Maybe, it's because that those siding with me can actually comprehend the following comparison, I simply took the same two photos (CE133A and CE133B) that the HSCA compared and then demonstrated that the difference between the gate latch and the rear screen door is relatively far in excess of 1mm, it's not exactly rocket science.
LOL! You're still ignoring the HSCA PEP's gate-bolt-to-screen parallax measurements! You're right: It's not exactly rocket science--it's a matter of doing basic subtraction! But your goofy graphic simply ignores the parallax measurements, and then you compound your blunder by claiming that the difference is "far in excess of 1 mm." Uh, no, it is not.
Let's do the math, shall we? How about math, instead of your ridiculous graphical fabrications? Here are the parallax measurements, straight from the PEP report:
133A: gate bolt to screen =30.4 mm. scaling; dist.=15.5 mm
30.4/15.5=
1.96133B: gate bolt to screen=32.1 mm, scaling dist.=15.2 mm
32.1/15.2=
2.11 (6 HSCA 177-180)
Okay, so the 133B measurement, i.e., the larger of the two, is 2.11 mm, and the 133A measurement, the smaller number, is 1.96 mm.
Alright, so what is 2.11 mm minus 1.96 mm? Answer: 0.15 mm So, no, the gate-bolt-to-screen difference between 133A and 133B is not "far in excess of 1 mm." It is only 0.15 mm. 0.15 mm is 85% smaller than 1 mm. It is only 0.005905512 inches. Expressed as a fraction, this microscopic difference is 59/10000ths of an inch. You need a micrometer just to measure such a tiny distance. It cannot be measured or discerned with the naked eye.This is twice now that you've committed this same amazing blunder of failing to do basic subtraction to get the difference between the two measurements. Incredible.
Yes laughable! I took two images with similar overhead lighting and directly compared them to each other and proved beyond all doubt that the square chin is caused by the resulting shadow. I redid my previous GIF to include the actual backyard photo and the similarity is conclusive.
I don't know how in the world anyone takes you and your zany graphics seriously. You don't even know what your own side's experts have claimed on this issue, much less what skeptical experts have said. FYI, the HSCA PEP experts claimed that the backyard figure's chin "vanishes in shadow." They acknowledged that the chin in the backyard photos looks different than the chin in undisputed Oswald photos, but they said this was because the bottom part of the backyard figure's chin is concealed by shadows.
Do you know who Malcolm Thompson was? He ran the Police Forensic Science Laboratory Identification Bureau of Scotland Yard for 25 years. He was also a president of the Evidence Photographers International Council and a fellow of the Institute of Incorporated Photographers, the Royal Photographic Society, and the Institute of Professional Investigators. Here's what he said about the backyard figure's chin vs. Oswald's chin:
I have seen photographs of Oswald and his chin is not square.
He has a rounded chin. Having said that, the subject in this picture has a square
chin but again it doesn't take any stretch of the imagination to appreciate that
from the upper lip to the top of the head is Oswald and one can only conclude
that Oswald's head has been stuck on to a chin, not being Oswald's chin.
And Thompson didn't buy the HSCA PEP's explanation for the chin difference, by the way.
By the way, the popular conspiracy theory that the bottom of Oswald's chin was removed and the upper portion of Oswald's face was composited on to someone else's chin is easily disproven by microscopically examining the consistent original grain structure, because a composite photo would be detectable due to the mismatch of the photo grain. JohnM
Oh, really? "Easily detectable," hey? Are you sure about that?
Once again you show you don't know what you're talking about. As former NSA photographic expert Brian Mee explained to me, and as Malcolm Thompson noted, you could thwart any grain-structure analysis by making a photocopy of the composites. The compositing of one person's chin onto the image of another person's face would be undetectable in a photocopy. Thompson made the point that even a computer analysis would likely be unable to detect forgery in photocopied composites.
Furthermore, how do you explain the obvious line that runs across the backyard figure's chin? It is a nearly straight line for most of its length. It begins on one side of the neck, crosses the chin, and ends on the other side of the neck. The PEP tried to explain it away with the claim that it was the edge of a watermark. Every photographic expert I interviewed rejected that explanation, noting they had never seen a watermark with an edge that was virtually straight.
You know, if I were a WC apologist, and I saw another WC apologist making the kinds of horrendous gaffes that you're making, I would steer clear of your threads, not to mention your arguments. But I've noticed that you guys, much like members of a cult, tend to stand by each other no matter how embarrassingly bad your arguments are and no matter how thoroughly you get refuted.