As I say, "lying" was just the most accurate label I could think of for that particular strategy. If you'd prefer "deliberate falsification" we can use that instead.
It's got nothing to do with me if the strategies you use to make a mockery of reasoned debate reflect on you as a person.
And if you think I'm not going to point out these strategies in case it hurts your feelings...you must be dreaming.
I guess I missed something somewhere. What "falsification" are you suggesting that I have done? Or is that just something you throw out as a smokescreen to cover up a lack of reasoned argument? You have not identified one item that I have put forward as evidence that is false. Not a single one. You just make a general statement that I somehow lied. It doesn't bother me. I am just trying to improve your rhetorical skills.
It's a fact that the majority of witnesses describe three clearly audible shots. From this fact we conclude that, on probability the best interpretation is that did indeed happen. But this interpretation of the evidence doesn't make it a "fact".
"... we must test these conclusions of "fact" against all the evidence..."
Give it a try sometime
So.... you don't think there are facts at all, just evidence? Is it not a fact that JFK was hit in the head by a bullet? Or do you think that is debateable too? Some posters actually have questioned that, by the way.
Strategy - Convenient misremembering
Nellie's reliability as a witness is undermined by the fact she describes the shot that hit JBC at a time when she was looking forward (plus many other inconsistencies). This has been dealt with in this thread but you forget that.
That, of course, is premised on your view that JBC was hit in the back at z223 when she was looking forward. If you conclude, as I have, that JBC was not hit there but was hit at z271 when she was looking right at him, then she was truthful. Conversely, if you use her evidence to determine when he was hit, one would have to conclude that he was not hit until z270 when she turned and looked at him.
When applying JBC's testimony to the Z-film you dismiss almost every salient point he makes in his testimony except the one that suits you. This has also been dealt with in detail in this thread but you forget.
No I don't. I accept most of the things that he very confidently recalled before he was hit in the back. I am less accepting of small details he recalled at the time of or after he was hit. That's all.
Strategy - reliance on contradictory eye witness testimony
Okay, let's play "contradictory witnesses"
Bill Newman, husband of Gayle, stood right next to her, witnessing what she was witnessing:
"... the President’s car was some fifty feet in front of us still yet in front of us coming toward us when we heard the first shot...And then as the car got directly in front of us well a gunshot apparently from behind us hit the President in the side of the temple.”
As far as Bill is concerned the second shot was the headshot, contradicting his wife's testimony. Where does this get us?
There was no contradiction at all. In his first statement (
19H490) he mentioned two shots but he did not say that there were only two shots. In his November 24/63 FBI statement (
22H842) he said that the shot that struck the President in the head and the previous shot were about 2 seconds apart and he said that the head shot was the third and last shot.
Not seeing exactly what his wife saw does not mean he contradicts what she said. Different witnesses focus on different things. Obviously Gayle Newman was looking at JBC. Bill Newman said he was looking right at JFK as the car passed. In fact, their statements as a whole are quite consistent and they are consistent with 3 shots, 3 hits and a second shot about 2 seconds before the head shot.
I'm an LNer??
You are not? Who do you think was shooting?
So the momentum transferred to JBC's wrist only applies to one Z-frame, after which it miraculously disappears?
That depends on the opposing force. The momentum transfer, according to that calculation, was .825 N. sec. or .825 kg m/sec. That means that a force equivalent to the weight 1.65 kg (16.5 Newtons) for 1/20th of a second or one frame would stop it. So a force of less than 4 lb (weight) applied to the wrist would completely stop any motion of the wrist caused by the bullet impact within one frame. The wrist going from 1 m/sec to 0 in 1/20th of a second would move but only about 2.5 cm or an inch.
So the force that shattered the bullet is not equally applied to JBC's wrist?
The force is not equally applied to the wrist but I am assuming that the force for the entire duration of contact was the maximum force. The maximum force would be the force applied to bone that causes bone to break. The force is greatest where it impacts bone and less where it impacts soft tissue.