moodstream
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2010
- Messages
- 417
Briars, Can you stand one more ? about the calls?
Briars,
Thank you for coming on JREF to argue for guilt. The more the better. It helps keep the conversation fresh.
Can you stand to go back to the topic of the phone calls. Sorry, I missed out on the discussion
Correct me if I am wrong but it seems your core claim is that RS stating there was no theft was a “boo boo” and he knew it. RS knows there was no theft because he staged the break in. By telling the police there was no theft, RS is giving himself away. You also just don’t like that RS’s account of the call in Honor Bound does not seem to you to correspond with an accurate objective reporting of the call, and you feel this is an intentional distortion, a lie.
One puzzling thing is that when RS told the police nothing was taken, RS actually knew something was taken, the $400 and the phones. How does this fit with your claim? You can’t be suggesting RS did not know of the theft from Ms Kercher’s room but did know nothing was missing from Filomena’s room, especially as you make a point of RS/AK not calling Ms Kercher after arriving at the cottage. How do you fit this with your claim that RS stating there was no theft was a boo-boo, if, as is so, there was a theft? On the other hand, had RS said it seemed like a theft occurred, that would have implied he must be guilty because how could he have known? Isn’t it damned if he did and damned if he didn’t? Seriously, that’s a question. Putting the money and phones aside, if the break in was staged but a decision had been made not to actually steal anything (which you explain how? btw), what’s the problem with telling the police nothing was stolen. It can’t be your position that the dispatcher would have expected RS to have an inventory of Filomena’s possessions! You’re not building your claim on a distinction between the spoken phrase ‘they did not take anything’ and ‘it doesn’t appear anything was taken’. Are you?
I just don’t see where RS’s statement to the police has any implicative value. I think you are falling into the basic guilter loop. You are forcing the conclusion that RS’s acts because he is guilty and offering your forced conclusion as proof your conclusion is correct.
Briars,
Thank you for coming on JREF to argue for guilt. The more the better. It helps keep the conversation fresh.
Can you stand to go back to the topic of the phone calls. Sorry, I missed out on the discussion
Correct me if I am wrong but it seems your core claim is that RS stating there was no theft was a “boo boo” and he knew it. RS knows there was no theft because he staged the break in. By telling the police there was no theft, RS is giving himself away. You also just don’t like that RS’s account of the call in Honor Bound does not seem to you to correspond with an accurate objective reporting of the call, and you feel this is an intentional distortion, a lie.
One puzzling thing is that when RS told the police nothing was taken, RS actually knew something was taken, the $400 and the phones. How does this fit with your claim? You can’t be suggesting RS did not know of the theft from Ms Kercher’s room but did know nothing was missing from Filomena’s room, especially as you make a point of RS/AK not calling Ms Kercher after arriving at the cottage. How do you fit this with your claim that RS stating there was no theft was a boo-boo, if, as is so, there was a theft? On the other hand, had RS said it seemed like a theft occurred, that would have implied he must be guilty because how could he have known? Isn’t it damned if he did and damned if he didn’t? Seriously, that’s a question. Putting the money and phones aside, if the break in was staged but a decision had been made not to actually steal anything (which you explain how? btw), what’s the problem with telling the police nothing was stolen. It can’t be your position that the dispatcher would have expected RS to have an inventory of Filomena’s possessions! You’re not building your claim on a distinction between the spoken phrase ‘they did not take anything’ and ‘it doesn’t appear anything was taken’. Are you?
I just don’t see where RS’s statement to the police has any implicative value. I think you are falling into the basic guilter loop. You are forcing the conclusion that RS’s acts because he is guilty and offering your forced conclusion as proof your conclusion is correct.