LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Well, thank you, that was nice. Though I have to say, PhantomWolf had a very similar post nominated last month, though I don't think it made the final. (I remember it was nominated, because I nominated it!) It was a better post too, I think.
I have to tell you that anyone on the forum reading the above with my name on it, would never guess in a million years that I had posted it in relation to the Knox/Sollecito case. It is precisely the objection I have made many times about the same mindless approach to the Megrahi case by posters on this forum, including (but by no means limited to) Alt+F4. Never a word of rational discussion of the evidence, just repeated assertions that the court verdict was all they needed to know, to know the man was guilty.
The whole point of the discussion (in that case) is that the judges were wrong, for more reasons than I can count but starting with blatant circular reasoning. Probably for political reasons. But even Darat at one stage refused to allow me to raise the point that Megrahi wasn't actually guilty, in threads started to discuss his release, or the current political situation in Libya. Because the place to discuss that was in Conspiracy Theories.
There is a very strong determination among a number of long-time JREF posters to declare any suggestion that a court verdict (any court verdict) was erroneous to be "woo", or a conspiracy theory. I think it's related to the fact that mostly, the sceptical position is on the side of the establishment. Doctors are not trying to keep you sick and man really did land on the moon and Oswald shot JFK. So there comes a time when the "establishment" position becomes the default, and anyone who disagrees is a woo.
But this simply doesn't work for miscarriages of justice. It's not uncommon for court verdicts to be overturned on appeal, because the accused simply didn't do it and the original verdict was wrong. I wish we could discuss these cases on the strength of the evidence, but unfortunately most attempts to start threads about these cases is met by someone jumping in and posting "Conspiracy Theories thataway ====>"
In fact I envy you this thread, monster though it is, because you actually have a discussion, on the evidence, even if you also have the sheeple who merely bleat that the verdict defines the reality.
Rolfe.
I totally agree with this, and I think you've captured the situation extremely accurately. I find it very interesting that many people choose to dismiss those who argue a miscarriage of justice in this case by suggesting that they are either a) full-on conspiracy theorists, who also presumable subscribe to the CTs regarding Moon landings, 9/11, JFK assassination etc; or b) people who might also campaign for the acquittal of sex killers such as Dennis Rader or Gary Ridgway.
However, I'd argue that most of us arguing for acquittal in this case are rational sceptics, with good reasoning skills and a logical approach to analysis and argument (although I guess I would say that, wouldn't I!). Speaking personally, I have little doubt that the Moon landings, 9/11 and the JFK assassination happened pretty much as per the official versions of events, and that Rader and Ridgway were correctly and safely convicted.
I'd also add that I've only ever become active in discussing or researching a potential miscarriage of justice before: the case of Barry George in the murder of Jill Dando. That murder (and the ensuing investigation and trials) had an extremely high profile here in the UK, and I remember starting to feel uneasy about the prosecution's case during the original trial of George. As I looked into it more, I became more convinced that the conviction was unjust and unsafe - even though the overwhelming majority of people in the UK believed that George deserved to be locked up for life. And, for the record, Barry George is by any measure a fairly disgusting individual, with a penchant for following random women with a camera, a bizarre fantasy life, and a filthy disorganised lifestyle. He's certainly not a moderately attractive, socially outgoing, American female college student....