Recent Posts

Recent Posts

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21
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.
22
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.


23
There are legitimate puzzles that theoretically could lead to different conclusions than the standard LN narrative.

1. Oswald for some reason chose to walk down a residential sidewalk in full view. That is a legitimate puzzle.
2. The broadcast description of the suspect would probably have fit tens of thousands of men in Dallas. A guy walking down the sidewalk in Oak Cliff would scarcely be an obvious suspect.
3. Tippit scarcely had a reputation as the sharpest, most diligent officer on the force.
4. Some reported behavior of Tippit that morning was distinctly odd; the reports may not all be accurate, but they do describe distinctly odd behavior.
5. Oswald up to the point of the Tippit encounter had been an amazingly cool character; why would he have done anything to call attention to himself?
6. If Oswald did nothing to call attention to himself, why did Tippit pull over?
7. If Tippit had serious concerns about Oswald, why did he exit his car unprepared for a confrontation?
8. And, of course, why did our cool cucumber almost immediately take the one action, in full view of numerous witnesses, that would guarantee he would not have a smooth escape from Dallas and would immediately and forever be on the run?
9. And why were the scene of the crime and the witness accounts such a jumbled mess that raises so many questions?

Your posts all read as though asking "Why?" (and other questions) is somehow illegitimate. "Just follow the most damning evidence" and forget the rest. How many people in this country have been wrongly convicted and even wrongly executed? Often they are exonerated because someone took a fresh look at the evidence or something new came to light. There is nothing sacred about the LN narrative.

I think there is a high likelihood that Oswald shot Tippit and fled to the Texas Theater. I don't believe the high likelihood is an absolute certainty.

I have seen some pretty convincing criticisms of the work of Mr. Tippit Murder, Dale Myers (and yes, I have read With Malice twice and followed his blog). He is as arrogant and close-minded as any CTer. Folks like Greg Doudna and Tom Gram, neither of whom I believe to be stupid or insane, amaze me by accepting accounts of the Tippit murder that are completely at odds with the LN narrative and that completely exonerate Oswald. Probably they are wrong, but I wouldn't bet my house they are 100% wrong.

Of course, the JFKA is a whodunnit - probably the ultimate real-world whodunnit. At this point either questioning the LN narrative or defending it can be little more than a hobby. Some peoples' version of the hobby is asking the questions that an investigator would ask and seeing where they lead. Your version of the hobby is telling them that asking such questions is illegitimate.

There are legitimate puzzles that theoretically could lead to different conclusions than the standard LN narrative.

Agreed.

This is also why the die hard LNs, who think they "know" everything about Oswald and the case and also "know" that they are always right, do not want critical questions being asked, as most of the time they can't or don't want to answer them. They prefer a superficial look at the evidence, so that they can ignore discrepancies, make up their own narrative and jump to flawed conclusions.

All those complaints about people "overthinking" the case tell us all we need to know. They are basically saying that their superficial approach to the evidence is enough for them to reach conclusions and they simply do not want anybody to look any further than they have looked. They are constantly going on about the need to look at the evidence as a whole, but forget or ignore that evidence needs to be authenticated and actually support their conclusions. They completely ignore that not everything that is presented as evidence is proof of something. In criminal cases it frequently happens that first impressions are subsequently proven incorrect by a closer examination of the evidence. Things are not always as they appear to be, but you can't tell that to a die hard LN because he will dismiss it and stick to his first impression conclusions. And in order to fill the gaps in the evidence they will add assumptions to speculation and misrepresent the facts where they need to.

24
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?

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?
25
When the Beatles would write songs, they would often plug in nonsense lyrics to be fixed later. This occurred with "Hey, Jude." When Paul demonstrated the song and came to the lyric "The movement you need is on your shoulder" he said "Don't worry, I'll fix that later." John replied "No, it's perfect, leave it." I have no idea what a shodunnit would be, but it's somehow perfect. "Oswald sho' dunnit, baby, of that I'm sure."

Your Perry Mason example is ironic. I laugh at the many, many episodes which are so complex that they end with Perry, Della and Drake sitting around a restaurant table. The plot has been almost impossible to follow, and the director knows it, so Della launches into her little summation for the benefit of the viewers: "And so, Perry, then Shirley was actually Ted wearing a latex mask ... and the dog in fact belonged to Bob ... and it all tied back into that confrontation between Shirley and Babs when they were on summer vaction in Istanbul back in college ... right?" Perry: "That's right, Della." Roll the credits.

There are two aspects to the JFKA: (1) Was Oswald the lone gunman in Dealey Plaza? and (2) Were Oswald and Dealey Plaza the whole story? It's almost absurd to suggest there is no whodunnit aspect to either of these. The WC, the HSCA, the Church Committee, the ARRB, the current legislative movement ... the vast number of technical medical, ballistic and forensic articles ... the 1000 or so books, ranging from the absurd to the definitely not absurd ... the concerted effort to keep the lid on the LN narrative ... yada yada yada - it all flies in the face of the JFKA being as cut-and-dried as you for some reason insist is the case.

As I've stated more than once, those who are clearly obsessed with the JFKA, but for no other reason than to keep hammering and hammering and hammering the LN narrative as though it were their religion and needed to be defended against any and all infidels, are a bigger mystery to me than any Harvey and Lee cultist.

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.
26
Of course I remember, Pinko.
This is the lie...sorry, fabrication... I'm talking about, so obviously I remember.
I've argued all along that Shelley immediately ran from the steps and met Gloria coming the other way. He states this in his affidavit. (People such as yourself have to ignore the fact that, during his WC testimony, Shelley completely changes his story, stating that he stayed on the steps for at least 3 minutes before Gloria ran up).
The 'fabrication' I have to keep calling you out on is the part where Shelley calls Lovelady to join him. You've invented that. It's your fabrication. It is not based on any testimonial evidence whatsoever. It's a lie you have to tell because you can't find any other way of getting Lovelady and Shelley on to the Elm Street Ext. within 25 seconds.
You have swallowed down Kamp's 'Lovelady' image without question even though it has been demonstrated that this image is dubious, to say the least, and now it's been pointed out that it's physically impossible for Shelley and Lovelady to do what they attested to in their WC testimonies AND be on Elm St within 25 seconds, you've had to invent this lie. If it's any comfort, Lance "I think I've Had An Accident" Payette did exactly the same thing.

On the other hand, my own identification of Lovelady in Darnell does not require me to lie my way through an explanation and makes perfect sense with the known timings:



   Bump regarding Lovelady/Shelley being on the TSBD as Officer Baker ran toward the TSBD.
   The "2 GUYS" alongside the "getaway" car on the Couch Film are NOT Lovelady and Shelley.
27
Royell steered me to a Couch clip which is the best quality I've come across:



I cropped and blew up the two men:



There is a hint of something on the shirt in this image that may be a pattern but I wouldn't have an idea how to get it to stand out.
Maybe someone who knows what they're doing can have a go.

   The timestamp for the above image is 20 seconds after the Kill Shot. The "2 Guys" we see alongside the "getaway" Car are NOT Lovelady and Shelley. The cavalierly awarded Lovelady/Shelley ID's have stood for decades. Those ID's are WRONG! I have conclusively proven we are Not seeing Lovelady and Shelley based on images showing both of them being on the TSBD Steps as Officer Baker runs toward the TSBD. Where did these "2 Guys" on the above image come from in order to arrive at this position next to the "getaway" car only 20 seconds after the Kill Shot? These "2 Guys" simply got out of the "getaway" car. They are now moving toward the "Wide Open" Huge Gates and the railroad yard. They are distancing themselves from their NOW Abandoned "Getaway" Car. This car would be in this same position for 3+ Hrs minimum.
28
Is there a way to correct a typo in the Subject line?

When the Beatles would write songs, they would often plug in nonsense lyrics to be fixed later. This occurred with "Hey, Jude." When Paul demonstrated the song and came to the lyric "The movement you need is on your shoulder" he said "Don't worry, I'll fix that later." John replied "No, it's perfect, leave it." I have no idea what a shodunnit would be, but it's somehow perfect. "Oswald sho' dunnit, baby, of that I'm sure."

Your Perry Mason example is ironic. I laugh at the many, many episodes which are so complex that they end with Perry, Della and Drake sitting around a restaurant table. The plot has been almost impossible to follow, and the director knows it, so Della launches into her little summation for the benefit of the viewers: "And so, Perry, then Shirley was actually Ted wearing a latex mask ... and the dog in fact belonged to Bob ... and it all tied back into that confrontation between Shirley and Babs when they were on summer vaction in Istanbul back in college ... right?" Perry: "That's right, Della." Roll the credits.

There are two aspects to the JFKA: (1) Was Oswald the lone gunman in Dealey Plaza? and (2) Were Oswald and Dealey Plaza the whole story? It's almost absurd to suggest there is no whodunnit aspect to either of these. The WC, the HSCA, the Church Committee, the ARRB, the current legislative movement ... the vast number of technical medical, ballistic and forensic articles ... the 1000 or so books, ranging from the absurd to the definitely not absurd ... the concerted effort to keep the lid on the LN narrative ... yada yada yada - it all flies in the face of the JFKA being as cut-and-dried as you for some reason insist is the case.

As I've stated more than once, those who are clearly obsessed with the JFKA, but for no other reason than to keep hammering and hammering and hammering the LN narrative as though it were their religion and needed to be defended against any and all infidels, are a bigger mystery to me than any Harvey and Lee cultist.
29
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?
30
I remarked in another thread that if the JFKA was a whodunnit, it was the worst whodunnit ever written. The murderer was revealed at the bottom of page one. By the time I got home from school, they already had him in custody.

I think those who think it is a whodunnit view the JFKA like a Perry Mason episode. The standard formula was for a prime suspect to be identified early in the episode. That person would become Perry's client. Perry and his team would investigate the crime. The case would go to trial and against the efforts of Hamilton Burger, Perry would gradually unravel the case and typically would put the real killer on the stand and coerce a confession from him (or her).

CTs like to treat Oswald as one of Perry Mason's clients. Sure, it looks like he was the perp but they just know that if they keep working at it, they will prove the prime suspect didn't do it after all. I can't wait to find out who they are going to get to confess on the witness stand, although that will likely require a seance.
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