Ok.
And I said that topic has not to do with the case.
I didn't say that you are ugly because you mentioned it, but since you addressed the concept, which itself may be valid, to avoid any confusion let's put in clear that has not to do with the case.
I think also CDhost's wording addressing a reality as a social construction, is inappropriate to the matter.
There are socially constructed realities (for example Amanda Knox is innocent and the police are bad, Berlusconi goes for minors). There are cases of brainwashing exploiting various techniques, but let's not confuse this with science fiction.
Your memory about that you were at home yesterday night, is not a social construction.
There isn't a known technique by which I can convince you to this memory against your will. There isn't even a method to convince oneself. There isn't a way by which you can be "convinced" by the fact that someone thinks that who has a uniform, if you are an average normal person.
And if a persuasion for any reason occurs, this is not limited in its effects to the kind of symptoms shown by Amanda Knox. When one suffers from a false memory, which is anyway rare and peculiar, its effect is permanent, and the person has no means to go back and to distinguish the wrong from the false memory any more. So if Amanda actually had a false memory, she could not claim any alibi.
It would be very interesting, from a scientific viewpoint, to know how and when she recovered her true memory and how she was able to distinguish it from the false one.
Her true memory was there all the time, it just had 'new ones' implanted by virtue of the police's incompetent techniques. It was also not complete, she had 'flashes' and they served as the bare bones of the scenario they had her walk through, 'helpfully' implanting more along the way. Also, they never actually
convinced her of this, otherwise they wouldn't be so 'vague' and 'confused.' The cops probably didn't
want those statements to look like garbage, but I suppose that's the best they could get from her.
A long time ago you and I had a discussion here, it was over why Rudy originally said Amanda wasn't there, and about his story. You were making an argument trying to explain your theory and I initially misunderstood why you and the cops would find it unbelievable, I thought you were saying that the description of the conditions that night didn't match what they would have been, namely that it was dark and he couldn't only see a shadowy figure. I started thinking about that, kinda like this, to determine if it should have been dark enough in the cottage he
wouldn't have been able to see who it was, here it goes, stream of consciousness:
November 1st....~9PM....Norfolk=Gibraltar...map of Med visualized...Rome...a little above...like Wisconsin over Norfolk...close enough...last Halloween...last trick-or-treaters ~8Pm....very dark...night...lighting in cottage? that lamp...
Boom
Unbidden it came, a mental image of a dark shadowy figure in the hallway in a menacing pose like he's about to advance on me. I still have it, I can summon it at will and have a few times since when this subject has come up. It's just the same as any other mental image I have of other events I know happened, except I know this isn't real. From the context of the memory I associate you and Sherlock Holmes with it because that's who I was discussing that topic with at the time.
Another time Platonov was gleefully making fun of the fact I'd misunderstood what Massei's theory was on the breaking of the window. There were a flurry of posts from him, Juror, Sherlock Holmes, (
hmmm....) Halides, et al and I was sitting here trying to picture it in my mind and...
Boom
I had a mental image of (myself!) throwing the rock through the window pulled inwards and bouncing the glass off the inner shutter. It too is still there, as real as any other mental image, but more like a dream in that it's without context and the associations are with that discussion.
If you read her statements and her note as well as her testimony I think something like that happened to her, she tried to imagine things and
boom she saw Patrick at the BB courts, at the house, and her in the kitchen. Unlike myself in those examples above, she has reason to believe they
might be true. The conditions have been created where they explain something the cops are adamant about, so she succumbs. Reading the statements and the note it appears what she is saying is that she was never
sure of any of it, but the cops browbeat her into submission and she signed it. In her condition at the time she was vulnerable to it, they'd convinced her it was
possible.
However Machiavelli, that's not the whole story, the most remarkable behavior demonstrated that night was not her signing those two statements, but the police then going to arrest Patrick on the basis of them. She probably had
no idea that would happen, as it's such a bizarre sequence of events it has not been explained to this day, no matter how many times I bring it up.
They just wanted her to sign those statements, they wanted her 'ass on a pad' along with Patrick's so they could arrest both of them because they had
other reasons to think them complicit in the murder.
That's why Raffaele isn't interrogated about the murder, why they don't try to corroborate anything Amanda says with him, or even grill him like a cheese sandwich like they did Amanda. They didn't think at first he was involved in the murder part, perhaps they thought maybe he was just going along with his cuddle-muffin and might not even have known she'd 'done it.'
Who knows with certainty, but those statements were the lies of the police, they put the idea into her mind, they convinced her it was possible and they even typed up the nonsense for her to sign in a language she barely read at that point. That's all she did was sign them under pressure, what they did as a result of them is their own responsibility, and it's obvious they lied through their teeth about it, and Amanda right from the very beginning with the note tried to tell the truth. She isn't sure, she can summon those images, it doesn't make sense, she tries to puzzle it out in that note.
After a few days she figures it out and it fades, right about when that Sister came to her if I recall correctly. She realizes those 'flashes'
were nothing but mental images she summoned, and now she's
certain. Just as I am certain my mental images of the hallway and the breaking of the window are nothing but imagination.
They just convinced her of something that wasn't true, Amanda's problem was she tried to explain too much and too well and everyone just naturally assumed she was lying, no one would believe her. Her problem was she was too damned honest, and that's
a bridge too far for even some of her supporters. Not that it matters.
