wasn't.
Anne's narrative only worked at all because Mike had no evidence to prove his - and she must have known it.
However much a shambles Mike had become, there was nothing to stop him - or the auction house for that matter - producing proof of how he obtained the scrapbook and exposing Anne's narrative as entirely false.
Unless you consider the bleedin' obvious: there was no such proof and Anne knew it, which neatly explains why Mike never did produce it.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
That's the insanity of this 'debate.'.
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Those who were fooled by Anne for years and now arguing that there is no way Anne could have believed she could have fooled them...
Blimey, how hard can this be?
RJ must think his readers are every bit as dim as he thinks Anne was.
"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
What's it about, Sir H.?Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Or, seen from another angle...
"there was nothing to stop Eddie Lyons - or the other electricians for that matter - from resurfacing and providing proof of how they obtained the scrapbook thus exposing Anne's narrative as entirely false.
Unless you consider the bleedin' obvious: nothing had been sold to Mike down the boozer and Anne knew it, which neatly explains why she felt free to tell the Yapp/Formby porkies."
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostNeither Mike, nor Anne, mentioned this relevant purchase to Shirley Harrison during the 2 1/2 years that Mike was working with her as a collaborator. That is "hiding the evidence."
"Hiding the evidence" is self-evidently a proactive process. One has to make a conscious decision that something needs to be hidden from view. How do you know that this was their intent, given that they may have simply been unaware that such a purchase was relevant given that neither was defending themselves from claims that they had hoaxed the scrapbook, merely from claims that the scrapbook had been hoaxed (there's a world of difference prior to Mike's June 1994 'confession')? The answer is that you don't know but you state it as if you do because you are unable to grant your audience the alternative view.
When the existence of this purchase was finally revealed, Anne still left the false impression that it was purchased in May 1992--a distortion that was still being repeated by Diary researchers at least as late as 1998.
I should have added here that you present the researchers' failure to realise that the diary was ordered in March 1992 as a 'distortion'. A distortion of what? If Anne had stated that the diary was purchased in May 1992 and produced the evidence to back it up, what sort of 'distortion' are the researchers knowingly perpetrating? I don't understand your logic. Unless you can show that they knew about the March 1992 ordering and therefore suppressed that knowledge, then you have no grounds to call it a 'distortion' (other than that you want your audience to be misled regarding their options here).Last edited by Iconoclast; 06-28-2023, 05:21 PM.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
On the contrary, it may be "hiding the evidence" or it may have been "we didn't realise we had evidence that was relevant to someone's claims that we hoaxed the scrapbook". You have homed-in on the former possibility, and I have - in my view, far more fairly - noted that both views are possibilities..
You said, dubiously, that they took no steps to hide the purchase. You now claim you are 'noting both views.'
This won't do.
Revealing to Shirley the existence of the red diary at any time in 1992 or 1993 would not have been "defending themselves from the claim of having hoaxed the scrapbook." It would have been the most natural thing in the world.
Your suggestion is ridiculous and deliberately myopic. They could have revealed the existence of the red diary as part of any normal communication between two collaborators. Mike and Shirley were under contractual agreement to share research.
There were attempts, both by Harrison and later by Skinner, to determine what research Barrett had previously conducted. Mike or Anne could have mentioned the red diary then. There were also attempts, by Shirley and others, to determine if the scrapbook was genuinely Victorian.
Anne's own rationale for the purchase of the red diary is that Barrett wanted to know what a genuine Victorian diary looked like.
What would have been more natural, then, to have mentioned this red diary there and then to Shirley Harrison, as she pondered these questions, and to show that they, too, had researched this?
Instead: nada. Not a peep.
Shake it, bake it, put any spin you want on it, Thom, they failed to reveal the existence of the red diary and the strange circumstances of its purchase until AFTER Bongo started spilling the beans.
The jury of history won't like that.
But hey, you, Owl, Caz, and Ero are convinced, so why give a toss what an insane member of the clown car thinks?
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostUnless you can show that they knew about the March 1992 ordering and therefore suppressed that knowledge, then you have no grounds to call it a 'distortion' (other than that you want your audience to be misled regarding their options here).
I never suggested Keith was deliberately distorting reality at the Cloak and Dagger meeting. Indeed, I said he 'apparently believed the May 1992 date was true.'
What I am suggesting is that Keith's impression of the purchase date is evidence that Anne had successfully bamboozled him.
Or are you trying to mislead your three readers?
What I do believe is that Anne herself knew this date was misleading. She controlled the purse strings. She damn well knew Mike had been dunned as a late payer by Martin Earl. What she didn't know is Martin Earl's methods, so she felt confident to give her bogus explanation for the purchase, not realizing that Martin Earl had placed an advertisement in Bookfinder that would make a mockery of that explanation. No one needs to have a minimum of 20 blank pages to see what a diary looks like.
Ergo, she lied.
The weird thing--the Through the Looking Glass aspect of this discussion---is that at least some of you--particularly Caz--believe that Anne lied and lied through her teeth FOR YEARS to the researchers around her, yet you're still willing to argue that her dodgy behavior was on the up & up.
You want your cake and to eat it, too.
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Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post
Hi Ike,
Not master hoaxers, just regular hoaxers. In fact, not very good hoaxers in my opinion. More opportunists than geniuses.
I should have put 'master' in inverted commas as I was referring to Mike's own description of himself (was it 'The world's greatest forger'?).
I would agree with you that - if it is a hoax - then it revealed itself too easily in some of the details provided; but I wouldn't agree that it is necessarily a hoax because of its style. Its style is perfectly acceptable to me for an averagely-educated cotton broker with a young, flirty wife and a hugely more successful brother. Do the details make it impossible to be authentic, though? Obviously, I do not think so (hence my really rather brilliant Society's Pillar).
Cheers,
Ike
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
And yet, once again, Barrett's interviewer (KS) was still repeating--apparently believing it to be true--the wildly misleading May 1992 date as late as 1998 at the Cloak and Dagger Club, and you and your co-authors were still parading, without irony, Anne' version of these event in The Inside Story.
So, I don't think she was so much 'dim' as desperate and perhaps even a little insightful that the years would roll by before her deceptions were realized.
What you do have is a set pf premises which are so tunnel-visioned that your conclusion is inevitable and yet so very utterly unsound.
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