LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Please do, Platonov, don't disappoint us, LJ is in a mistake-admitting streak![]()
I certainly am
I'm perfectly willing (and in fact more than happy) to immediately admit mistakes when I am shown to be wrong. I want my opinions and judgement to be based on solid, verified facts - if I get some of those facts wrong, then I'd far rather be corrected than continue basing my opinions/judgements on an imperfect set of facts.
And this speaks to a wider issue: I (and I think many others on the side of acquittal) would be completely willing and ready to change my view of the guilt/non-guilt of Knox and Sollecito if I could be shown that there was sufficient evidence before the courts to prove their participation beyond a reasonable doubt. For example, as I've said many times previously, if the bathmat partial print could be definitively identified as Sollecito's, then I would immediately shift to a position that he is guilty and that Knox is likely also guilty. Or if the bra clasp had been collected properly and with minimal risk of cross-contamination in the first few days of the investigation, and it had tested positive for Sollecito's DNA and no other unidentified female DNA, then similarly I'd switch to believing Sollecito (andprobably Knox) to be guilty. And of course if any trace of Knox had been properly found either on Meredith's body or made in Meredith's blood in the room, then I'd quickly switch to a guilty viewpoint.
On the other hand, what intrigues me (but probably doesn't surprise me) is the seeming rigidity and implacability of the guilty viewpoint of many (most?) on that side of the debate. Most such people seem to be so deeply emotionally wedded to sustaining their position that they seem determined to rationalise or ignore any factual developments which may impact upon the likelihood of an acquittal in the appeal trial.