Ben:
"If you really subscribe to the mantra that a modern commentator cannot challenge a professional opinion if it was uncontested at the time, then I guess you must be in favour of Stride being a ripper victim. Every police official of any seniority accepted Stride as a ripper victim, but you cheerfully reject the conclusion of the contemporary professionals, preferring your own opinion."
Donīt be a fool, Ben. A better comparison would be my Tabram scenario. Not a living soul back in 1888 supported it, and few do today. So why not choose that instead? Must I not be a total idiot to have promoted it?
Then again, I have always said that I know that it is a fringe suggestion.
As for Stride, I have always said that yes, it COULD have been Jack. I even think that I have said that I donīt see my own scenario as much more credible - they weigh in at similar weights, roughly, but since many people have found that hard to swallow, I have fought my fight from a viewpoint that excludes the Ripper. Thatīs the way people want things here - they need to paint you into corners and say "you are not allowed to change your mind!" - as if anybody but me knew what mind I am of...!
You do it yourself repeatedly, which is understandable since you refuse to leave any of your own convictions, come what may evidencewise.
Itīs funny, though, that you should mention Stride, since when I was in London November last, I was presented with the first new good reason I have heard in years to actually count her into the Ripperīs tally! Surrounding evidence that I have never seen before does point to her actually being a Ripper victim.
This is all I will say about that for now, since it does not belong to my own research, but there you are: I am as flexible as ever, Ben.
"I will continue to believe that Kileen was most probably in error"
You do that, and you will be guessing. If you instead say that you think that there is a chance that he could have been wrong to some extent, I will go along with you. But "most probably" reeks of totally other grounds for deciding than factual ones.
"You say that his opinion was uncontested at the time, which obviously wasn’t quite the case. He clearly endorsed the suggested “bayonet” as a possibility for one of the weapons, and equally clearly, that weapon was later considered an improbable candidate for any of the wounds."
He was uncontested when it comes to the two weapons suggestion, and that is what I am saying. The bayonet business is something else, and what you have to show for your theory fails totally to convince me of anything but a daydream on your behalf. Factually, it is disastrous. Anyways, donīt mix up apples with pears - it was the two weapons suggestion that was uncontested.
"it’s completely clear that people disagree with you"
They DO? Who?
"The sheer implausibility of the suggestion that the killer decided at the last moment to use the “better” knife, which he could have used from the outset, is already "firm" ground on which to base the far more logical, far more probable “one knife” scenario."
The killer? What if there were two? Or three? Or do the Home Office annotations rule that out to, in a manner obscured to me?
So much for that "firm ground" of yours, Ben.
All the best, Ben!
Fisherman
"If you really subscribe to the mantra that a modern commentator cannot challenge a professional opinion if it was uncontested at the time, then I guess you must be in favour of Stride being a ripper victim. Every police official of any seniority accepted Stride as a ripper victim, but you cheerfully reject the conclusion of the contemporary professionals, preferring your own opinion."
Donīt be a fool, Ben. A better comparison would be my Tabram scenario. Not a living soul back in 1888 supported it, and few do today. So why not choose that instead? Must I not be a total idiot to have promoted it?
Then again, I have always said that I know that it is a fringe suggestion.
As for Stride, I have always said that yes, it COULD have been Jack. I even think that I have said that I donīt see my own scenario as much more credible - they weigh in at similar weights, roughly, but since many people have found that hard to swallow, I have fought my fight from a viewpoint that excludes the Ripper. Thatīs the way people want things here - they need to paint you into corners and say "you are not allowed to change your mind!" - as if anybody but me knew what mind I am of...!
You do it yourself repeatedly, which is understandable since you refuse to leave any of your own convictions, come what may evidencewise.
Itīs funny, though, that you should mention Stride, since when I was in London November last, I was presented with the first new good reason I have heard in years to actually count her into the Ripperīs tally! Surrounding evidence that I have never seen before does point to her actually being a Ripper victim.
This is all I will say about that for now, since it does not belong to my own research, but there you are: I am as flexible as ever, Ben.
"I will continue to believe that Kileen was most probably in error"
You do that, and you will be guessing. If you instead say that you think that there is a chance that he could have been wrong to some extent, I will go along with you. But "most probably" reeks of totally other grounds for deciding than factual ones.
"You say that his opinion was uncontested at the time, which obviously wasn’t quite the case. He clearly endorsed the suggested “bayonet” as a possibility for one of the weapons, and equally clearly, that weapon was later considered an improbable candidate for any of the wounds."
He was uncontested when it comes to the two weapons suggestion, and that is what I am saying. The bayonet business is something else, and what you have to show for your theory fails totally to convince me of anything but a daydream on your behalf. Factually, it is disastrous. Anyways, donīt mix up apples with pears - it was the two weapons suggestion that was uncontested.
"it’s completely clear that people disagree with you"
They DO? Who?
"The sheer implausibility of the suggestion that the killer decided at the last moment to use the “better” knife, which he could have used from the outset, is already "firm" ground on which to base the far more logical, far more probable “one knife” scenario."
The killer? What if there were two? Or three? Or do the Home Office annotations rule that out to, in a manner obscured to me?
So much for that "firm ground" of yours, Ben.
All the best, Ben!
Fisherman
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