MG: Below are some of the problems with the backyard rifle photos noted by Hershal Womack, a professor of photography at Texas Tech University...
...which doesn't address the OP or the point I raised about the OP. You're down to a Galloping Gish, blowing smoke across the pasture.
You again showcase your ability to misread and misrepresent. I made several points in the OP, only one of which was incorrect.
In the OP I pointed out that Mytton makes the utterly bogus claim that the incidents of parallax in the photos are "massive" and "vast," when in fact they were so small that they could only be detected with the aid of computers and microscopes and were found to be matter of millimeters, sometimes 0.1 mm.
In the OP, I discussed Mytton's claim that the backyard photos are "tiny," when in fact 133-C Dees is an 8 x 10 first-generation print and 133-A Stovall is a first-generation 5 x 8 print. The PEP was able to make high-quality enlargements from 133-A DeM that could be displayed on a large-screen viewer because 133-A DeM was “probably made in a high-quality enlarger with a high-quality lens” (6 H 148).
In addition, in the OP I repeated one of the central points about the backyard photos as revealed by the PEP's parallax measurements, i.e., that the differences in the distances between the background objects would be far greater if the photos had been taken in the manner claimed by the official story, that there is no way that a cheap top-viewfinder handheld camera that was handed back and forth between exposures would produce photos that contain differences in background-object distances that are so small they could only be detected with photogrammetric measurements done with the aid of computers and microscopes.
Did you just "forget" about these points that I made in the OP?
MG: Yes, there most certainly are {microscopic distances}. Let us once again look at the table for paragraph 441 regarding the horizontal parallax measurements in the PEP's report (6 HSCA 178). The difference in the lower-level "a" distance between 133-A and 133-B was measured to be just 0.8 mm, or 0.03 inches, or 3/100ths of an inch. The difference in the middle-level "a" distance was found to be just 0.1 mm, or 0.003 inches, or 3/1000ths of an inch. The difference in the upper-level "a" distance was found to be just 1.1 mm/0.04 inches or 1/25th of an inch.
The difference in the upper-level "a" distance was the largest of the differences in the horizontal parallax measurements. The naked eye cannot a detect a difference of 1.1 mm/0.04 inches in the distances between background objects in the photos, unless they have super-human vision. To detect a difference of just 1/25th of an inch in the distances between the same objects in two photos, a person would need the aid of a high-powered magnifying glass or a microscope, just as the PEP did.
Let's continue: The difference in the lower-level "b" distance between 133-A and 133-B was found to be just 0.5 mm, or 0.019 inches, or 19/1000ths of an inch. The difference in the middle-level "b" distance was found to be 0.7 mm, or 0.027 inches, or 27/1000ths of an inch.
Of all of the measurements you've given here the smallest is 0.1mm. "Microscopic" is generally held to be "too small to be seen by the naked eye". For reference, a dime is a little over 1 mm thick. The tiny ridges along the circunference of a dime are spaced every 0.18mm. The width of a human hair ranges from 0.18mm to 0.018mm, and is typcially held to be .075mm on average. People can generally distinguish the ridges along a dime's edge or a human hair. Therefore, "microscopic" refers to something even smaller than the smallest number you've given, much less any of the others.
So you're doubling down on Mytton's ludicrous claim that the background-distance differences are "very visible" to the naked eye.
Why, then, was the PEP only able to detect them with photogrammetric measurements done with the aid of computers and microscopes?Your comparisons of dimes and human hair are patently ridiculous. First off, a dime is 1.35 mm thick, not just "a little over 1 mm thick." Second, simply discerning the existence of ridges on the side of a dime or being able to see a human hair has nothing to do with detecting the kinds of differences in the distances between background objects that the PEP found in the backyard photos.
Tell me, what do you think would happen if someone produced a dime with ridges that were 0.08 mm apart instead of the usual 0.18 mm apart, and if you showed the altered dime and a regular dime to 10 people and asked them if they noticed any differences in the two dimes' ridges, without the aid of any magnification? Huh? How many people do you think would detect the difference in the spacing of the ridges without any kind of magnification and without holding the dimes very close to their eyes but holding them no closer than 12 inches to their eyes? And if any of those 10 people said they thought the ridges were closer together on one of the dimes, how many of them do you think would be able to tell you that the amount of difference was 0.1 mm? Huh?
Similarly, of course, if a human hair is held close enough to you, you will be able to see/discern it, but that has nothing to do with the parallax measurements discussion. Take a deep breath and think about this: If you took two photos, say 8 x 10 in size, and moved an object in the background of one of the photos by 0.075 mm, are you seriously suggesting that people would be able to detect the 0.075 mm difference in the distance between the two objects without any magnification? Really?
A 0.1 mm difference in the distance between two background objects in two photos is indeed microscopic, which is why the PEP had to use computers and microscopes to do their photogrammetric measurements.
MG: But if the differences in the background-object distances had actually been larger "in the real world," this would have proved the camera's movement was larger "in the real world," a point that the PEP would have loudly trumpeted.
Says who? This is really just some irrational projection you hurl against McCamy, Kirk, et al, because you have nothing left to argue with.
Oh, come on. You can't really believe that the PEP would have said nothing if they had found evidence that the camera's movement was not just "slight" and "very small" but was much larger.
Mytton's whole argument about camera movement "in the real world," as if the PEP was talking about some other world, is nonsensical and further evidence of his utter incompetence. The PEP was talking about the camera's movement "in the real world." What other world does Mytton think the PEP was referencing when they said the camera moved to the left only "slightly" and that the change in its vertical position was "very small"? Mars? Venus? Some unseen parallel world?
Again, all the PEP needed to do is show that parallax existed in order to show that the backgrounds are not identical. There is no requirement that it be either larger or smaller than some amount.
Nonsense. They needed to show that the amount of parallax was reasonable and plausible in light of how the photos were allegedly made, but instead they found that the differences between the background objects were only tiny fractions of an inch and had to be measured with the aid of computers and microscopes.
Furthermore, they didn't even measure 133-C for parallax, a fact that you blithely and incredibly dismiss as meaningless.
The PEP also reported that they were able to view the different photos stereoscopically, which also demonstrates that the backgrounds are not identical.
One, the PEP experts knew full well that fake photos can also be viewed stereoscopically as long as they show two different perspectives, even if the perspectives are only slightly different.
Two, I have repeatedly said that the identical-background argument is not necessary to prove the photos are fake, and that the main point about the backgrounds is that the microscopic differences in the distances between their objects could not have been produced by a handheld camera that was handed back and forth between exposures but indicate that a tripod was used and that Marina was not the photographer.
Again, in her later years, Marina said in a record interview that she did not take the backyard photos in evidence. When she was pressured and manipulated into going along with the official story, she said that she held the camera up to her eye to take the photos (a physical impossibility with the Imperial Reflex 620 camera), that she only took one or two photos, that she had never seen the white sling, and that she had not seen a telescopic sight on the rifle.
MG: And please tell me how the PEP could prove that the same background was not used in the backyard photos when they only did parallax measurements on two of the three photos, especially given the fact that the backyard figure's pose in 133-C is different than his poses in the two other photos. I can't help but suspect that the PEP did measure for parallax in 133-C, realized the measurements and resulting camera movement were problematic, and decided to simply ignore 133-C when it came to parallax and camera movement
As I've mentioned before, the claim that A,B and C are identical can be completely refuted by showing any combination of: A and B are not identical, B and C are not identical, A and C are not identical. This is basic logic, and is apparently beyond your comprehension.
This is your idea of "basic logic"?! How do you know that 133-C's background is not identical to 133-A's or 133-B's? You don't, because the PEP, incredibly, failed to do parallax measurements on the photo (or, if they did, the never mentioned them). If 133-C's background were identical to 133-A's background, that would be a huge problem for your side. Or, if 133-C's background were identical to 133-B's background, that would also be a huge problem for your side.
MG: This is just silly, given the difficulty that the PEP had in detecting any change in the camera's vertical position. They could only find one determination for vertical parallax and had to resort to claiming that vertical parallax was established because the small black rectangle on the bottom edge of a part of the fence appears more elongated in the vertical direction in 133-A than it does in 133-B (6 HSCA 179).
They only needed to find one example to disprove the contention that the backgrounds in the the photos are identical. Again, basic logic.
You mean basic nonsense. Let me give you some genuine basic logic: If you're claiming to prove that the backgrounds in three photos are not identical, you cannot establish this claim by only doing parallax measurements on two of the photos. Or, if you're claiming that the floor plans for three houses are not identical, you cannot establish this claim by only examining the floor plans of two of the houses.
MG: As I've said before, if you want to prove the backyard photos are authentic/pristine, conduct a reenactment with people who don't know what they're reenacting. Have them use an Imperial Reflex 620 camera and take three photos in the manner alleged for the backyard photos, and see if their photos contain the same tiny differences in the distances between background objects and if their photos exhibit only "slight" and "very small" horizontal and vertical camera movement between exposures.
And while you're at it, do parallax measurements to determine if there was any change in the camera's angular position between exposures. Unless the participants miraculously manage to avoid tilting the camera even in the slightest degree, you will find that the camera's angular position changed between exposures.
If you want that done, do it yourself.
UH-HUH. We both know that any such reenactment would prove the backyard photos to be fraudulent.
Physicist Philip Stahl, who has written books on physics and astronomy, did a pixel analysis of the backyard rifle photos and found that they must have been tampered with:
"Given some original values dx1, dy1, the mapping will yield diffused dimensions that are within about 30% of the original. However, +30% shows that there clearly had to have been tampering such that the images are not the same." (
http://brane-space.blogspot.com/2013/11/analysis-of-pixel-diffusion-in-oswald.html)
Stahl decided to conduct the analysis after reading Hany Farid’s study, which supposedly proved that the backyard photos are authentic. Stahl reviewed Farid’s study and concluded it was severely flawed, as he discusses in the above-mentioned article and in his article “Hany Farid’s Pixelated Illusions”:
http://brane-space.blogspot.com/2009/11/hany-farids-pixelated-illusions.htmlFormer professor of mathematics Richard Charnin has studied the backyard rifle photos and has likewise concluded they have been faked. If anyone is wondering about Charnin’s credentials, in 1965, he earned a BA in mathematics from Queens College. In 1969, he earned an MS in applied mathematics from Adelphi University, and in 1973, he earned an MS in operations research from the Polytechnic Institute of New York. Here is Charnin’s article “Mathematical Proof that the Oswald Backyard Photos Were Faked”:
https://richardcharnin.wordpress.com/2014/06/09/jfk-mathematical-proof-that-the-oswald-backyard-photos-were-faked/I would recommend Charnin’s 2014 book
Reclaiming Science: The JFK Conspiracy.