bettybaby00
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Well I don’t expect to convince anyone (respectful disagreement, AK) regards the context of using DNA “exclusively” in ML’s exoneration action, I view the timing of ML’s pronouncement pointing to what ML obviously believed was the gold standard – a match of tDNA. Perhaps others here may have interest in this timing.
2003: Denver Lab retrieves the sample of DNA from the panties which was enhanced to 10 markers and entered into CODIS.
2007: Bode Labs scrapes the long-johns and retrieves the tDNA. (To my knowledge no one on this forum has viewed this lab report, so we do not know how many markers there were. While the following linked article from 2003 is somewhat dated it does give additional info on how defense attorneys might evaluate DNA analysis http://www.bioforensics.com/articles/champion1/champion1.html )
2008: ML “exonerates” the Rs.
So when ML states in her press announcement “previous scientific exculpatory evidence,” one may conjecture, as I have, that she is referencing the distal 007-2 DNA, because it is her “AHA” moment of a match that an intruder touched the long-johns as well. If there had been other “scientific exculpatory evidence” prior to Bode’s analysis of the tDNA, ML would have used it ( ML was considered by many around her to be firmly an intruder theorist.) It’s for this reason I take the same view as Cynic that ML is basing her exoneration of the Rs on DNA, and this is how I interpret an understanding of the word “exclusively” used by Cynic and Krane.
Some here likely know what "reductio ad absudum" and “slippery slope’ arguments are. Those can be used humorously, and perhaps mockingly, and I believe that was Kolar’s intent on discussing “6 intruders” able to enter like circus midgets through the broken basement window. If any of us here echo his viewpoint of the “cagey 6,” it likely is a bit of a mocking stance. But these kind of arguments are not unique to either side - IDI or RDI.
Off topic, but here’s a humorous example of reductio ad absurdum: The pointy-haired boss in Dilbert announces a plan to rank all of the engineers 'from best to worst' so as 'to get rid of the bottom 10%.' Dilbert's co-worker Wally, included in the bottom 10%, responds that the plan is 'logically flawed' and proceeds to extend the range of his boss's argument. Wally asserts that the boss's plan, if made permanent, will mean continual dismissals (there will always be a bottom 10%) until there are fewer than 10 engineers and the boss will 'have to fire body parts instead of whole people.' The boss's logic will, Wally maintains (with a touch of hyperbole), lead to 'torsos and glands wandering around unable to use keyboards . . ., blood and bile everywhere!' These horrendous results will be the consequence of extending the boss's line of argument; hence, the boss's position should be rejected."(James Jasinksi, Sourcebook on Rhetoric: Key Concepts in Contemporary Rhetorical Studies. Sage, 2001)
All mho.
Gotta love Dilbert!