Justinian2
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2010
- Messages
- 2,804
I would pay $100+ for a self portrait from Amanda Knox and I'm no art collector.
[Guilters would say that's obvious]
They're neat.
[Guilters would say that's obvious]
They're neat.
Just to know, Claudio Pratillo Hellmann is a native from Padova.
Here is a "news" report on Amanda's latest works of art. For some reason I am reminded of that statement analysis fellow:
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3205243/Weird-jail-pics-by-murderer-Knox.html
Jane: (Insert Dan Aykroyd quote here)
Just incredible.
I never agreed Quintavalle's story is pure fantasy.
I never thought he lied. I have doubts on the reliability of his memory in terms of recognize the right person. But I would never assume his recollation is fantasy. I think there is evidence it is not.
I think guilters generally believe she stole a mop, maybe together with a bucketAlso this from LondonJohn:
Did Quintavalle testify to Amanda buying bleach or a mop head the morning of November 2? I thought he only testified to the fact that he saw her that morning in/near the shop.
There is a photo that Charlie linked on this thread a time back that showed clothes on Amanda's bed taken November 2 or 3. On the bed is what appears to be jeans, a gray jacket, a jean jacket, a scarf, a black and gray striped shirt, maybe some other clothing.
In the motivations, page 83, Quintavalle testifies to what he believes Amanda was wearing that morning:
Apart from miraculously recollecting a year after what she was wearing there are more serious problems with his testimony, they are pointed out in Amanda's appeal and were discussed here at length.While this photo and Quintavalle's testimony does not carry enough weight for me to consider Amanda guilty (as with Nara's testimony or Curatola's testimony), it does suggest that Quintavalle may be telling the truth about having seen Amanda in his shop.
Apart from miraculously recollecting a year after what she was wearing there are more serious problems with his testimony, they are pointed out in Amanda's appeal and were discussed here at length.
Esteemed painting analyst Jane Firbank is also, strangely, a proponent of the "Human Givens" approach to mental health. Her website, where she calls herself a "human givens practitioner" is here:
http://hgi.org.uk/register/Therapists/Jane-Firbank.htm
The "Human Givens" approach is set out here
http://www.hgi.org.uk/archive/human-givens.htm
and is summarised thus:
"If human beings' needs are met, they won't get depressed; they cannot have psychosis; they cannot have manic depression; they cannot be in the grip of addictions. It is just not possible."
I must admit I'd never heard of this approach before, but this seems a bit optimistic to me, quite frankly.
Just out of curiosity, how did this analysis go down in the guilt-based community?
I believe Kevin Lowe has cited his sources on that topic many times.
And what makes this incredible "recollection" of Knox's precise clothing near-miraculous is the fact that Quintavalle would have had no reason to take special notice of Knox that morning. Even if she was acting in a "slightly strange" manner, that's still no reason to retain near-photographic memory of her clothing. It's simply not remotely feasible. If Quintavalle had heard gunshots inside his shop that morning, and had seen Knox running out of the front of the shop immediately afterwards, I suppose he would have retained a strong memory of what she was wearing, since he would have instantaneously linked her with a serious incident.
To make an analogy, do you remember what clothes the person in front of you in the supermarket queue was wearing the last time you were there? Would you even remember what clothes your mother/father/friend was wearing the last time you saw them, if it was over two days ago? I would suggest that nobody would remember such details, unless there was a compelling reason to do so. And in the case of Knox's alleged presence in the Conad store on the morning of November 2nd, there was no compelling reason for Quintavalle to have lodged this sort of information into his memory (or, for that matter, for him to remember in which direction she headed after leaving the store). I personally believe him to be a liar/embellisher - although it's also possible that he truly believes that he saw what he saw. The same applies to Curatolo, of course (who "saw what he saw" in about five different and contradictory versions!).
Esteemed painting analyst Jane Firbank is also, strangely, a proponent of the "Human Givens" approach to mental health. Her website, where she calls herself a "human givens practitioner" is here:
http://hgi.org.uk/register/Therapists/Jane-Firbank.htm
The "Human Givens" approach is set out here
http://www.hgi.org.uk/archive/human-givens.htm
and is summarised thus:
"If human beings' needs are met, they won't get depressed; they cannot have psychosis; they cannot have manic depression; they cannot be in the grip of addictions. It is just not possible."
I must admit I'd never heard of this approach before, but this seems a bit optimistic to me, quite frankly.
Just out of curiosity, how did this analysis go down in the guilt-based community?
No, Mary, he has not.
Lowe offered absolutely NO "evidence" in support of his assertions about the 'elasticity' of the human intestine and the displacement of alimentary matter within that organ.
Not one "peer-reviewed scientific journal."
Not one authoritative text.
Ergo, in order to back up his assertions in this regard, he must be able to point to PERSONAL training/ experience/ education of some kind.
To wit, he must be a medical doctor.
How else could one reasonably claim to know the ease/difficulty with which alimentary matter might be displaced within the human intestine during autopsy?
If he is not a M.D., well...
Of course, if I've missed a post of his in which he claims to be a medical doctor as a means of supporting the citation-free assertions he's made in respect of these matters, feel free to point it out.
An article concerning the filing of additional documents to Raffaele's appeal (or I think it is in addition to the first documents filed). The details of the new filing are not known at this time. If I am wrong about the content of this article please correct.
http://www.ansa.it/web/notizie/regioni/umbria/2010/11/04/visualizza_new.html_1704919157.html
Treehorn,
I searched on my username and "treehorn" as my search term. I generated about 10 comments directed toward you that have not been answered. They included comment numbers 12773, 12752, 12723, 12682, 12640, and 12637, plus several others earlier than these. Would you be so kind as to have a look at them and to respond as you see fit? I would hate to think that all of my research that went into my responses was for nought, but maybe I was barking up the wrong tree.
Really? I thought the opposite. I thought things went this way: they tried to put all the blame on him first - in particular, Sollecito's defense set things in this strategy - and only after he retaliated implicating them, albeit it is still a mild, retained retaliation.
treehorn,
This morning I wrote two comments directed to you. One is from a textbook on anatomy and physiology that discusses the small intestine, and the other collects unanswered questions and comments from me to you. I would appreciate a response.
"Amanda says prison is like not living because nothing changes. She says everything is the same incessantly," her stepfather Chris Mellas told ABC News.
This coment makes no sense. We don't know how three people did it. We only know three people were there and are responsible.
There may be nothing miraculous in finding DNA three weeks later.
I trained to be Scientology Auditor in 1975 and was good at it.
I've got no agenda. I have no interest in anything but the truth - wherever it may lie.