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1
I am going to go out on a limb with the pigeon acceleration time and say less than a second. 

It's just science:  My reasoning is as follows: 1. The Tesla motor co. is named after Nikolai Tesla.  2. Tesla loved pigeons.  In fact, he is quoted as saying he loved pigeons "the way a man loves a woman".  3. It follows that Musk would not have made his fastest car much faster than a pigeon - that would not honour the memory of the namesake of his company.  4. So a pigeon acceleration time is at least equal to the fastest Tesla car, the Model S Plaid, which has a 0-60 mph acceleration of just under 2 seconds. 5. Assuming the acceleration is constant (it is actually quicker from the start), this would put 0-30 in just under a second. QED.

I didn't think your reasoning could get any nuttier. You surprised me.

Your claim ignores one important factor. When pigeons take off, their first move is usually to gain elevation. They usually do this for a couple seconds before acceleratign horizontally. There's no reason to believe the pigeons would be out of Rosemary Willis' field of vision by the time she looked up.
2
Dear Herr Smith.

You're right.

Mussolini is more apt.

My bad.

-- Tom

Bad comp, Mussolini was assassinated. The left has failed three times to take out Trump. That doesn't mean they won't keep trying.
3
What the CT community needs is one piece of irrefutable evidence that is central to the LN narrative and is flatly inconsistent with it.

Yup. And in 62 years of trying, the CT community has failed to bag that snipe. It makes me wonder why they keep trying.

I was going to compare it to their hunt for the white whale but then I remembered Ahab did find his white whale.
4
$13 in 1963 was quite a bit of money, the equivalent of $141 today.

As for your other comments, I recommend you read two articles:

Faulty Evidence: Problems with the Case Against Lee Harvey Oswald
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1R1CZaCZfLA5QFjTCHNINcKxTH4cBiPfw/view?usp=sharing

Extra Bullets and Missed Shots in Dealey Plaza
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WRwhDQ9HMydf5pICsHwgtkoNKw0YSO8T/view?usp=sharing

$141 isn't going to get you very far today. I just looked up the Greyhound bus fare from Dallas to El Paso. it's $62.99. Roughly 45% of your cash. $13 might have allowed Oswald to eat some meals and take a short trip somewhere in 1963, but it would be gone in a few days. Complicating this is his face would be in every newspaper and TV news program not just in this country but neighboring countries as well.

I read your article about the problems with the case against Oswald. You should have quit after the second paragraph. You immediately started to go downhill from there. You demonstrate something I wrote recently in another thread. CTs will invent one lame excuse after another to dismiss any and all evidence of Oswald's guilt. Just taking your imagined problems regarding the Carcano rifle. You claim the money order Oswald used to purchase the rifle was bought at a time Oswald was at work. You cited Summers as a source. I'm assuming that's Anthony Summers, longtime conspiracy author. Do you have another source for that. My research tells me the claim is based on the postmark of the letter to Klein's which contained the money  order. The post office doesn't postmark letters when they are mailed. They have collection times for mailboxes and the time stamps are made when those collected letters are processed. There's no telling when Oswald mailed the letter to Klein's.

You also pointed out that nobody at the post office remembered handing Oswald a long package. Seriously? There's no telling which postal employee handed the package to Oswald and do you really think whoever it was that handed Oswald the package would have remembered doing so 8 months prior to the assassination.

You make an issue of the fact that Oswald ordered a 36 inch rifle but received a 40 inch rifle. Gee, whoever heard of a mail order house making a substitution like that? Even today I occasionally have to send something back to Amazon because what I received was not what I ordered. The serial number C2766 was unique to that rifle and that is the one Klein's sent to Oswald. He was photographed with the rifle and his palmprint was on the underside of the barrel.

Furthermore, the purchaser was listed as A. Hidell. How did these conspirators know 8 months in advance that one day Oswald would be working at a building overlooking a motorcade that was part of a presidential visit toe Dallas that wasn't even in the planning stages. How could they have known their patsy would have been carrying a fake ID with the name Alex Hidell. Do you guys ever bother to think these things out before you make these outrageous claims.

Then you suggest that all the documents with Oswald's handwriting on them could have been forged. I sat on a jury in a forgery case once and it was explained to us that most forgeries do not involve the forger copying somebody else's handwriting but disguising their own. Again, the suggestion that the conspirators were already trying to frame Oswald 8 months before the assassination are ludicrous.

The rest of your perceived problems with the evidence regarding the Carcano fall into the coulda, wouldna, shoulda category with zero evidence to support any of them.

The above are just the logical fallacies you committed in the first three pages of your article. Had I continued pointing out the logical fallacies in the rest of your 39 page diatribe, I might be here until next week. I wonder how much of your time you wasted on that article but I wasn't going to waste my time pointing out your silliness. I've told you before your material hasn't improved one bit since I first came across it on the old Prodigy service 35 years ago. If anything, you have just become more verbose.
5
What the CT community needs is one piece of irrefutable evidence that is central to the LN narrative and is flatly inconsistent with it. It would have to be either (1) something that shows to a certainty that what the LN narrative says took place in Dealey Plaza is incorrect, or (2) shows to a certainty that Dealey Plaza is not the whole story. The CT community has largely shot itself in the foot (feet?) by (1) proposing so many diametrically oppsed alternative scenarios for what took place in Dealey Plaza that it's almost comical, (2) hypothesizing so many diverse conspirators that it's likewise almost comical. To even get the attention of serious historians with anything short of irrefutable evidence, there would have to have been a single plausible theory involving plausible conspirators that cast really serious doubt on the critical elements of the LN narrative insofar as Dealey Plaza is concerned. Instead, we have a hopeless mishmash of mostly raw speculation - and the increasingly preferred theory of an elaborate, multi-faceted conspiracy flowing from the highest levels of government and an elaborate, multi-faceted coverup is one of the most ludicrous and inherently unbelievable of all. And on it goes ...
6
This is a classic example of what I wrote in another thread. You're overthinking this. You are making assumptions about what you think Oswald's demeanor should have been had he shot JFK. Perhaps you are imagining how you would have acted had you been in Oswald's shoes. That approach only makes sense if you assume Oswald would think like you in the same circumstances. I am going to assume you are not a wannabe presidential assassin so I see no reason to believe Oswald demeanor would mimic yours under the same circumstances.

I see no reason to think Oswald would have been surprised by being confronted by a cop with his gun drawn given that he knew what he had just done. Acting innocent when we have done something wrong is a life skill most of us learn when we are very young. "I don't know who knocked over the flower pot". That skill has served me well over the years. I even pulled it on my boss once. And it worked. That was many years ago. I hope he's not reading this.

No, I don't believe I'm overthinking it. I am simply noting Oswald's behavior as described by Baker and Truly and finding it exceedingly odd. If I jumped to "and that behavior is impossible for someone who just assassinated JFK," that would indeed be overthinking it. I simply note that this is a guy who shot the President of the United States something like two minutes previously, stashed his rifle, started down the stairs, heard someone coming up, ducked into the lunchroom - and was cooler than the proverbial cucumber when confronted by an officer who stuck a gun in his stomach. By any standard, that is remarkable - and suggestive to me of a dissociative state of some sort. We are allowed to at least think in LN Land, aren't we? It's a certainty that Baker and Truly would have been star witnesses for the defense if there had been a trial.
7
He encounters this zombie in the lunchroom who seems oblivious to everything that has happened and doesn't even ask "What's this all about?" when a gun is stuck in his stomach.

How do you know that Oswald didn't ask that or a similar question?

I obviously don't KNOW that. However, both Baker's and Truly's descriptions of the encounter are sufficiently "pro-Oswald" that I see no compelling reason they would have omitted a statement along those lines.

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Secondly, do you agree that not everybody reacts to situations in the same way?

Obviously they don't. But there is certainly a range of "normal" or "expected" behaviors when one has assassinated a President two minutes previously and now has a police officer sticking a gun in his stomach. Oswald's behavior seems to me outside that range, which is why I have described it as seeming like a dissociative state. On this thread or another one, I quoted an article to the effect that killers sometimes do exhibit a weird dissociative sort of calm.

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Then Baker just blithely accepts Truly's word that the zombie works in the building, as though someone who works in the building couldn't still be a suspect.

So, now we have Baker and Oswald who did not react in the way you expect them to do?

I would have no expectations for Truly. Baker actions don't strike me as very solid police work, but he may not have been thinking clearly under the circumstances.

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That might be plausible if the zombie were sitting at a table munching on a sandwich and reading a newspaper, but under the circumstances the whole thing seems bizarre to me.

This is just one of many bizarre things when it comes to Oswald.

For example, isn't it the LN narrative that Oswald decided to kill Kennedy after Marina refused to live with him again? If so, how does that make sense, when, at the same time, you claim that Oswald, at least one day earlier, made a paper bag to conceal a rifle in, which would imply premeditation?

And does it even make sense to make a paper bag, when it is alleged that Oswald took the rifle (unseen) to New Orleans on public transport. Duffel bags were found in Ruth Paine's garage and they apparently belonged to Oswald. So, why not simply use a duffel bag to bring the rifle into the TSBD? And while we're on the subject, if Oswald transported to rifle to New Orleans in a duffel bag, why not use the same bag to place it in Ruth Paine's car when she picked up Marina. Why use a blanket instead and risk the rifle being seen by Ruth?

I think you're confusing me with John Corbett. I started an entire thread not long ago about the seeming disconnect between Oswald's behavior in Irving on 11-21 and his assassination of JFK: https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,4977.0.html.

I have also stated in just the last day or so that the paper bag strikes me as one of the weak links in the LN narrative. I have not "claimed" anything about the paper bag.

If Oswald constructed and used a paper bag, I assume he did so because it would make his excuse to Frazier that he was going to Irving to get curtain rods more plausible. One would think that a paper-wrapped package described as curtain rods would be likely to raise fewer questions than a duffle bag. I don't know what size duffle bags Oswald had, but that might have seemed like an odd and extreme way to carry curtain rods. It may also have had something to do with the way the disassembled rifle was packaged inside the blanket, which Michael Paine described as seeming as though it were tied together.

You seem to have shifted the focus away from what you were suggesting in the post to which I responded: What "framing" scenario explains Oswald's actions if the M-C rifle was not in fact his and if he didn't know it was in the building?
8
The Hitler comparison mystifies me.  Hitler had two primary political objectives.  Eliminating the Jews and obtaining land in Eastern Europe for colonization.  Hiter murdered millions of Jews.  Trump has a Jewish daughter, grandchildren, and is a strong advocate for Israel.  So much so that anti-Semite liberals who have much more in common with Hitler than Trump often criticize him for it.  Can you imagine Hitler being awarded the Israel Prize?  Such a profound ignorance of history under the guise of politics is pathetic and offensive:

"US President Donald Trump was awarded the Israel Prize, the country’s highest honor, at the annual Independence Day ceremony in Jerusalem on Wednesday.

At Wednesday’s ceremony, Kisch said Trump has been a true friend of the Jewish people and Israel for decades, standing uncompromisingly against manifestations of antisemitism.”

Trump was informed in December by Education Minister Yoav Kisch that he would be awarded the prize in the category of “special contribution to the Jewish people.”

Kisch signed an Israel Prize certificate in honor of the US president on Tuesday, declaring in a video sent to the press that he didn’t think there was “any other person who can mark such amazing achievements and a wonderful connection to the Jewish people except for Trump at this time.”

“His name will be remembered in the annals of our people,” he declared."

Dear Herr Smith.

You're right.

Mussolini is more apt.

My bad.

-- Tom
9
As in the lunchroom encounter with Baker, Oswald seems to have been in a weird dissociative state. With Baker, Whaley and Roberts, it would seem that feigned astonishment would have served his interests: "What? The President was shot? What happened? I was eating lunch and missed the whole thing." With Roberts and Whaley, he might even have asked questions that would have aided his escape: "Do they know who did it? Have they captured anyone?" Instead, literally nothing. But then in the theater and in custody, he snaps out of it and is the typical Oswald. Very odd, or at least it seems so to me.

The Baker encounter is really bizarre. Baker rushes into the building in search of a suspect. He encounters this zombie in the lunchroom who seems oblivious to everything that has happened and doesn't even ask "What's this all about?" when a gun is stuck in his stomach. Then Baker just blithely accepts Truly's word that the zombie works in the building, as though someone who works in the building couldn't still be a suspect. That might be plausible if the zombie were sitting at a table munching on a sandwich and reading a newspaper, but under the circumstances the whole thing seems bizarre to me.

This is a classic example of what I wrote in another thread. You're overthinking this. You are making assumptions about what you think Oswald's demeanor should have been had he shot JFK. Perhaps you are imagining how you would have acted had you been in Oswald's shoes. That approach only makes sense if you assume Oswald would think like you in the same circumstances. I am going to assume you are not a wannabe presidential assassin so I see no reason to believe Oswald demeanor would mimic yours under the same circumstances.

I see no reason to think Oswald would have been surprised by being confronted by a cop with his gun drawn given that he knew what he had just done. Acting innocent when we have done something wrong is a life skill most of us learn when we are very young. "I don't know who knocked over the flower pot". That skill has served me well over the years. I even pulled it on my boss once. And it worked. That was many years ago. I hope he's not reading this.
10
Anytime we ask ourselves what Oswald was thinking at any given time, we are speculating because he was the only one who knew and he took those secrets to his grave. If you believe in a hereafter and you go to the hot place, maybe you can ask him.

Obviously his decision to kill JFK was not done on the spur of the moment. That took planning and preparation. He made the bag for concealing the gun on Thursday at the latest. His traveling to Irving on a Thursday rather than his normal weekend trip is an indication he went there to fetch his rifle. Had the case gone to trial, those facts would have been used to establish premeditation.

His actions post assassination are another matter. We have no idea what he was thinking from that point on. He probably knew he would be the subject of a manhunt and his decision to get his gun might well have been to arm himself against a cop(s). The fact he killed the first cop who encountered him and tried to kill the second is a strong indication he didn't intend to be taken alive. The cops would have been legally justified in killing him in the theater but chose instead to act with restraint. Did he have a destination in mind? Who knows but with only $13 in his pocket, he wasn't likely to get far. Maybe he would have held up a bank or a liquor store to get more cash. Who knows but it's fun to speculate about, just as it is fun to speculate about his motive for killing JFK.

$13 in 1963 was quite a bit of money, the equivalent of $141 today.

As for your other comments, I recommend you read two articles:

Faulty Evidence: Problems with the Case Against Lee Harvey Oswald
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1R1CZaCZfLA5QFjTCHNINcKxTH4cBiPfw/view?usp=sharing

Extra Bullets and Missed Shots in Dealey Plaza
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WRwhDQ9HMydf5pICsHwgtkoNKw0YSO8T/view?usp=sharing
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