Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Since I wasn't arguing 'bitterly' over this or anything else in Diary World, and am highly unlikely ever to do so, it's not my mental habits Palmer needs to concern himself with.
As I understand it, the Barretts were asked to produce a typescript of the diary as part of their contractual agreement to be Harrison's collaborators.
There appears to be no evidence that the typescript received in April was produced by the Barretts as a condition of an agreement yet to be drawn up, signed and returned. If the pair were as crooked as Palmer would have us believe, would they not have delayed matters until they had contractually committed themselves to delivering one - especially as they would have needed, at the very least, to check it through carefully and only, in Palmer's own words: 'hand in a document that had the appearance of a transcript created directly from the manuscript'?
How does Palmer think the Barretts went about this? Did they create a completely new document, transcribed onto the word processor from the finished hoax, in April 1992? Or did they have to adapt an original working document before and after printing it off, to give it the right appearance?
I was once mocked by Palmer for suggesting there would need to have been at least two typed versions to keep the Barretts in the hoaxing frame, and now it seems that this is what he is suggesting himself. He is conceding the very point I made myself - that no hoaxer with half a brain would have handed in their own original creation from their word processor, along with their finished hoax. And by conceding this much, he also appears to be conceding that he has not identified any 'glaring indications' in the released typescript that it represents an earlier draft, and could not be a genuine transcript created directly from the physical diary.
I don't recall anyone suggesting that--if the Barretts were the hoaxers--they would have been stupid enough to simply hand over one of Barrett's rough drafts, filled with lines they had decided not to use in the diary or other glaring indications of an earlier draft.
Is that what you believed the skeptics were hoping to find? If so, I'm sorry to inform you that such is not the case.
Is that what you believed the skeptics were hoping to find? If so, I'm sorry to inform you that such is not the case.
I note Palmer's use of the expression: 'if the Barretts were the hoaxers' when appearing to speak for others. For the longest time, when speaking for himself, he has had Mike and Anne up to their elbows in the diary's creation. Nobody else needed to apply.
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