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1
Are you being deliberately obtuse??

The GIF I just showed you, showed multiple flowers moving independently!



Here's ALL the frames plus a few more in your much ballyhooed 29:30 timeframe and as can be seen, you're imagining a twisted face from shadows and open spaces. Somewhere in the middle an obvious space between two flowers at the top becomes your right eyebrow and the left eyebrow appears and disappears because it's the shadow between two moving flowers. DOH!



JohnM

                                                               JOHN - Thanks for posting 29:30

              So you're claiming that what we are actually seeing in 29:30 is merely "shadows"? This is what we do actually see: (1) A LARGE SOLID BLACK DOT at the end of Lamb Chop's snout, (2) A THIN BLACK CIRCLE around Lamb Chop's Entire snout preceding the LARGE SOLID BLACK DOT, (3) BLACK EYES, and, (4) The FLOPPY EAR. "Shadows"? What we see are irrefutable Details! These are irrefutable Facts!
 
              You need to remember that there were numerous variations of Lamb Chop. There was everything from a small Lamb Chop "hand puppet", to a full body Lamb Chop "Doll". And the face of Lamb Chop also changed with these numerous Lamb Chop variations. These facial variations included the distinctive Lamb Chop "Snout" with its' THIN BLACK CIRCLE and Large BLACK DOT that we do see in 29:30.  Jean Hill said she saw a small dog in the backseat of the JFK Limo. What she actually saw was "Lamb Chop".  The Lamb Chop facial details that we see in 29:30 conclusively Proves this.
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LP--

Verily I read the Caro books too...I am even a grad of the LBJ School of Public Affairs in Austin. Some of the Johnson Administration people made presentations while I was there, including Dean Rusk.

I doubt LBJ was involved the JFKA. I am less sure of what happened to a guy named Marshall.

The 1961 death of U.S. Department of Agriculture official Henry Marshall was initially ruled a suicide but later, in 1985, changed to homicide, following investigations linking it to Texas swindler Billie Sol Estes and claims that then-Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson (LBJ) ordered the killing to cover up fraud.

It sure looks like Marshall was murdered, and in the Texas of 1961, somehow that obvious fact was smoothed over.

Who knows?

I mean, aside from Robert Morrow.
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Not sure I follow your reasoning on several points.

The TSBD was a perfect location, right by the hairpin turn onto Elm.

TSBD6 was not a floor with offices, but only boxes of books. Nobody went there except to place or retrieve books. By luck, the JFK motorcade passed the TSBD during the lunch hour. Again, that was luck, but made for an excellent sniper's secluded nest. The TSBD6 was deserted. Perhaps, if someone had been there, LHO would have gone up to TSBD7.

I don't know every building in Dallas, but the TSBD was about good as one could hope. 

LHO was able to secret a rifle into the TSBD without notice. That alone made the TSBD a good choice. LHO, a lithe 24, and who had mustered through Marine boot camp, knew of the back stairs out of the TSBD, that would provide a quick exit. He proved the worth of that exit route.

My suspected second gunsel indeed may have fired from another location behind the limo, such as Dal-Tex building. I don't know.

Of course, the JFKA was risky operation. The use of a diversion on the GK likely increased odds of escape.

Still, again, you are assuming the perps think as you do.

For example, the perps of the 1954 Capitol shooting cared more about the act, than escaping.

The shooting of the U.S. Capitol occurred on March 1, 1954, when four Puerto Rican nationalists—Lolita Lebrón, Rafael Cancel Miranda, Andres Figueroa Cordero, and Irvin Flores Rodríguez—fired approximately 30 shots from the House visitors' gallery to protest U.S. rule, wounding five congressmen. All assailants were captured, convicted, and imprisoned, later having their sentences commuted by President Jimmy Carter in 1978 and 1979.

In 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists, Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola, attempted to force their way into the Blair House in Washington, D.C., where Truman was staying during renovations of the White House.

In both above cases, there was a conspiracy of assassins, who wanted to perp the act more than they wanted to escape. There was Latin American leftist politics being played out. There were zealots and extremists all over Cuba and Latin America during the 1950s-60s. Assassinations were common.

(AI: Political assassinations in Latin America during the 1950s and 1960s were frequent, reflecting intense Cold War tensions, the prevalence of military dictatorships, and rising revolutionary movements. These killings often aimed to eliminate political opposition, silence critics of entrenched regimes, or, in the case of CIA-backed initiatives, prevent the spread of communism.)

A couple hot-head G2'ers, seeking revenge for JFK's many assassination attempts on Castro, may have also wanted to perp the act more than they wanted to escape.

The G2'ers may have been surprised they were able to simply drive away from Dallas, and then to read in the papers that LHO was a LN.

You say there were flaws in the JFKA CT. Of course, there were---it was a simple, low-level op. But it worked, so it wasn't that flawed.

---30---

I have not done much plinking, and that long ago. I did fire a 30.06 and I saw why everyone seemed to like them. I don't know why you are so down on Winchesters. Maybe you had a lesser sample.

AI: Model 70 (Bolt-Action): Often called "The Rifleman's Rifle," the Model 70 is praised for its accuracy, classic Mauser-style controlled-feed action, and three-position safety. It is considered a top-tier hunting rifle.Model 94 (Lever-Action): Iconic for deer hunting, the Model 94 is known for being lightweight, compact, and reliable in rugged conditions.
The Winchester is also highly regarded.

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LBJ is, of course, at the very pinnacle of likely conspiracy participants.

Cui bono? (“Who benefitted?”) is the standard criminal inquiry when looking for suspects.

Well, going from a vastly underused and ridiculed VP who was likely to be dropped from the 1964 ticket, was facing Congressional investigation and likely to be removed from office to POTUS in the blink of an eye has to be as “cui bono” as it gets.

HOWEVER, I recently finished all four of acclaimed historian Robert Caro’s massive and highly acclaimed books on LBJ, which are regarded as among the very best works of their kind. They are collectively thousands of pages – and the last one only takes us up to a few months after the JFKA as we await Caro’s final volume that he hopes to publish in his lifetime (he’s 90).

It was refreshing to read real history by a real historian instead of JFKA blather. Caro is aware of all the conspiratorial theorizing that swirls around LBJ but says he found nothing in his exhaustive research to suggest LBJ was actually involved. (For a counterpoint, and a glimpse of true conspiratorial insanity, search “Robert Morrow” at the Ed Forum and you’ll see what non-history by a foaming-at-the-mouth LBJ crank looks like.) Caro is no LBJ worshipper, so that charge can't be laid at his feet.

I lived through LBJ's Presidency but was astounded at who he really was. Yes, he was a roughhewn character who could be rude, crude, sneaky and manipulative, but he was a political genius of the first magnitude and had a preternatural talent for motivating those around him to work as unbelievably hard as he did. “Uncle Cornpone,” as he was derisively referred to by the Kennedy crowd, was actually far more politically sophisticated and savvy than all of them put together. Immediately after the JFKA, he pledged to push through JFK’s civil rights legislation that was then hopelessly bogged down. Civil rights leaders who met with him came away awed (and even crying), saying JFK and RFK were “children” in comparison to LBJ. Again and again, dating back to his days at a Podunk college in the Texas hill country, what he achieved and how he did it is difficult to believe. Simply a genius in more ways than one.

He had said repeatedly since early childhood, in circumstances where it seemed ridiculous at the time, that he would one day be President. He wasn’t kidding. He thought it was his destiny, and it was his obsession.

Just one example: He was also obsessed with becoming wealthy. Early in his Congressional career - he was in his 20s - a Texas multi-millionaire who enjoyed being a benefactor offered him a sweetheat deal on an oil operation that would have made him wealthy overnight. LBJ thought about it but decided he couldn't risk being associated with the oil industry. The benefactor was flabbergasted. No one in Texas would have cared about an association with the oil industry, even if LBJ decided to run for Governor or the Senate. He then realized that this impoverished twentysomething newbie Congressman wasn't thinking in those terms. He was thinking about the Presidency.

Everyone – and I mean everyone – urged him not to accept the Vice Presidency. He was “Master of the Senate” (the title of Caro’s third book), already fantastically more powerful than any VP could ever be. It made no sense to anyone but LBJ. He made no bones about why he was accepting the position. He expected to die early – all the Johnson men did – and this was likely his last shot at the Presidency.

He told people why he was accepting the position. On the night of JFK's inauguration, he told Clare Booth Luce. He had previously told other trusted friends and journalists. I may not have the quote exactly right, but it was very close to this: “I’m a gamblin’ man, darlin’, and this is the only chance I got. One in six Presidents dies in office. I’ve done the research.” And he actually had done the research.

As it turned out, of course, his gamble paid off. His Presidency turned into a Shakespearean tragedy as Vietnam escalated from something like 15,000 American advisers to more than 500,000 troops - but he had achieved the Presidency as he had always dreamed.

Suspicious? Sure. But on the other hand, who would have spoken this brazenly before JFK's inauguration and then actually have masterminded or even participated in the JFKA? Anyone involved, up to and including LBJ, would have been risking certain execution. LBJ was very aware of his place in history – he has a far larger place than I had realized – and there is no way in my opinion (or Caro’s, I surmise) that he would’ve risked throwing it (and the vast wealth he had achieved) all away. Just an aside, but there was far more to Ladybird than I had ever realized - and I don't believe LBJ would have done that to her, either.

He was a dutiful VP, remaining loyal through all the Uncle Cornpone stuff and the demeaning sideline role to which he was relegated. He utterly despised RFK (the feeling was mutual) but not so much JFK.

I have no doubt he regarded the JFKA as an unbelievable stroke of luck and wasn’t shedding any tears. However, the more I learn the less likely I think it is that he had any role in the JFKA or any preknowledge of it. Robet Morrow, as you will see if you care to do so, vehemently disagrees.

Here's wacky Robert, for whom a tinfoil hat simply isn't sufficient:



See https://www.wsj.com/articles/front-runner-for-texas-school-board-wants-to-teach-pole-dancing-conspiracy-theories-11583526093 ("AUSTIN, Texas—He wears a jester hat, frequently tweets photos of women’s breasts and advocates for teaching in schools that Lyndon Johnson assassinated John F. Kennedy.").
5
Yes, I think you are correct… It takes a little bit of investigative curiosity even to look for these things…

And way too much time on your hands.
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LP--

You make good points.

OTOH, the Kennedy trip to Dallas was known by the public two months in advance. The actual route was published locally on Nov. 19.

How much planning does it take to say, "We will hole up in the TSBD6 and fire on JFK after he passes. The diversion will fire from the GK area about the same time."

Why would we hole up in the TSBD6? That is a fantastically risky location from every angle, before and after the actual shooting. Even if Oswald was one of our gunman, why was he not on the roof of the Dal-Tex or County Records building? It was the lunch hour - he could have gone anywhere. A high-caliber rifle not traceable to him could have been waiting. As is so often the case, this seems to me like ad hoc reasoning because we are stuck with the inconvenient fact that Oswald did his shooting from TSBD6.

If I can see the screaming flaws in this scenario, how is it possible the KGB and/or G2 couldn't see them?

I haven't followed the "diversion" argument, but what does that add? With or without a diversion, it was a certainty lots of people were going to realize the shots had come from TSBD6 and, moreover, Oswald chances of simply walking out of the building had to be miniscule at best.

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It largely involved a huge stroke of luck (LHO in the TSBD), and then pointing guns and shooting.

Even in the LN scenario, I think it involved FANTASTIC strokes of luck, from Oswald managing to get the rifle out of the Paine garage and into the TSDB ... to finding himself alone on the sixth floor ... to actually accomplishing his objective ... to walking out of the building. Without the Tippit encounter, he might still be living in Havana (or maybe Boise) today. This to me cuts against a conspiracy - why would the KGB or G2 trust to all these fantastic strokes of luck, especially with an erratic character like Oswald, when the objective could have been achieved much more easily and cleanly without Oswald at all?

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BTW, there is the "Sawyer memo": DPD Inspector Sawyer reported one witness told him that he (the witness) saw a man running from the TSBD carrying a Winchester, in the immediate aftermath of the JFKA.

That was Chuck Connors, who was coincidentally filming an episode of "Rifleman."  :D Take it from me, a lever-action 30-30 Winchester is not an assassination weapon. I think I described my experience of stupidly sitting on my front porch on my father-in-law's ranch and firing both a 30-06 and a 30-30 Winchester at an old truck frame perhaps 20 yards away. The 30-06 pierced the frame and left a hole as neat as a drill. The 30-30 ricocheted off and thudded against the side of the house about 5 feet to the right of my silly head.

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Gus Russo reported LHO was friendly with G2. There's your connection. LHO was seen by some in G2 company in MC and NO.


Much as I'm intrigued by Russo's work, he needs to provide something a lot more evidential than "Take it from me." He seems to have pretty much disappeared from the scene, and I could find no contact information. As stated above, I'm troubled by the fact that G2 would be using someone like Oswald whose background and highly public sympathies would point directly to Castro. Logically, wouldn't they use a gunman who would point away from them if caught, and wouldn't they take a lot more precautions than turning him loose in TSBD6 and leaving him to fend for himself?

I'm really beginning to think I need to come out of retirement and get into planning political assassinations. I seem to be way better at it than all the hypothesized conspirators in the JFKA!
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It fascinates me that one angry guy could create such a ripple in history and culture.  Oswald could have made a lot of choices that day including to stand on the street as a spectator.  Instead he decided to commit this terrible act.  The assassination is just one consequence.  I do believe that the JFK assassination let a genie out of the bottle in the US that emboldened many terrible acts.  School shootings, mass shootings, and other assassinations were largely unknown before 11.22.63.  Every angry loon takes inspiration from Oswald whether they know that or not.  That's the real legacy.

It's fascinating to ponder what might have been if not for the random circumstances that brought JFK into easy rifle range of Oswald. My guess is Oswald would have find some other prominent person to kill and it wouldn't have had near the impact assassinating the POTUS did. It's anybody's guess how Vietnam would have played out. I could be wrong but I don't think JFK would have escalated it to the degree LBJ did. JFK probably would have been re-elected in 1964. I think the seeds of the civil rights unrest had already been planted and we would have had the riots we did in the second half of the decade. Beyond that, it's impossible to what might have happened. Looking at current events, I don't think Charlie Kirk would have been assassinated because I don't think there would have been a Charlie Kirk or a Tyler Robinson. I don't think any of the school shooters going back to Columbine would have ever come into existence. Would there have been other school shooters in other places. Who knows. There would have been a different reality that would completely change all events both large and small.
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If you really think you've found some game changing evidence of a conspiracy, why are you wasting your time posting it here for a few dozen people to read. Why don't you take what you've discovered to the networks, the cable news channels, and the major newspapers. Surely at least one of them will be interested in such a revelation. You could go down in history as the guy who solved the JFKA.

RT, Newsmax, OANN, Fox News, and Pravda!
9
For the record, there was never a "time Oswald was supposed to be transferred".

Curry simply told the world's press that as long as they were present the next morning by 10 AM, they wouldn't miss anything.  That is not to say the transfer was scheduled for a particular time, but instead it was "scheduled" for ANY time after 10 AM.

Anyone planning to kill Oswald would take that to mean he needed to be in the garage by 10 AM if he wanted to kill Oswald. Otherwise, he could miss his chance, Oswald would have been transferred to the county jail, stood trial, been convicted, sentenced to death, been spared by SCOTUS in 1972 and he might still be doing time in the Texas state penitentiary.
10
Why did it have to be guys. Why couldn't it have just been on guy who got lucky. Why did he need G2-KGB help?
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