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Denial, Desperation and Dishonesty - Defending Stephen Knight’s Nonsense

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  • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
    Already had this discussion and proved it already. If you keep ignoring that , thats your problem . i dont particularly care what other people think, its you having this conversation with and youve been proven wrong. so move on nothing to see here end of topic for you .
    Utterly pathetic.

    You are a perfect example of the title of this thread - Denial, Desperation And Dishonesty.

    Answer the three questions in post #244

    Youve stated that you can do so.

    Well do so.
    Regards

    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

    Comment


    • Already had this discussion and proved it already. If you keep ignoring that , thats your problem . i dont particularly care what other people think, its you having this conversation with and youve been proven wrong. so move on nothing to see here end of topic for you . rinse and repeat. end of topic.


      'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

      Comment


      • New topic now is .Long v Codosch , anyone care to comment on there statements at the inquest ?.
        'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

        Comment


        • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
          New topic now is .Long v Codosch , anyone care to comment on there statements at the inquest ?.
          Dishonest clown.
          Regards

          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

          Comment


          • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
            Already had this discussion and proved it already. If you keep ignoring that , thats your problem . i dont particularly care what other people think, its you having this conversation with and youve been proven wrong. so move on nothing to see here end of topic for you .
            I am really sorry, but just because yo say something is so, does not mean you are correct or that you have proved anything.

            From what you have posted, i have to tell you that you have proved nothing, speculated yes, suggested yes, proved not at all.

            I am finding this thread verging on the comical, when people disagree you say you are entitled to your view on a public forum, ignoring that they are entitled to theirs.


            Steve

            BTW, it would make following easier if the quote facility was used, or at the very least, who's post is being quoted.
            Last edited by Elamarna; 06-25-2019, 10:31 AM.

            Comment


            • Nope thats not in their statements, i think your interpreting all it wrong.Try again .
              'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

              Comment


              • With respect Elamarna ,you have come into this conversation way to late, this has been going on for weeks, went through all that, but it didnt matter so this is whats happens in the end , but thanks anyway .
                Last edited by FISHY1118; 06-25-2019, 11:00 AM.
                'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post





                  Wrong - Gull suffered a stroke in October 1887 which meant that he became incapable of even continuing his hardly strenuous job of a doctor. If he’d have recovered fully he’d have taken up his job again. But he didn’t. Because he couldn’t. Murdering and mutilating prostitutes is far more physical than sitting behind a desk
                  Not wanting to get too involved in your spat with each other but you can't state he was incapable of carrying on as a doctor.
                  There is no evidence for that .
                  Like most older people , he probably simply decided he wanted to take his retirement after his illness .
                  He was not short of a few bob and didn't have to put off his retirement any longer
                  You can lead a horse to water.....

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by packers stem View Post

                    Not wanting to get too involved in your spat with each other but you can't state he was incapable of carrying on as a doctor.
                    There is no evidence for that .
                    Like most older people , he probably simply decided he wanted to take his retirement after his illness .
                    He was not short of a few bob and didn't have to put off his retirement any longer
                    It’s stated that he had to give up his work. There’s no evidence that he fully recovered in fact it’s stated that he didn’t fully recover. We have his age too. The queens physician in ordinary killing and mutilating prostitutes is insanity.
                    Regards

                    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                    Comment


                    • Wilkes and Bettany,sBiographical History of Guy's Hospital

                      "Sir william gull had two or three short illnesses before the one which was the commencement of his fatal malady, but at this time he was well and enjoying himself in Scotland, near killiecrankie, when he was seized with slight paralysis on the right side of and aphasia. this was in October 1887. he recovered in great measure and returned to London, where he remained for some months comparatively well. friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner but he said he felt another man and gave up his practice. he subsequently had three epileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, but on January the 29th 1890 he was suddenly seized with a apoplectic attack, fell into a coma , and gradually passed away.''

                      Make up your own mind packer, but take note of the words ''he recovered in great measure'' and had three epileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, and friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner.

                      The queens physician in ordinary killing and mutilating prostitutes is a possibility
                      'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

                      Comment


                      • Hi RJ,

                        Stop press . . .

                        The Hutchinson in Gull's 1882 letter was the Quaker and surgeon Jonathan Hutchinson [1823-1913], who wrote a ten-volume work Archives of Surgery.

                        "Bartender, two pina coladas, please . . . with umbrellas."

                        Regards,

                        Simon
                        Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
                          Wilkes and Bettany,sBiographical History of Guy's Hospital

                          "Sir william gull had two or three short illnesses before the one which was the commencement of his fatal malady, but at this time he was well and enjoying himself in Scotland, near killiecrankie, when he was seized with slight paralysis on the right side of and aphasia. this was in October 1887. he recovered in great measure and returned to London, where he remained for some months comparatively well. friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner but he said he felt another man and gave up his practice. he subsequently had three ereturned to London, where he remained for some months comparatively wellpileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, but on January the 29th 1890 he was suddenly seized with a apoplectic attack, fell into a coma , and gradually passed away.''

                          Make up your own mind packer, but take note of the words ''he recovered in great measure'' and had three epileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, and friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner.

                          The queens physician in ordinary killing and mutilating prostitutes is a possibility
                          Ok I This is the tactic is it? Of the points that I’ve raised you’re fixating on the least important in the hope I’ll forget about the others.

                          he recovered in great measure

                          This is not a complete recovery but an good recovery. It’s a small point but it’s an important distinction which you deliberately seek to ignore to suit your own purposes.


                          returned to London, where he remained for some months comparatively well

                          Note the word comparatively. It means - to a moderate degree as compared to something else.

                          As he remained in London for some months, when we add those some months onto October 1887 we get closer to Ripper time of course.


                          friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner but he said he felt another man and gave up his practice.

                          Hope your keeping up Fishy? And so in this period, the months after October 1887 which take us close to August 1888, Gull said that he felt a different man (which means not himself - which means unwell.) The effects of this illness meant that he was forced to give up his practice. Now - Gull wasn’t a surgeon requiring a steady hand or manual dexterity or great hand/eye coordination - he was a Physician, a very senior one, but a Physician nonetheless. This work as a very senior physician would not have been a very physically taxing one. Probably just examining, diagnosing and giving the benefit of his experience. And yet his illness meant that he couldn’t even do that.

                          And so to sum up - we have a man who was nearing 72 at a time when 72 would have been significantly over the average lifespan (accepted that someone of Gull’s wealth would be expected to have lived longer than a poorer person.) A man for whom a stroke had made it impossible to even continue with a job that wasn’t physically taxing. An illness that had made him feel like a different man. We have him mutilating prostitutes in the East End according to some Freemasonic plan? Surely they would have had younger, fitter doctors (even surgeons) ready to have undertaken the task? Come on.


                          And so Fishy. You will still say that this was perfectly reasonable behaviour of course and so we have nowhere else to go with it. Are you going to continue with this blatant obfuscation tactic?


                          Now, for the umpteenth time are you going to back up your claims and answer the questions. Long and Cadosch are irrelevant to this thread (post it elsewhere and, unlike you, I won’t dodge the question)

                          Where do you get your information that Gull was interviewed by Abberline over The Whitechapel Murders?

                          Do you accepts that Victorian TOD’s could be wildly inaccurate?

                          Do you accept that you were wrong on the Halse issue?

                          And finally...

                          Will you provide the proof that you claimed to have that proved that the hospital was where Knight said that it was?

                          And will you provide the rest of your proof to show that Simon’s research was wrong when he rebutted Knight’s theory?


                          Im wondering how you will avoid answering this time?


                          Regards

                          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                          Comment


                          • Hi Herlock,

                            I fear that all you will elicit is that Fishy's first language is not English.

                            Regards,

                            Simon
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
                              With respect Elamarna ,you have come into this conversation way to late, this has been going on for weeks, went through all that, but it didnt matter so this is whats happens in the end , but thanks anyway .
                              Which shows no respect for fellow posters at all.
                              And it is not for you to say someone joins a debate too late, it is clear you have no respect for any opinion but your own.

                              Steve

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
                                Wilkes and Bettany,sBiographical History of Guy's Hospital

                                "Sir william gull had two or three short illnesses before the one which was the commencement of his fatal malady, but at this time he was well and enjoying himself in Scotland, near killiecrankie, when he was seized with slight paralysis on the right side of and aphasia. this was in October 1887. he recovered in great measure and returned to London, where he remained for some months comparatively well. friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner but he said he felt another man and gave up his practice. he subsequently had three epileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, but on January the 29th 1890 he was suddenly seized with a apoplectic attack, fell into a coma , and gradually passed away.''

                                Make up your own mind packer, but take note of the words ''he recovered in great measure'' and had three epileptiform attacks, from which he rapidly recovered, and friends who then saw him did not discern much difference in his looks and manner.

                                The queens physician in ordinary killing and mutilating prostitutes is a possibility
                                May one ask if you have checked with the current leading experts on Gull about his condition, rather than a few lines from a book ?

                                Steve

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