26-07-2012, 03:01 AM
(This post was last modified: 26-07-2012, 03:16 AM by Jim DiEugenio.)
This is why Albert is so discouraging to talk to about this.
He actually brings up that piece of baloney about Cord Meyer supposedly saying "the same bastards who killed Kennedy."
What can one say about such erudition. Except what I already said about the guy. He trolls around looking for BS, and then posts it as if its true. Then I have to come back to explain its not.
This comment originated with none other than the late David Heymann. Did you know that? If you did then why bring it up?
Yep, Heymann the serial liar who not only made up quotes but ACTUALLY MADE UP NON EXISTENT PEOPLE TO SAY THEM! Who are you going to use next, maybe Gregory Douglas?
But further, Nina Burleigh exposed this a long time ago. First of all Cord would never have said such a thing since, like Bradlee, he thought Crump killed Mary. (Which I agree with.) But also, at the time Heymann made this one up, Meyer was in a hospital room and was allowed no visitors since he was very ill.
Albert, you could not find this out? How hard did you dig?
As per the so called home invasion, as I said, very clearly, to fit into Janney's ersatz construct, they could only have been after the so-called diary. Which, as I have explained in detail, did not exist in any normal sense. Therefore, we are left with two alternatives: it was a simple home invasion, which happens every day in nice areas; or this was simply after the fact hyperbole.
I would really appreciate it if you did some real research on this subject instead of just stumbling around blindly.
Dawn, yes the book reads like a thriller because most people do not know that everything Janney says in the first chapter--usually called the set up--is not just unsubstantiated, but false. Therefore, Janney creates an interest and opposition--Mary against the world, that is non-existent.
He actually brings up that piece of baloney about Cord Meyer supposedly saying "the same bastards who killed Kennedy."
What can one say about such erudition. Except what I already said about the guy. He trolls around looking for BS, and then posts it as if its true. Then I have to come back to explain its not.
This comment originated with none other than the late David Heymann. Did you know that? If you did then why bring it up?
Yep, Heymann the serial liar who not only made up quotes but ACTUALLY MADE UP NON EXISTENT PEOPLE TO SAY THEM! Who are you going to use next, maybe Gregory Douglas?
But further, Nina Burleigh exposed this a long time ago. First of all Cord would never have said such a thing since, like Bradlee, he thought Crump killed Mary. (Which I agree with.) But also, at the time Heymann made this one up, Meyer was in a hospital room and was allowed no visitors since he was very ill.
Albert, you could not find this out? How hard did you dig?
As per the so called home invasion, as I said, very clearly, to fit into Janney's ersatz construct, they could only have been after the so-called diary. Which, as I have explained in detail, did not exist in any normal sense. Therefore, we are left with two alternatives: it was a simple home invasion, which happens every day in nice areas; or this was simply after the fact hyperbole.
I would really appreciate it if you did some real research on this subject instead of just stumbling around blindly.
Dawn, yes the book reads like a thriller because most people do not know that everything Janney says in the first chapter--usually called the set up--is not just unsubstantiated, but false. Therefore, Janney creates an interest and opposition--Mary against the world, that is non-existent.