It is when it comes to every other crime allegation. Whenever anyone is accused of a crime, the story is weaker, the less the accuser can say about the crime. You can't just say "John Smith punched me," and then expect the story to be persuasive if you can't supply any other details.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Mon Oct 08, 2018 5:56 pmYou're still not getting me.
She has presented zero evidence that I'm aware of. We only have her word. Her word isn't good enough. I don't even have to be skeptical.
Now, what you're doing is attempting to discredit her, and you're making all kinds of claims that don't hold up to scrutiny ie she should remember particular details and if she doesn't then that's a tick in the evidence against column. But it's not.
Well, i don't think so. How do you counter the fact that her "put in the second door" story was just false? She said she told the psychologist the story when she and her husband were wrangling about putting in a second front door - she said she needed an escape route, because of the trauma of being assaulted when she was 15. Howevever, that door was put in several years earlier, in order to accommodate strangers renting out part of her house.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Mon Oct 08, 2018 5:56 pm
I think I've shown that I'm able to erase every tick you want to put in the evidence against column with a plausible counter.
She's sure Leland Keyser was at the party. Leland has no recollection of it, and flat out said she never met Kavanaugh, ever. Is there really a plausible explanation for that? Maybe there wasn't a party?
Go ahead and try it. But, he's not the one making the allegation. He's saying "I wasn't there." Go ahead and poke holes.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Mon Oct 08, 2018 5:56 pm
Others have pointed out that you haven't even tried this with Kavanaugh. Do you think it would be possible?
We always live with uncertainty. The alternative is tyranny and unthinkable oppression - as the notion that reason and logic would be thrown out the door leads to a bad situation. If someone makes a truth claim, it has been pretty normal practice to suggest that the person making the truth claim has the burden of demonstrating it in a verifiable sense. That is, we don't take people's word for stuff.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Mon Oct 08, 2018 5:56 pm
But somehow you already know it's not good enough.
So, what can we do? I think we can do an investigation in the hopes of finding evidence. We also have to be prepared to live with uncertainty. Where does that leave us with Kavanaugh? --doesn't matter anymore eh?
As you said, in this case, we have zero corroborative evidence. We don't even have a second voice saying "I was there and she's telling the truth." So what can be done with that? Well, we can examine the story itself for problems which exist even if we base the analysis just on the claimant's own words. Where the story contradicts itself, as this one does, it becomes impossible even to verify her claims.