Recent Posts

Recent Posts

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21
Where is the car in proximity to the window in the 140s?
How do you know a shot in the 140s isn't a firecracker?

The window is only open about 13in - at only about a foot from the floor and covered in boxes.
Did he point the gun straight down?  how could he see? how could that be missed? ...and 120s is just ridiculous 

Also, I don't buy a shaky camera at the sound of shots. It may be actual but not exclusive.
If Sitzman was holding on to him, how do you know any of her movements would not effect the camera?

22
Given the fact that you believe, correctly, that Oswald fired all three shots and killed JFK, why do you think Elsie Dorman, standing 35 feet away from Oswald's ear-splitting Carcano, jiggled her camera so violently at "Z-124" that she inadvertently turned it off, and why did you think she did it again at Z-222?

Do you think Roselle and Scearce are mistaken when they say Kellerman began leaning over and looking behind/down to his right at Z-148, Connally began a quick head turn left, followed by quickly looking back right at Z-149, Jackie started an accelerated head turn to her left at Z-142,  JFK started taking a quick look to his left at Z-142, and Nellie began a quick, sweeping head turn to her right at Z-144?

Bear in mind these aren't shoulder-hunching "flinches", but head turns, and are, therefore, voluntary responses to the sounds of the gunshot, not "startle reactions" that preceded them by about half-a-second second earlier.

You've said that the Zapruder film, unlike many eyewitnesses, has never "lied" to you.

If you try hard enough, you'll find the above-mentioned all-within-a-half-second-of-each-other movements in your beloved celluloid truth-teller.

Lacking any other documented loud stimuli at the time, how else can these nearly simultaneous head movements of all five limo passengers be explained as anything other than their conscious responses to the sound(s) of Oswald's first, missing-everything, shot?

You have Kellerman reacting at Z148. JBC at Z149. Jack and Jackie at Z142. Within a half second is not what I call simultaneous. Your whole premise is based on these non-simultaneous head movements being a reaction to a gunshot, a shot Jackie doesn't even remember hearing. JFK didn't seem at all phased by it as he continued to calmly wave to the crowd until he was struck at or about Z222. Not exactly a WTF-was-that reaction by JFK. Why would you assume these head movements were triggered by a loud stimulus. Can't you think of any other reason the occupants of the limo would be looking around during a motorcade?
23
One can only wonder whether or not Dale K. Myers graduated from the Gary Aguilar, or perhaps the Vince Lombardi, School of Charm.

Regardless, has the old deejay, Myers, learned yet that Brian Roselle and Kenneth Scearce showed in 2020 that Oswald's first, missing-everything, shot was not at Myer's beloved Z-160, but at hypothetical Z-124 -- half-a-second before Zapruder resumed filming at Z-133 -- and that, as Roselle has graphically shown more recently, the first of two involuntary pauses in Elsie Dorman's filming of the assassination occurred at the aforementioned "Z-124"?

(Her second involuntary pause "just happened to occur" around Z-222, i.e., at the time of the "Single Bullet" shot.)


Myers' lame 2008 diatribe against Max Holland and Kenneth Scearce:

https://jfkfiles.blogspot.com/2008/12/cherry-picking-evidence-of-first-shot.html


Herb Huskr's very recent "Carcano Sound Intensity and Startle" video presentation:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/553546571932211/user/100003268844965

Note: Back in 2008, Max Holland and Kenneth Scearce thought Oswald's first shot was at hypothetical Z-107. Scearce and his research colleague, Brian Roselle, now think it was about a second later, at hypothetical Z-124.

I am far more impressed by Dale Myers thorough 3-D analysis than I am of Roselle and Scearce's unproven theory which to the best of my knowledge has never been peer reviewed. Until that is done, it has the same validity as my theory that the shot was fired at Z148 causing Zapruder to flinch at Z155. I do believe the first shot was a little earlier than Myers has proposed because I don't think JBC would have reacted to it by Z164.
24
That is simply an incorrect statement. There is evidence (shot pattern, Altgens, Hickey Nellie, Greer, etc). You just refuse to accept it. Do you really think the FBI went to the trouble building all these models without some evidence:





JFK was visible when he passed the lamp post.  You obviously have trouble recalling what I have posted many times:

JFK is obviously reacting before z225 because he is already in a contorted position. Look at his face and hands.
You are apparently not familiar with what he said he did in reaction to the first shot. What he did from z230-270 is generally consistent with what both he and Nellie he said he did after the first shot-he turned around to his right and uttered “oh, no, no” because he knew he had just heard a rifle shot and thought assassination was underway.  Jackie turns to look at him, as she said she did, when he starts shouting in the mid z240s.  Nellie said he uttered that before the second shot, which fits. JBC said it was as he was hit, although he said it might have been before he was hit (to the HSCA).
It just requires a slight deflection to the right on the bullet hitting the back.No. That is just what the evidence says happened.  You don’t have to accept it.

It is comical the mental gymnastics you are willing to go through to try and make your scenario seem plausible. It's not working. JBC's position at Z271 alone blows your theory out of the water. It is not remotely possible he could have shot JBC in the back at that point and have the bullet come out the right side of his torso. It would take a hell of a lot more than "a slight deflection to the right" for that to happen. It would require the most magical of all magic bullets. Just what would cause such a dramatic deflection? The bullet hit no bone until it exited from JBC's chest. If it was even possible for the bullet to enter JBC's back at Z271, it would be a tangential strike and the bullet would only graze him. It's unbelievable the things you have convinced yourself of to try and salvage your cockamamie theory. Give it up. You're embarrassing yourself.
25
   I am very familiar with Kaline's MLB stats, the old stadium with the 2nd deck overhang in the outfield, Reggie nailing the transformer, etc. Favorite Tiger would be Mickey Lolich, Norm Cash coming in 2nd, Freehan 3rd. The 2/3 deferred? Not sold.

I couldn't find a story to confirm Al Kaline's deferred compensation but I did find this one that said he turned down a raise to become Detroit's first $100,000 a year player because he didn't think he had a good enough season to earn it.
https://sports.ha.com/itm/baseball-collectibles/others/1971-al-kaline-signed-detroit-tigers-player-s-contract-and-copy-of-replacement-contract-requesting-a-lower-salary-from-the-al-ka/a/50049-58297.s

Mickey Lolich will always have a special place in the hearts of longtime Tigers fans for his heroic performance in the 1968 World Series when he stole the thunder from Denny McLain and Bob Gibson. He pitched his third complete game victory in game 7 on just two days rest, outdueling Bog Gibson. Lolich was a workhorse in the early 1970s, pitching over 300 innings in four consecutive seasons topped by an astounding 376 innings in 1971, the most by any pitcher since 1917. Wilbur Wood, a knuckleballer, eclipsed him by 2/3 of an inning the following year. Nobody has come close since. Today they think its a big deal if a pitcher throws 200 innings in a year. They pitch every fifth day and they call it a quality start if they pitch 6 innings and give up 3 runs or less. Lolich took the ball every fourth day and more often than not threw a complete game, 29 of them in 1971. Sadly, Mickey passed away this past February.
26
1) Funny, I'm not a big fan of people who utter or write redundancies like "hypothetical imaginings."

2) Regardless, do you think it's absolutely impossible that the first shot was fired right before Zapruder resumed filming, i.e., when the limo was already about 70 feet down Elm Street?

3) The quick, nearly simultaneous non-startle head turnings of JFK, Jackie, Connally, Nellie, and Kellerman between Z-140 and Z-149 suggests that it actually did happen, and since it probably took them about a second to start to consciously turn their heads, it means that the shot (or firecracker, or blowout, or Harley backfire if you prefer) they heard was at or very near hypothetical (HYPOTHETICAL BECAUSE ZAPRUDER WASN'T FILMING AT THE TIME) "Z-124."

4) I'm afraid you have Abraham Zapruder and the lead group of motorcycle policemen to blame for your predicament, Robin, because if they hadn't been so doggone far ahead of the limo and/or if Zapruder hadn't turned his camera on when he saw them turning onto Elm Street, he wouldn't have had to stop filming when he realized that the limo wasn't right behind them . . . and then resume filming 17 seconds later when he finally saw the limo, already 70 feet down Elm Street, coming straight towards him.

Hypothetically straight towards him, anyway.

Imagine that!

3) The quick, nearly simultaneous non-startle head turnings of JFK, Jackie, Connally, Nellie, and Kellerman between Z-140 and Z-149 suggests that it actually did happen, and since it probably took them about a second to start to consciously turn their heads, it means that the shot (or firecracker, or blowout, or Harley backfire if you prefer) they heard was at or very near hypothetical (HYPOTHETICAL BECAUSE ZAPRUDER WASN'T FILMING AT THE TIME) "Z-124."


27
My euphoria is unchecked.

In that case, your ignorance is unbounded.
28
Tom you keep talking about a hypothetical Z-124 frame.

A hypothetical imagining of what actually happened on Elm St after Zapruder stopped filming prior to starting again at Z-133.

I am not a big fan of hypothetical imaginings.

1) Funny, I'm not a big fan of people who utter or write redundancies like "hypothetical imaginings."

2) Regardless, do you think it's absolutely impossible that the first shot was fired right before Zapruder resumed filming, i.e., when the limo was already about 70 feet down Elm Street?

3) The quick, nearly simultaneous non-startle head turnings of JFK, Jackie, Connally, Nellie, and Kellerman between Z-140 and Z-149 suggests that it actually did happen, and since it probably took them about a second to start to consciously turn their heads, it means that the shot (or firecracker, or blowout, or Harley backfire if you prefer) they heard was at or very near hypothetical (HYPOTHETICAL BECAUSE ZAPRUDER WASN'T FILMING AT THE TIME) "Z-124."

4) I'm afraid you have Abraham Zapruder and the lead group of motorcycle policemen to blame for your predicament, Robin, because if they hadn't been so doggone far ahead of the limo and/or if Zapruder hadn't turned his camera on when he saw them turning onto Elm Street, he wouldn't have had to stop filming when he realized that the limo wasn't right behind them . . . and then resume filming 17 seconds later when he finally saw the limo, already 70 feet down Elm Street, coming straight towards him.

Hypothetically straight towards him, anyway.

Imagine that!
29
Tom you keep talking about a hypothetical Z-124 frame.

A hypothetical imagining of what actually happened on Elm st after Zapruder stopped  filming prior to starting again at Z-133

I am not a big fan of  hypothetical imaginings.



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