Yet he said he saw it and it was NOT the shot that caused JFK to be struck in the head, which was the third shot. How is it even possible that the unusually short and very local blast of air occurs just to the right of JFK's head lifting his hair at the point in time that it Hickey places it, IF he hadn't seen it? That makes no sense. And it fits with Greer, Tague, the wounds, the shot pattern, the first shot hitting JFK etc. etc.
Your argument that he was at the wrong angle to see it isn't very persuasive. He was looking down onto the top of JFK's head. Why would he not be able to see what he said he saw? Can you duplicate this in 3D?
The "fake" line was yours:

I just extended it to measure it.
I hope the break will allow you to come up with new descriptive epithets for the 3 shot 3 hit scenario. "Mason-nut theory" and "Bat__it crazy" and "Sponge-Bob Squarepants" were all very good but getting a little worn with age. I expect you can do better.
As Jerry has demonstrated beyond doubt - it was impossible for Hickey to see the slight ruffle of JFK's fringe from where he was positioned.
It was physically impossible.
This has been demonstrated beyond any question.
Rather than tackle Jerry's comprehensive demonstration of this impossibility, all you can manage is "yet he said he saw it".
You fail to comprehend that, if it was impossible for Hickey to see the fringe ruffle your demented theory requires, then he must have been talking about something else when he referred to JFK's hair moving.
It is the only conclusion that can be drawn.
Your demented "logic" - that Jerry's faultless demonstration must be wrong because you think Hickey said he saw JFK's fringe ruffle - says all anyone needs to know about the quality of your approach to this matter.