I realize that the case against Oxford is strong.  
But the case against Stratford is very strong.
And the case against collaboration is strong too, but I think we should keep an open mind.  Shakespeare's work was not merely exemplary but unsurpassed.  We might expect the unexpected.  (Many of the sonnets are so personal as to imply a single author.  The "collaborators" may have been mostly just offering advice about versification.)
What sticks out when I ponder this are the hundreds of strong coincidences connecting the Works to Oxford's life story.  (Could it be that Oxford's son-in-law penned some of the works as if they were by Oxford, as a sort of tribute to his wife's father?  Yes I know this is far-fetched.)
	
		
	
	
		
		
			No, I don't care to single out some of the 102 reasons. I linked to the site so that an interested reader could explore the contra-Oxfordian arguments, since we have not previously gone there in any detail.
Yes, you would have to click each link to each separate "reason" to read the articles. I myself have only read about 20 of them.
It's okay with me if you don't want to further explore the contra-Oxford position.
		
		
	 
I DO want to challenge my opinion with anti-Oxford arguments.  But, as I showed with examples, the "synopsis" of many of 102 reasons tell us nothing; they're mostly content-free sarcasm against Oxfordians.  I wrote "LIKE an ad-baiting site."  They aren't showing ads, but they tease with nonsense hoping for a click.
The first Shakespeare biography I read was Ian Wilson's: 
I deliberately chose an anti-Oxfordian biography.  Whether he wrote poems or not, Oxford should fit into a good Shakespeare biography: He was Southampton's close friend and prospective father-in-law for heaven's sake.  He was a premier patron of the theater.  But, except for a few content-free pejoratives, the ONLY mention of Oxford in Wilson's book is a few sentences about an alleged fart when he was bowing to the Queen!  I don't need to read that sort of anti-Oxfordianism.