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2
As keen-eyed observers know, Royell's posts are now invisible to me because he has been consigned to the nutcase wing of the Ignore bin. However, since this silly thread is now back up near the top of the first page, I can only assume that HE HAS CONTACTED BART KAMP, as I DID and as I SUGGESTED AT LEAST FIVE TIMES THAT HE OR DAN O'MEARA DO and that he is now sharing with the forum the fruits of his dialogue with Bart. If I am mistaken, please allow me to live with my comforting assumptions and don't break the news that, no, Royell is all hot air and not man enough to contact Bart.
3
Perry Mason would have a field day with this case. The 1960's version of OJ Simpson. There are so many holes in this case no jury would convict Oswald.

There are so many holes in this case no jury would convict Oswald.

I agree there are all sorts of problems with the evidence, but I'm not so sure that Oswald wouldn't have been convicted.

Texas doesn't have a great track record and the innocence project has proven that many of the Wade convictions were unsafe.

A trial has it's own dynamic and there is no way of knowing what evidence would have been presented at court.

4
Perry Mason would have a field day with this case. The 1960's version of OJ Simpson. There are so many holes in this case no jury would convict Oswald.
5
I have zero sympathy or empathy for Oswald. I can think of no American who has ever done more harm to our country. I wish the SOB had been hit by a bus on 11/21/1963. Most people would have never heard of him and that would be just fine. As far as I'm concerned, he lived 3 days longer than he should have.
6
Ah, epistemology - my favorite topic! Religious beliefs cannot be proven in any ultimate ontologiacal sense because they by definition deal with matters beyond our reality. Ditto for atheistic beliefs - the nonexistence of a deity cannot be proven (and some 20% of atheists do hold beliefs that are amazingly "supernatural"). However, there is scientific and anecdotal evidence that bears on the religious questions, as well as reasonable inferences from that evidence, and philosophical reasoning. By diligent study and reflection, one can arrive at a high level of conviction. If someone has done the work and holds a 95% level of conviction in materialistic atheism, Catholicism, Islam or Scientology, I can only explain why I think differently but I can't screech "You're wrong, the truth is obvious!" We see again and again and again on religious forums and many others that a very large percentage of people simply cannot abide doubt or ambiguity. They cannot admit, to themselves or others, "Yes, I hold a high degree of confidence in my convictions, but they are just convictions and I have to acknowledge they could be partially or wholly wrong." Hence, most "discussions" sound a great deal like this forum: "What is the matter with you? Why can you not see how right I am? It's so obvious!".

It's a binary question. Either there is a Supreme Being or there is not. Billy Graham and Madalyn Murray O'Hair both died completely convinced that their answer to that question was the correct one even though one of them had to be wrong. One thing I can say for sure. Only one of them might have been rudely surprised to learn the answer.
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Atheists also play a game that seems to underlie your posts: "Hey, it's your religious claims that are extraordinary. You have the burden of satisfying me, and it's a damn high bar because extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Materialistic atheism is the default position for any intelligent, rational person." This is, of course, completely false. There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about the existence of a deity than the nonexistence of one. There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about the existence of a higher level of reality than the nonexistence of one. This is a game internet atheists play because they are as mindless about their beliefs as most religious believers and this game frees them from the obligation to justify their position. It's all just "Hey, you gotta convince me." No, I don't have to convince anyone but myself. If I were trying to convert an atheist, or vice versa, then indeed the burden would be on he who was trying to do the converting - and the standard still wouldn't be whether I had met some imaginary standard of extraordinariness, but simply whether I had convinced my listener.

This is why I don't argue about religion with people. There is simply no way of proving one POV or the other. That is not true of the JFKA. We do have evidence that tells us unambiguously who killed JFK. I saw without hesitation that in 62 years no one has produced credible evidence that person had any accomplices. I accept the principle that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. There is a theoretical possibility that Oswald had one or more accomplices in his crime. Given how thoroughly the JFKA has been researched and the passage of 62 years, I find the chances of any such evidence surfacing to be extremely remote.
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Ditto with the JFKA: There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about a logical and internally consistent conspircy theory than about the LN narrative.

All I can say is there is ample evidence of the latter and none for the former.
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Who killed JFK and why is a real-world question and thus differs from religious ones in that respect - but the epistemological principles are largely the same. The fact is, the WC was an agenda-driven inquiry that intentionally avoided some critical questions. [/quote

Such as?
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The HSCA was staffed largely by conspiracy enthusiasts, had an organized crime orientation, and bought into dubious acoustical evidence. Some 62 years of inquiry and debate has generated lots of new information. Just as with religion, the field is polluted by folks who can't think clearly. (A key epistemological principle is that for beliefs to have epistemic justification - not to be true, but just to be justified - the believer must have "cognitive faculties properly operating in an environment in which they were intended to operate." IMHO, an awful lot of people on a forum such as this would not make it past the "cognitive faculties" threshold.) The LN narrative is a compelling and evidence-based one, but it hasn't eliminated all doubt by any means. If someone is an LN fundamentalist or a CT fundamentalist who can't acknowledge the doubt and uncertainty inherent in his convictions, then the discussion is just like a religious one in which "doubt-free" Catholics, Baptists, Mormons and Jehovah Witnesses just screech at each other.

I say without hesitation that there is zero doubt that Oswald killed JFK and I will generously concede the theoretical possibility the had accomplices. I would put the chances of that being the case around 0.01%. The only question in my mind is how many zeros belong to the right of the decimal point.
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It's not my burden to present "just what evidence" makes me believe what I believe, and that exercise is futile with a fundamentalist anyway. My modicum of doubt about the LN narrative is based on a host of factors, some of which I've explained here. One is just that a Mafia hit in many ways just "makes more sense" and is inherently more believable to me than the LN narrative. Did Carlos Marcello actually confess to Jack Van Laningham? Did Santo Trafficante actually confess to Frank Ragano? I'm not saying absolutely yes to either, but the accounts are evidence that demands to be considered and evaluated. This is true of virtually every aspect of the JFKA. If someone has done his homework and decided the WC narrative is true, that's fine - but the mistake is thinking that one's convictions equate to ontological truth, that it is heresy even to challenge them, and that anyone who holds different convictions is ipso facto wrong.

In lieu of any evidence to the contrary, you give me no reason to reconsider my absolute belief that Oswald killed two men on 11/22/1963. As the late Carl Sagan once said, "I don't want to believe. I want to know.". I know Oswald was a double murderer. If you choose to base your beliefs on something other than evidence, that is your right. I choose not to go down that road and I wonder why anybody would.
7
I'm mystified by the CT compulsion to find somebody, anybody other than Oswald was behind the JFKA.

Religious dogma cannot be proven. The Oswald-did-it narrative was proven a long time ago. The fact that so many reject it is their shortcoming, not the narrative.

Since you are an attorney, I have to think you have a healthy respect for evidence. Just what evidence is there that makes you think somebody other than Oswald was involved in the crime?

Ah, epistemology - my favorite topic! Religious beliefs cannot be proven in any ultimate ontologiacal sense because they by definition deal with matters beyond our reality. Ditto for atheistic beliefs - the nonexistence of a deity cannot be proven (and some 20% of atheists do hold beliefs that are amazingly "supernatural"). However, there is scientific and anecdotal evidence that bears on the religious questions, as well as reasonable inferences from that evidence, and philosophical reasoning. By diligent study and reflection, one can arrive at a high level of conviction. If someone has done the work and holds a 95% level of conviction in materialistic atheism, Catholicism, Islam or Scientology, I can only explain why I think differently but I can't screech "You're wrong, the truth is obvious!" We see again and again and again on religious forums and many others that a very large percentage of people simply cannot abide doubt or ambiguity. They cannot admit, to themselves or others, "Yes, I hold a high degree of confidence in my convictions, but they are just convictions and I have to acknowledge they could be partially or wholly wrong." Hence, most "discussions" sound a great deal like this forum: "What is the matter with you? Why can you not see how right I am? It's so obvious!"

Atheists also play a game that seems to underlie your posts: "Hey, it's your religious claims that are extraordinary. You have the burden of satisfying me, and it's a damn high bar because extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Materialistic atheism is the default position for any intelligent, rational person." This is, of course, completely false. There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about the existence of a deity than the nonexistence of one. There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about the existence of a higher level of reality than the nonexistence of one. This is a game internet atheists play because they are as mindless about their beliefs as most religious believers and this game frees them from the obligation to justify their position. It's all just "Hey, you gotta convince me." No, I don't have to convince anyone but myself. If I were trying to convert an atheist, or vice versa, then indeed the burden would be on he who was trying to do the converting - and the standard still wouldn't be whether I had met some imaginary standard of extraordinariness, but simply whether I had convinced my listener.

Ditto with the JFKA: There is nothing inherently more extraordinary about a logical and internally consistent conspircy theory than about the LN narrative.

Who killed JFK and why is a real-world question and thus differs from religious ones in that respect - but the epistemological principles are largely the same. The fact is, the WC was an agenda-driven inquiry that intentionally avoided some critical questions. The HSCA was staffed largely by conspiracy enthusiasts, had an organized crime orientation, and bought into dubious acoustical evidence. Some 62 years of inquiry and debate has generated lots of new information. Just as with religion, the field is polluted by folks who can't think clearly. (A key epistemological principle is that for beliefs to have epistemic justification - not to be true, but just to be justified - the believer must have "cognitive faculties properly operating in an environment in which they were intended to operate." IMHO, an awful lot of people on a forum such as this would not make it past the "cognitive faculties" threshold.) The LN narrative is a compelling and evidence-based one, but it hasn't eliminated all doubt by any means. If someone is an LN fundamentalist or a CT fundamentalist who can't acknowledge the doubt and uncertainty inherent in his convictions, then the discussion is just like a religious one in which "doubt-free" Catholics, Baptists, Mormons and Jehovah Witnesses just screech at each other.

It's not my burden to present "just what evidence" makes me believe what I believe, and that exercise is futile with a fundamentalist anyway. My modicum of doubt about the LN narrative is based on a host of factors, some of which I've explained here. One is just that a Mafia hit in many ways just "makes more sense" and is inherently more believable to me than the LN narrative. Did Carlos Marcello actually confess to Jack Van Laningham? Did Santo Trafficante actually confess to Frank Ragano? I'm not saying absolutely yes to either, but the accounts are evidence that demands to be considered and evaluated. This is true of virtually every aspect of the JFKA. If someone has done his homework and decided the WC narrative is true, that's fine - but the mistake is thinking that one's convictions equate to ontological truth, that it is heresy even to challenge them, and that anyone who holds different convictions is ipso facto wrong.
8
Some of us think the truth is worth defending, even if our reach doesn't extend beyond the online forums. For decades, before online discussion groups became a reality, the CTs had the field to themselves. The two main avenues for one to express their opinions were writing books and appearing on  electronic media programs. Few LNs were writing books defending the WC because there was no money in it and few appeared on radio or TV programs because there were no ratings in it. That allowed conspiracy theories to flourish like unattended weeds. With the popularization of the internet, some semblance of balance was restored to the discourse. The CTs were still in the majority, but the LN narrative was allowed to breathe. I don't know if it is reflective of public opinion but my very unscientific observation is the LNs make up a significantly higher percentage of the participants on the various forums than we did even 10 years ago. Has progress been made in shaping public opinion. I don't know. I haven't seen a recent poll on the subject but I would be there are still 60-65% who believe in conspiracy of some sort. I think if people were completely honest about it, a majority would say they don't give a rat's ass one way or another.

Some of us think the truth is worth defending

There is nothing wrong with defending the truth, but that's not what you are doing. You defend what you believe is the truth and you can't understand that other people might not agree with you or even ask critical questions.

I think if people were completely honest about it, a majority would say they don't give a rat's ass one way or another.

I'm one of those. I couldn't care less if Oswald did it or not. The guy has been dead for decades, so what would be the purpose of defending him?

My only interest in this case is simply to find out if the evidence that was used to declare Oswald guilty actually holds up under scrutiny. But I can't say that to a die hard LN because he will nevertheless claim that I'm trying to defend Oswald.
9
Some of us think the truth is worth defending, even if our reach doesn't extend beyond the online forums. For decades, before online discussion groups became a reality, the CTs had the field to themselves. The two main avenues for one to express their opinions were writing books and appearing on  electronic media programs. Few LNs were writing books defending the WC because there was no money in it and few appeared on radio or TV programs because there were no ratings in it. That allowed conspiracy theories to flourish like unattended weeds. With the popularization of the internet, some semblance of balance was restored to the discourse. The CTs were still in the majority, but the LN narrative was allowed to breathe. I don't know if it is reflective of public opinion but my very unscientific observation is the LNs make up a significantly higher percentage of the participants on the various forums than we did even 10 years ago. Has progress been made in shaping public opinion. I don't know. I haven't seen a recent poll on the subject but I would be there are still 60-65% who believe in conspiracy of some sort. I think if people were completely honest about it, a majority would say they don't give a rat's ass one way or another.

    Don't know what TV you have been watching. CBS, NBC, ABC have always put out Pro LN Specials. Cronkite, Huntley/Brinkley, Jennings, ALL of them were pushing this LN  BS:. That was their job and they knew it.  Even the relatively recent stuff we see on Smithsonian, Nat Geo, History Channel is Pro LN. Nat Geo gave Max Holland the platform to push his bullet dinging off the traffic signal support beam without a shred of evidence. The LN Tripe has been supported by the Fake News'ers since Day 1. If these guys were "on the square", they would release their Original Assassination Films. They refuse to do this. Their, "in the bag". And they have been dating back to WW 2. During WW 2, that news "stuff" that was shown in Movie Theaters along with the movies themselves was pure propaganda.
10
People, people, people - thank you, I guess, but I KNOW all the LN responses. I can (and have) regurgitate them myself. As stated, I believe there is a high likelihood the LN version of the Tippit murder is correct. But noooooo, this is insufficient for a hardcore LN zealot. There is a mysterious compulsion to keep pushing the LN narrative as though there were some crowd of lurker historians out there who might be swayed unless all comments that don't toe the LN party line are immediately shut down.

Much the same thing is encountered on religion forums, which is why I have equated the LN narrative to some quasi-religious gospel. On those forums, there is a species of believer who keeps parroting something along the lines of "It's all in the Bible, just read the Bible" no matter how theologically deep the discussion might be. On those forums, I attribute such responses to fear - fear that examining one's faith might shake it. That surely can't be what's going on here ... can it?

People, people, people - thank you, I guess, but I KNOW all the LN responses. I can (and have) regurgitate them myself. As stated, I believe there is a high likelihood the LN version of the Tippit murder is correct. But noooooo, this is insufficient for a hardcore LN zealot. There is a mysterious compulsion to keep pushing the LN narrative as though there were some crowd of lurker historians out there who might be swayed unless all comments that don't toe the LN party line are immediately shut down.

Exactly right. In my mind the apparent fear of a die hard LN is that he gets involved in a conversation that could force him to reconsider his opinion about an aspect of the case, simply because he doesn't want to do that.


I'm mystified by the CT compulsion to find somebody, anybody other than Oswald was behind the JFKA.

Religious dogma cannot be proven. The Oswald-did-it narrative was proven a long time ago. The fact that so many reject it is their shortcoming, not the narrative.

Since you are an attorney, I have to think you have a healthy respect for evidence. Just what evidence is there that makes you think somebody other than Oswald was involved in the crime?

I'm mystified by the CT compulsion to find somebody, anybody other than Oswald was behind the JFKA.

This says it all. It's absolute paranoia. John is basically saying that if you don't share his belief that you must be an Oswald defender who desperately wants to exonerate him.

Religious dogma cannot be proven. The Oswald-did-it narrative was proven a long time ago. The fact that so many reject it is their shortcoming, not the narrative.

And here he is saying; no matter what you say, I am and will always be right. My belief that Oswald did it is supreme and if you disagree (or even question it) you are committing blasphemy.

The hilarious part is of course that John doesn't understand that his "Oswald did it" belief is actually also similar to religious dogma.

Just what evidence is there that makes you think somebody other than Oswald was involved in the crime?

And here is the classic LN claim that they are right unless you can prove them wrong, which of course is impossible as they will never accept any evidence you present as valid.

This "guilty unless proven innocent" nonsense is the basis for the entire LN position.


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