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31
I've said UNCORROBORATED witnesses can't be relied upon.
JBC said he turned when he heard the shot. I can see when he turned It was Z164.
JBC disputed the SBT because he had been led to believe JFK was hit by the first shot and he KNEW he had been hit by the second shot. When asked if the single bullet could have occurred on the second shot, he said that's possible.A whole lot of "so-and-say said" arguments with nothing to support that so-and-so accurately remembered exactly what happened when.

How do you know when Rosemary Willis stopped and why? She ran ahead of the limo - how do you know she
wasn't looking back for the car. Her father told Shaw Trial he called her name - How do you know she didn't turn for that ?
She stopped for a shot. - When was the shot? You don't know. Witnesses are often wrong (but only when you want).


I can see when Rosemary Willis stopped. She started to slow down in the late Z160s. It took her about 3 steps to come to a complete stop and as soon as she did, she turned back toward the TSBD. Once again the Z-film shows it is the best witness available to us.
I've never claimed to have proof positive of when the first shot was fired. I have argued the best evidence is it was fired in the 147-148 time frame based on the camera jiggle at Z155. Others may disagree which is fine. Nobody else has definitive proof of when the first shot was fired either. It is all based on how we weigh the clues the Z-film provides us. I can say for fact that there was no shot at Z204 because I know Oswald fired all three shots and he couldn't have fired a shot at Z204 and another at Z219-200. In addition, the tree would have still blocked Oswald's view of JFK at Z204 making it unlikely Oswald would fire a shot then when his target was about to come into the clear in less than half a second.

All pretext by you. Disputed and corroborated as false by Phil Willis, Hugh Betzner, Sam Holland and Rosemary Willis.
32
Once again, you talk out of two sides of your mouth.

There is no sound on any film. You are backing into your a preset conclusion with no basis of fact.
You said witnesses cannot be relied on and are often times wrong. How do you know JBC was correct about when he turned?
He disputed the SBT directly. You cherry pick what you want.

I've said UNCORROBORATED witnesses can't be relied upon.
JBC said he turned when he heard the shot. I can see when he turned It was Z164.
JBC disputed the SBT because he had been led to believe JFK was hit by the first shot and he KNEW he had been hit by the second shot. When asked if the single bullet could have occurred on the second shot, he said that's possible.
Quote

Phil Willis took his number 5 picture when he heard a shot. That was about Z-frame 202.
Hugh Betzner took his number 3 picture and was winding his camera when he heard the same shot.
Sam Holland, was on the bridge. He heard the same shot when JFK reached for his brow. That occurs about Z-204.

Look at Betzner 3 and Willis 5 - see where the car is between two shots. WC didn't. Look at "Black Dog Man" in both pictures.
A human figure taken with 2 different cameras - both oddly without any flesh tone or distinct characteristics. (a black man huh?)
Rosemary told the HSCA: Ms. Willis stated that she was present with her father and a sister in the area of the grass section of the plaza at
the time of the Presidential motorcade on November 22, 1963. The other was a person who was standing just behind the
concrete wall near the triple underpass. "That person appeared to "disappear the next instant."

A whole lot of "so-and-say said" arguments with nothing to support that so-and-so accurately remembered exactly what happened when.

How do you know when Rosemary Willis stopped and why? She ran ahead of the limo - how do you know she
wasn't looking back for the car. Her father told Shaw Trial he called her name - How do you know she didn't turn for that ?
She stopped for a shot. - When was the shot? You don't know. Witnesses are often wrong (but only when you want).
[/quote]

I can see when Rosemary Willis stopped. She started to slow down in the late Z160s. It took her about 3 steps to come to a complete stop and as soon as she did, she turned back toward the TSBD. Once again the Z-film shows it is the best witness available to us.
Quote

 :) Your time line isn't proof of anything
Interesting, she actually stops short right around z- frame 200.

I've never claimed to have proof positive of when the first shot was fired. I have argued the best evidence is it was fired in the 147-148 time frame based on the camera jiggle at Z155. Others may disagree which is fine. Nobody else has definitive proof of when the first shot was fired either. It is all based on how we weigh the clues the Z-film provides us. I can say for fact that there was no shot at Z204 because I know Oswald fired all three shots and he couldn't have fired a shot at Z204 and another at Z219-200. In addition, the tree would have still blocked Oswald's view of JFK at Z204 making it unlikely Oswald would fire a shot then when his target was about to come into the clear in less than half a second.
33
The Z-film alone gives us clues as to when the first shot was fired without using any witnesses. We see JBC turn to look over his right shoulder at Z164. Here's where a CORROBORARED witness can come into play. He said he turned in response to hearing the first shot which he recognized as the sound of a high powered rifle. The film and JBC's statement jibe. Without JBC's statement it would be hard to determine that his turn to look over his right shoulder was a reaction to the first shot. The fact the film and his statement jibe strengthens the probative value of both. In addition we have Rosemary Willis running alongside the limo. She begins to slowdown during the Z160s and when she comes to a stop, she turns and looks back to the TSBD. She later said she did that upon hearing a gunshot. She didn't testify before the WC but was called by the HSCA. None of this is proof positive as to when the first shot was fired but taken as a whole, it is probative of a shot prior to Z164. If we add to that the blurring and frame jump in Z155, it is a strong indication of a shot around Z147-148.

If we don't read the reactions of JBC and Willis as evidence of a gunshot, there is nothing in the Z-film that would tell us when Oswald's missed shot was fired.  That is why the WC never determined which shot missed. They allowed that it could be the first, second, or third shot.

Once again, you talk out of two sides of your mouth.

There is no sound on any film. You are backing into your a preset conclusion with no basis of fact.
You said witnesses cannot be relied on and are often times wrong. How do you know JBC was correct about when he turned?
He disputed the SBT directly. You cherry pick what you want.

Phil Willis took his number 5 picture when he heard a shot. That was about Z-frame 202.
Hugh Betzner took his number 3 picture and was winding his camera when he heard the same shot.
Sam Holland, was on the bridge. He heard the same shot when JFK reached for his brow. That occurs about Z-204.

Look at Betzner 3 and Willis 5 - see where the car is between two pictures. WC wouldn't. Look at "Black Dog Man" in both pictures.
A human figure taken with 2 different cameras - both oddly without any flesh tone or distinct characteristics. (a black man huh?)
Rosemary told the HSCA: Ms. Willis stated that she was present with her father and a sister in the area of the grass section of the plaza at
the time of the Presidential motorcade on November 22, 1963. The other was a person who was standing just behind the
concrete wall near the triple underpass. "That person appeared to "disappear the next instant."


How do you know when Rosemary Willis stopped and why? - She ran ahead of the limo - how do you know she
wasn't looking back for the car. Her father told Shaw Trial he called her name - How do you know she didn't turn for that ?
She stopped for a shot. - When was the shot? You don't know. Witnesses are often wrong (but only when you want).

 :) Your time line isn't proof of anything
Interesting, she actually stops short right around z- frame 200.
 
34
YAWN

Maybe you should put your jammies on, have your cookie and your glass of milk, and go beddy-bye now, Corbett, so you can dream of John Galt, again.
36
No, you went with the con artist who happens to be Vladimir Putin's favorite "useful idiot" (or worse).

Is your taxable income more than a million dollars per year?

If not, then Kamala's raising the capital gains tax to 28% (not to 40% which you mistakenly believe) wouldn't apply to you.

So, what it boils down to is that Kamala is a woman with a "crazy" laugh and you were misled by [fill in the blank].


ME: Did Kamala Harris promise to raise the capital gains tax to 40%?

No, Kamala Harris did not promise to raise the capital gains tax to 40%. She proposed increasing the top federal long-term capital gains rate to 28% for households with annual income over $1 million (from the current 20%), which is a more modest increase than in President Biden’s earlier budget proposals.

Key Details from Her Proposal

Core proposal: Tax long-term capital gains and qualified dividends at 28% (instead of ordinary income rates) for taxable income above $1 million.

This was announced in September 2024 and represented a softening from Biden’s FY2025 budget, which called for taxing capital gains at ordinary income rates (top rate 39.6%) for high earners.

Combined with the existing or proposed Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) of 3.8%–5%, the effective top federal rate on capital gains for the highest earners would be around 33% (or up to ~38% in analyses including certain interactions). State taxes could push combined rates higher in some places (e.g., over 40% in high-tax states), but the federal component she directly proposed was 28%.

Context and Comparisons

Current top federal long-term capital gains rate: 20% (plus 3.8% NIIT for high earners).

Historical note: Rates were near 40% in the late 1970s (pre-Reagan cuts), but Harris’s plan did not restore that.

Other elements: She also supported a billionaire minimum tax on unrealized gains for those worth $100 million+ (a narrow proposal from the Biden administration) and taxing unrealized gains at death above exemptions, but these are distinct from a broad 40% rate on realized gains.

Claims of a 40% (or higher) promise often stem from conflating her plan with Biden’s original budget, adding NIIT/state taxes, or referencing older Democratic proposals. Reliable analyses from sources like the Tax Foundation, CRFB, CNBC, and ITEP confirm the 28% figure as her stated position.

In short, the claim is not accurate—her public proposal was for a 28% rate on long-term capital gains for top earners.

ME: If the capital gains tax were raised to 28%, would it have had a negative effect on the retirement income of some people?

GROK: Yes, raising the long-term capital gains tax to 28% (as Harris proposed for households with taxable income over $1 million) would have a negative effect on the retirement income of some people.

Who Would Be Affected?

High-income retirees with substantial taxable brokerage accounts (not IRAs or 401(k)s) who realize large gains to fund spending. Example: A $100,000 long-term gain at the current 20% top rate nets $80,000 after tax. At 28%, it nets $72,000 — an 10% reduction in proceeds from the gain itself.

This requires selling more shares to maintain the same spending level, accelerating portfolio depletion over a long retirement.

Retirees near or above the $1 million income threshold in a given year (e.g., from a big stock sale, business exit, or concentrated positions). Combined with the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (potentially rising), the effective federal rate could reach ~31.8–33%.

Those in high-tax states, where state capital gains taxes (often ordinary income rates) could push combined burdens noticeably higher.

Ripple Effects

Higher taxable income from gains could make more Social Security benefits taxable, increase Medicare IRMAA surcharges, or trigger other phase-outs.

Reduced incentive for frequent rebalancing or realizations, potentially leading to less optimal portfolios or higher volatility exposure.

Indirect market effects: While modest, higher taxes on high earners could slightly dampen asset prices or returns over time, affecting all investors (including those in tax-advantaged accounts).

Who Would Likely See Little or No Direct Impact?

Most middle-class retirees whose total taxable income stays well below $1 million — they’d remain in the 0% or 15% long-term capital gains brackets.

Those relying primarily on Social Security, pensions, or traditional IRA/401(k) withdrawals (taxed as ordinary income regardless).
Users of Roth accounts (tax-free) or strategies like holding until death for step-up in basis.

Analyses (e.g., Tax Foundation) show the 28% proposal is targeted at high earners and would raise revenue mainly from them, with smaller dynamic economic drags compared to larger hikes.

Bottom line: At 28%, the direct hit is narrower and milder than a 40% rate, mostly affecting wealthier retirees with large taxable portfolios. Many average retirees using taxable accounts for supplemental income would still face modestly lower after-tax proceeds on realizations, making tax-efficient planning (e.g., asset location, Roth conversions, tax-loss harvesting) even more valuable.

ME: What about households with less than one million dollars of yearly taxable income?

For households with less than $1 million in yearly taxable income, the 28% capital gains rate would not apply. They would continue to pay the current long-term capital gains tax rates: 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on their total taxable income.

Current Long-Term Capital Gains Brackets (2025)

These brackets are based on total taxable income (not just the gain amount):

0% rate: Single: Taxable income ≤ ~$48,350; Married filing jointly: ≤ ~$96,700

15% rate: Single: ~$48,351 to ~$533,400; Married filing jointly: ~$96,701 to ~$600,050

20% rate: Single: Over ~$533,400; Married filing jointly: Over ~$600,050

(The exact thresholds adjust annually for inflation.)

Harris’s proposal specifically targeted the top rate (replacing the 20% bracket) only for income above $1 million. Most households—even upper-middle-class ones with significant investment income—would see no direct change to their capital gains tax rate.

Potential Indirect or Minimal Effects

Very few retirees or households under $1M taxable income would face the higher rate. Even someone realizing a large one-time gain (e.g., selling a business or appreciated stock) would only pay 28% on the portion of income exceeding the $1M threshold. The rest of their gains would still qualify for the regular 15% or 20% rates.

Other tax interactions could still matter for those near the higher brackets:Large gains could push total income high enough to make more Social Security benefits taxable.

They might increase Medicare IRMAA premiums or trigger the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (which applies above ~$200K/$250K modified AGI, regardless of the proposal).

No broad impact on typical middle-class or even affluent retirees relying on taxable accounts, as long as their annual taxable income stays below $1 million.

In short: For the vast majority of households (well over 99% based on IRS data), Harris’s 28% proposal would have had zero direct effect on their retirement income from capital gains. The change was narrowly targeted at very high earners. Tax-efficient strategies like asset location, Roth accounts, and tax-loss harvesting would remain just as valuable as they are today.

YAWN
37
I started as an LN, became a CT in the 1980s for a few years, then became an LN again sometime in the late 1980s
38
Are there any JFKA "researchers" here who started out as Lone Nutters but who are now Tin-Foil Hat Conspiracy Theorists?

How about the other way around?

Don't be shy.
39
TG--

To be sure, it is impossible to verify whether Kostikov was Dept. 13 or not.

Still, LHO met three KGB'ers down in MC...and two months later helped perp the JFKA.

John Newman says extra-tricky, sneaky, way-clever stealthy elements within the CIA planted the "World War III virus" far in advance of the JFKA...and somehow connived to get LHO to visit the KGB, so that any investigation into LHO would be shut down by a nuke war-fearful LBJ.

Maybe. That always struck me as "out on a limb" territory.

Why do you say Oswald only helped?

Flash-Bang in the Bushes?

Smoke?

Bang . . . . . Bang-Bang?

Connally's wrist?

You love conspiracies?

(LOL)
40
TG--

To be sure, it is impossible to verify whether Kostikov was Dept. 13 or not.

Still, LHO met three KGB'ers down in MC...and two months later helped perp the JFKA.

John Newman says extra-tricky, sneaky, way-clever stealthy elements within the CIA planted the "World War III virus" far in advance of the JFKA...and somehow connived to get LHO to visit the KGB, so that any investigation into LHO would be shut down by a nuke war-fearful LBJ.

Maybe. That alway struck me as "out on a limb" territory.
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