quadraginta
Becoming Beth
Quadraginta, you are floundering. This is nonsense. People in Knox's situation, whether guilty or innocent, do not make statements like this voluntarily. Honest police do not conduct interrogations like this until 5.30 in the morning, nor without recording the sessions, nor without legal advice for their victim.
All of us can understand the inconvenience of the well-established phenomenon of an internalised false statement if the premise is that Amanda is guilty, and the goal is to defend that premise. I'm sure I won't be the only one to point out that presumption of innocence is fundamental to justice. The fact that you seem to want to argue in the absence of such a presumption tells us a lot.
You blather about "floundering" and then spew something like this? That's cute.
"Presumption of innocence" has a particular meaning when used in the context of a courtroom. It is largely concerned with the burden of proof, which rightly belongs to the accuser.
When discussing concepts such as confirmation bias the meaning of the phrase takes on an entirely different context, and a different set of implications. When contemplating the question of actual guilt or innocence it has no ritual meaning at all.
If you understand the difference then you can only have made the statement you did as an exercise in schoolyard level word play, and as an effort to insult me and impugn my integrity.
If you do not understand the difference then perhaps you should go back to school and spend less time in the schoolyard.