TG--
You are an indomitable, indefatigable colossus, a pillar of gimlet-eyed insights, and a towering figure upon the JFKA research scene.
Flattery, although true in this case, will get you nowhere.
I think JBC did not do a 180-degree turn in his seat after being shot through the chest (taking out four inches of rib and leaving a large, ragged exit hole in his chest), having his right wrist shot through and fractured, and having the slug burrow into his thigh. I think he was immediately incapacitated.
JBC was neither the first nor the last person to do something "superhuman" after having a rib smashed by a bullet.
. . . . . . .
ME: Has anyone ever done something that was physically impressive after having a bullet smash one of their ribs?
GROK: Yes, there are several well-documented real-world examples of people performing physically impressive (or at least highly functional) feats shortly after having ribs broken by gunshot wounds.
Here are some of the most striking (pardon the pun):
Theodore Roosevelt (1912) – The most famous case.While campaigning in Milwaukee, Roosevelt was shot in the chest with a .38 revolver at close range. The bullet cracked his fourth rib on the right side, deflected slightly, and lodged in the chest wall (it was never removed).
Immediately after being shot, Roosevelt coughed into his hand, saw no bright red blood (correctly concluding the lung was not pierced), stood up, walked to his car, and insisted on delivering his scheduled 90-minute speech before going to the hospital. He began with the legendary line: “Friends, I shall ask you to be as quiet as possible. I don’t know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot—but it takes more than that to kill a bull moose.”
50 Cent (Curtis James Jackson III) – 2000
Shot nine times at point-blank range with a 9 mm handgun while sitting in a car. One bullet struck him in the chest and reportedly fractured a rib (sources vary whether it was a direct rib fracture or secondary from lung collapse).
Despite massive blood loss and injuries to his face, hand, legs, and torso, he survived and within months was back in the studio recording. While not an immediate athletic feat, the fact that he regained full physical capacity (and later became known for intense workout regimens) after that degree of trauma, including rib damage, is remarkable.
Military and law-enforcement cases (multiple) U.S. soldiers and Marines in Iraq/Afghanistan have continued fighting after taking 5.56 or 7.62 rounds to the plate or body that cracked/fractured ribs but did not penetrate vital organs thanks to body armor or glancing hits. Many accounts describe troops returning fire, dragging wounded buddies, or running hundreds of meters to cover while having one or more cracked ribs from bullet impacts.
One specific documented case: LAPD Officer Kristina Ripatti (2006) was shot in the chest with a .45 ACP; the round cracked a rib and collapsed a lung. Despite being paralyzed from the waist down by a second bullet that hit her spine, she still managed to return fire and wound her assailant before collapsing.
In short: Yes, people have done extraordinarily impressive things—speech-giving, returning fire, continuing to fight, or rapidly returning to high-level physical condition—after having a rib smashed or cracked by a bullet. Theodore Roosevelt’s 90-minute speech minutes after taking a .38 to the chest remains one of the most extreme examples in history.