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JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / Re: The Tippit Shooting At 1:15-1:16, FACT
« Last post by Martin Weidmann on Yesterday at 10:35:57 PM »I basically agree with this. The Tippit murder has really never interested me beyond the level of the broad questions: Where was Oswald going? Why did Tippit stop? Why did Oswald shoot him? All of the "problematical minutiae" has just never really interested me. The notion that this was some conspiratorial frame-up of Oswald just strikes me as so fantastically improbable that I've really never got past the threshold question, "What sense would that have made?" I read a great quote from a presentation that Paul Hoch gave in 1993: "We [CTers] have identified twelve of the three gunmen." I think this is the problem with much conspiracy thinking - there is just "too much" to be plausible. Hence my thread about focusing on plausibility, quality rather than quantity.
When you are interested in the JFK assassination, you can not ignore the Tippit murder. I have questions similar to yours and a few more of my own; how does it make sense that an alleged killer on the run finds himself walking down a go nowhere street like 10th street?
The notion that this was some conspiratorial frame-up of Oswald just strikes me as so fantastically improbable that I've really never got past the threshold question, "What sense would that have made?"
Ever considered that part of the conspiracy to have people dismiss it as "fantastically improbable"? The mere fact that it doesn't make sense to you, doesn't mean that it doesn't make sense in a bigger scheme of things?
Do you know about Operation Mincemeat? To most people it wouldn't make sense to drop a dead body dressed up as an English officer in the Mediterranean with a fake letter about an invasion in Greece that went against all logic, but it convinced the Germans nevertheless. So it worked! If you limit you willingness to consider possibilities because you find something improbable you might just selling yourself short. In this crazy world there are far more things possible than anybody can or wants to comprehend.
Athur Conan Doyle had Sherlock Holmes say ""When you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." To dismiss a possibility because you find in improbable will never get you to the truth!
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