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Author Topic: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.  (Read 4618 times)

Offline Joe Elliott

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If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« on: April 21, 2020, 09:21:54 PM »
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If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.

In science, a theory has to be falsifiable. A proper theory is one that makes predictions about nature, is tested and ‘Jumps through all the hoops’. That is, it is not proven false by any experiment designed to trip it up. A theory that makes no predictions that can be tested is not a scientific theory. It must be falsifiable.

A similar corollary is that if one holds a belief that you can never change then one is holding onto a theory that is probably false.

For instance, I believe that Bigfoot does not exist. Can I imagine a scenario where I can change my mind? Yes. If a live Bigfoot was captured. If a skeleton was found. Or even just a skull. Even DNA sample from scat found in the forest from an unknown ape specie, let’s say, most closely related to humans with a common ancestor of 5 million years ago, would be enough for me to change my mind. But under what scenario can a believer in Bigfoot ever change his mind? This is a strong clue that Bigfoot skeptics are probably right is because they can change their minds while Bigfoot believers basically can’t.

I can imagine a scenario where I could go from a LNer to a CTer. Yes. Let’s say ballistic experts started to announce that the JFK assassination could not have happened. They only formerly said that it could because they were under threat of a large secret and enduring conspiracy which has finally gone away. And they demonstrate in real world experiments that at no speed can a MC/WCC break a bone without fragmenting the bullet. This would be enough to convince me that the SBT must be false and there must have been a conspiracy.



So, I have a challenge for all the CTers out there. Give me a possible future scenario you can imagine where you would change your mind and conclude that Oswald acted alone.

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If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« on: April 21, 2020, 09:21:54 PM »


Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2020, 01:51:55 AM »
If all of these things happened and enough experts convinced you that the SBT was impossible, would you then conclude that Oswald did it? If not, then your example isn’t relevant.

I’m not a CT (I have no conspiracy theory), but what would it take to convince me?

A preponderance of reliable evidence that he did it. Real evidence, not silly crap like “why did he leave his wedding ring behind?)

Offline Joe Elliott

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #2 on: April 22, 2020, 02:34:32 AM »

If all of these things happened and enough experts convinced you that the SBT was impossible, would you then conclude that Oswald did it? If not, then your example isn’t relevant.

I already answered that in my initial post. Yes, I would change my mind and conclude that there was probably a conspiracy to kill JFK.



I’m not a CT (I have no conspiracy theory), but what would it take to convince me?

A preponderance of reliable evidence that he did it. Real evidence, not silly crap like “why did he leave his wedding ring behind?)

You are not a CTer? You think it is just as likely that Oswald acted alone as there was a conspiracy?


Plus, you are being vague.

Give us a real concrete scenario that could happen that would change your mind.

What experiments by ballistic experts would convince you that Oswald could have been the lone assassin? And that the evidence is consistent with him being the lone assassin.

What would have to happen?

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #2 on: April 22, 2020, 02:34:32 AM »


Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #3 on: April 22, 2020, 03:44:12 AM »
I already answered that in my initial post. Yes, I would change my mind and conclude that there was probably a conspiracy to kill JFK.

Sorry, I made a typo.  I meant to ask "would you then conclude that Oswald did not do it?" You might conclude that somebody else took a shot, but you would still believe that Oswald shot JFK, right?  Is there anything that could ever convince you that Oswald was not involved at all?

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You are not a CTer? You think it is just as likely that Oswald acted alone as there was a conspiracy?

I don't think there is sufficient evidence to determine who killed JFK.  You seem to think that Oswald doing it is a given and the only dispute is whether he had help or not.

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Give us a real concrete scenario that could happen that would change your mind.

It would have to be new evidence.  The existing evidence is too insufficient and questionable/tainted, and people insisting over and over again that it's good enough does not make it any more convincing.

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What experiments by ballistic experts would convince you that Oswald could have been the lone assassin?

None, because there are no ballistics in the world that can tell you who fired a weapon.

At this point, it would have to be conclusive physical evidence, like DNA.  Or conclusive photographic evidence.  New documents of known provenance showing that this particular rifle was picked up by Oswald.  Conclusive physical evidence that he fired a rifle that day, handled that rifle, and that CE139 was the gun that killed Kennedy.  Something like that.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2020, 04:05:13 AM by John Iacoletti »

Offline Joe Elliott

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #4 on: April 22, 2020, 04:41:16 AM »

Sorry, I made a typo.  I meant to ask "would you then conclude that Oswald did not do it?" You might conclude that somebody else took a shot, but you would still believe that Oswald shot JFK, right?  Is there anything that could ever convince you that Oswald was not involved at all?

Seeing that Oswald was involved in the conspiracy? Possible.

Seeing that there was a conspiracy and Oswald was innocent? That would be a hard sell.

Why would Oswald break his usual routine to visit his wife just Thursday night instead of visiting over the entire weekend? This only makes sense if he wanted to collect his rifle.

Why did Oswald bring a long narrow package to work?

Why would Oswald tell the young Wesley Buell Frazier that the long narrow package contained curtain rods when his room already had curtain rods.

Why when questioned by the police, did he deny bring in a long narrow package at all? Oh, yes, I must assume that the police were lying about everything. And I should assume that Wesley Buell Frazier was lying as well.

Why was Oswald my himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?

How is it that Oswald just happened to run into his boss and the policeman on the second floor, right by the stairs, about where we would expect him to be if he was fleeing the sixth floor after the shooting?

Why did Oswald immediately leave the building and Dealey Plaza in the few minutes after the shooting?

Why did the frugal Oswald take an American taxi, which he never did before, to rush back to his boardinghouse, when he could have walked there and didn’t expect to leave work for many hours. It makes sense if he unexpectedly got away and needed to get his handgun as soon as possible since the police could be showing up, maybe within the first hour.

Why did he sneak into the theater as police cars with sirens were coming down the street?

How is it there just happened to be the murder of a police officer within a mile a 15 or so minutes before this happened?

Why was Oswald carrying a handgun at the time he was arrested in the theater?

Why would Oswald try to pull a handgun on the first police officer to approach him in the theater?


Oswald was part of a conspiracy? Maybe. Oswald was innocent? That is a very hard sell, regardless of whatever evidence turns up.


I don't think there is sufficient evidence to determine who killed JFK.  You seem to think that Oswald doing it is a given and the only dispute is whether he had help or not.

It would have to be new evidence.  The existing evidence is too insufficient and questionable/tainted, and people insisting over and over again that it's good enough does not make it any more convincing.

None, because there are no ballistics in the world that can tell you who fired a weapon.

At this point, it would have to be conclusive physical evidence, like DNA.  Or conclusive photographic evidence.  New documents of known provenance showing that this particular rifle was picked up by Oswald.  Conclusive physical evidence that he fired a rifle that day, handled that rifle, and that CE139 was the gun that killed Kennedy.  Something like that.

Basically, there is no scenario that you can imagine that would cause you to change your mind that there probably was a conspiracy to instead believe that Oswald probably acted alone.

Correct?

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #4 on: April 22, 2020, 04:41:16 AM »


Offline Bill Chapman

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #5 on: April 22, 2020, 06:16:26 PM »
The ring Everything was faked, planted or altered in some way
« Last Edit: April 22, 2020, 06:35:15 PM by Bill Chapman »

Offline Jack Trojan

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #6 on: April 22, 2020, 07:09:09 PM »
Seeing that Oswald was involved in the conspiracy? Possible.

Seeing that there was a conspiracy and Oswald was innocent? That would be a hard sell.

Why would Oswald break his usual routine to visit his wife just Thursday night instead of visiting over the entire weekend? This only makes sense if he wanted to collect his rifle.

Why did Oswald bring a long narrow package to work?

Why would Oswald tell the young Wesley Buell Frazier that the long narrow package contained curtain rods when his room already had curtain rods.

Why when questioned by the police, did he deny bring in a long narrow package at all? Oh, yes, I must assume that the police were lying about everything. And I should assume that Wesley Buell Frazier was lying as well.

Why was Oswald my himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?

How is it that Oswald just happened to run into his boss and the policeman on the second floor, right by the stairs, about where we would expect him to be if he was fleeing the sixth floor after the shooting?

Why did Oswald immediately leave the building and Dealey Plaza in the few minutes after the shooting?

Why did the frugal Oswald take an American taxi, which he never did before, to rush back to his boardinghouse, when he could have walked there and didn’t expect to leave work for many hours. It makes sense if he unexpectedly got away and needed to get his handgun as soon as possible since the police could be showing up, maybe within the first hour.

Why did he sneak into the theater as police cars with sirens were coming down the street?

How is it there just happened to be the murder of a police officer within a mile a 15 or so minutes before this happened?

Why was Oswald carrying a handgun at the time he was arrested in the theater?

Why would Oswald try to pull a handgun on the first police officer to approach him in the theater?


Oswald was part of a conspiracy? Maybe. Oswald was innocent? That is a very hard sell, regardless of whatever evidence turns up.


Basically, there is no scenario that you can imagine that would cause you to change your mind that there probably was a conspiracy to instead believe that Oswald probably acted alone.

Correct?

Correct. Not until you explain how everything you posted is not consistent with Oswald being a patsy.

You seem to think that Oswald was a lone nut by default and it is up to CTs to prove he wasn't. The reality is that the LN hypothesis is weaker than the patsy hypothesis. You LNers are all in with Oswald acting alone, which has a crapload of evidence suggesting otherwise. However, you deny a conspiracy because it's 1 strike and you are out if even 1 other person was involved. That's why the HSCA concluded that Oswald likely did not act alone. The LN hypothesis can be disproven with more evidence, but you can never prove it like you can't prove bigfoot didn't do it.

I don't see many CTs claiming Oswald was innocent or not involved is some fashion, only that he was a patsy and not a LN. Otherwise, all the points you made above are consistent with Oswald being a patsy. There is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that Oswald did not even touch the MC rifle that was planted on the 6th floor. No prints on both murder weapons, a useless scope on the rifle, and an impossible trajectory from the 6th floor entering JFK's back at the T1 vertebrae and exiting at C7, then into Connally at the 5th rib then smashing thru his wrist bone and into his thigh, then falling out onto the wrong stretcher in pristine condition with no DNA on it. And all that is just fine with you LNers because you assume Oswald took all the shots and was definitely NOT a patsy. There is a plethora of similar circumstantial evidence pointing to a conspiracy that needs to be explained before CTs can buy into the LN hypothesis.

For CTs, that ship has sailed because you LNers have failed to defend your LNer position with any facts or evidence that refute a conspiracy. Oswald may have even taken ALL the shots, (which I don't believe) but he was no LN. He was a patsy, which all your anecdotal evidence supports. You can't cherry pick your evidence that you think supports your position and ignore the evidence that doesn't. That's not how logic and critical thinking works. Not very scientific.

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #6 on: April 22, 2020, 07:09:09 PM »


Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong.
« Reply #7 on: April 22, 2020, 08:08:28 PM »
Seeing that Oswald was involved in the conspiracy? Possible.

Seeing that there was a conspiracy and Oswald was innocent? That would be a hard sell.

Exactly.  So now refer back to your original observation:  "If you cannot be wrong then you are wrong".

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Why would Oswald break his usual routine to visit his wife just Thursday night instead of visiting over the entire weekend? This only makes sense if he wanted to collect his rifle.

There are a lot of hypothetical things that would "make sense".  Make up with Marina. Convince her to move in with him.  Hell, even getting curtain rods makes sense.  If you think the only possible reason for coming there on a non-Friday (not the first time he did so, BTW) was to get a rifle to kill the president with, then you are engaging in post-hoc rationalization.

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Why did Oswald bring a long narrow package to work?

Apparently not that narrow.  Again, you can make a case for many other things besides a hypothetical rifle in a bag for which there is no evidence.

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Why would Oswald tell the young Wesley Buell Frazier that the long narrow package contained curtain rods when his room already had curtain rods.

Several possibilities.  Maybe the room didn't really already have curtain rods. Mrs Johnson was photographed with another person hammering up curtain rods after the assassination.  Maybe he wanted different curtain rods.  Maybe the curtain rods were for the apartment Lee wanted to rent for Marina to come live with him.  Maybe he lied to Frazier because he was embarrassed to air his martial strife to Frazier.  Maybe Frazier made up the story to distance himself because Fritz was threatening to charge him as an accomplice.  This notion that the only possible reason is getting a rifle to shoot the president with is fundamentally flawed.

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Why when questioned by the police, did he deny bring in a long narrow package at all?

Maybe Frazier really was thinking of a different day.  How would you know?  Maybe the interrogation report wasn't accurate.  By the way, the report doesn't say he denied bring in a long narrow package, it says that he "denied that he had brought the long package described by Mr. Frazier and his sister."  But I'm sure Frazier and Randle didn't come into the interrogation room.  How did they characterize what Frazier and Randle described?  We don't know.

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Oh, yes, I must assume that the police were lying about everything. And I should assume that Wesley Buell Frazier was lying as well.

You should assume nothing -- including that there was a rifle in the bag that Frazier saw.

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Why was Oswald my himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?

Why was Dougherty by himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?
Why was Piper by himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?
Why was Wilson by himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?
Why was West by himself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?
Why was Hine by herself during the shooting when almost everyone else was with others?

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How is it that Oswald just happened to run into his boss and the policeman on the second floor, right by the stairs, about where we would expect him to be if he was fleeing the sixth floor after the shooting?

The only reason that's where you "expect him to be" is because you think he did it and then rushed down the stairs in 75-90 seconds.

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Why did Oswald immediately leave the building and Dealey Plaza in the few minutes after the shooting?

You don't know that he left the building in the few minutes after the shooting.  All you can say is when he boarded the bus, and that isn't even certain.  McWatters thought he was identifying the grinning teenager (Roy Milton Jones)

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Why did the frugal Oswald take an American taxi, which he never did before, to rush back to his boardinghouse, when he could have walked there and didn’t expect to leave work for many hours.

This is evidence? Why did the frugal Oswald buy a rifle for $19.95?  Why didn't the Oswald who had $13.87 in his pocket just buy a damn movie ticket and evade suspicion (if in fact he didn't)?

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It makes sense if he unexpectedly got away and needed to get his handgun as soon as possible since the police could be showing up, maybe within the first hour.

You can fit all kinds of speculation into a predetermined conclusion and claim it makes sense.

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Why did he sneak into the theater as police cars with sirens were coming down the street?

Nobody saw him "sneak into the theater".

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How is it there just happened to be the murder of a police officer within a mile a 15 or so minutes before this happened?

How is it that John Gibson was in a movie theater a mile from where a police officer just happened to be murdered?

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Why was Oswald carrying a handgun at the time he was arrested in the theater?

That's what boys do.  On the other hand, why would somebody who had just shot a cop ditch a jacket, but not the gun?  Here's the thing:  hypothetical questions aren't evidence of anything.

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Why would Oswald try to pull a handgun on the first police officer to approach him in the theater?

Why would you think he "tried to pull a handgun on a police officer"?

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Oswald was part of a conspiracy? Maybe. Oswald was innocent? That is a very hard sell, regardless of whatever evidence turns up.

But is there anything that could possibly sell you, even in theory?  Refer back to your premise.

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Basically, there is no scenario that you can imagine that would cause you to change your mind that there probably was a conspiracy to instead believe that Oswald probably acted alone.  Correct?

Incorrect.  I never stated that I thought that there probably was a conspiracy.  There isn't sufficient evidence to make that conclusion either.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2020, 08:13:16 PM by John Iacoletti »