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51
Now, even though Oswald clearly lied, he says ate alone but in the same room he was with Junior and Norman therefore Oswald ate lunch with the two negro men, it doesn't even mean that they were sitting together, for instance I was at a film premier and in the same theatre was the movie star who appeared in the movie, so is it wrong of me to say I saw the movie with the movie star? Of course not!

Nice try, but nobody said "in the same room".

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Another problem for Oswald's alibi is that he assumed that even though Junior and Norman were friends, on this particular day they didn't eat together in the Domino room! Ouch!

Nice try, but nobody said Junior and Norman ate together.

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BTW how would the interrogators know at this stage to make up a story that Junior and Norman were even friends who hung out together, as seen by the two negro men arriving together at the fifth floor windows directly below Oswald with Oswald's rifle? See how intelligent deductive reasoning beats CT's who make dumbass assumptions!

Who said they did?  Yet another "Mytton" strawman.
52
Bookout missed at least an hour

Irrelevant, since he was there when they were discussing lunch and the two negro coworkers.

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and Oswald was telling one provable lie after another.

LOL.  Something isn't a "provable lie" merely because YOU believe something else is true.

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WOW, talking about "selective rhetoric", no where does this Bookout report say that Oswald saw Junior and the short fellow "just minutes before the assassination"

No, but that is when Norman and Jarman walked through the shipping area.  Which is what I said.

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but it does say that they walked through the room and we know for a fact that they didn't walk through the Domino room!

Bookhout didn't say "Domino room" either.

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Another Oswald fabrication. Oswald had no alibi because Oswald was on the 6th floor with Oswald's rifle assassinating the President!

Cool story, bro.

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Oswald tells U.S. Secret Service Kelley that he ate lunch with two coloured boys.

They didn't interrogate Oswald separately.  They all are reporting on the same interrogation.  You don't know which version (if any) is accurate.

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"Selective rhetoric" indeed! LOL This is why you can never trust a devout Conspiracy Theorist because they never tell the WHOLE story and just pick and choose whatever evidence fits their worldview.

Hilarious, coming from the guy who cherry-picked "having lunch with" and didn't tell the whole story.

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That's why it's so easy to be a CT because their fall back of everyone lied except who the CT's say, said the truth, fits every Conspiracy scenario.

Yet another "Mytton" strawman.  Nobody said "everyone lied".  You are the one claiming "provable lies" without any actual proof.
53
Once again, we are provided with a textbook lesson in Conspiracy Think.

Frazier and Randle insisted the package they saw was several inches shorter than a disassembled Carcano. It would have been nice for the WC narrative if they could have been convinced, coerced or intimidated into changing their stories, but they were firm. Randle in particular was impressive in regard to the package.

Here in the Real World, we take account of the circumstances under which they saw the package, how much attention they paid and how different their observations were from what they would have seen if Oswald had been carrying the disassembled Carcano (6.3” in the case of Randle, 28.5" vs. 34.8"). If Frazier and Randle had been firm that Oswald was carrying an ordinary little lunch sack, the WC would have had, and the LN narrative would have, a much more significant problem. As it was, they established a longish, stiff package.

We factor what Frazier and Randle observed into the totality of the circumstances, from the purchase of the rifle to its storage in the Paine garage; to Oswald’s curious Thursday trip and curtain rod explanation; to the rifle being found in the TSBD and identified as the assassination weapon. The rational conclusion is that Frazier and Randle were simply mistaken regarding the length, which is entirely understandable given the circumstances under which they saw the package and how much attention they would have paid; at the time, there was absolutely nothing significant about Oswald or the package. (A homely analogy, but I've played golf with my good friend at least 50 times. I couldn't tell you if his putter is 36" or 30".)

This is not how Conspiracy Think works. Frazier’s and Randle’s observations are dispositive. Oswald was carrying a package too short to be the rifle, period. From this, Conspiracy Think spirals off in both directions – i.e., whether Oswald owned a rifle at all, who removed it from the Paine garage and planted it in the TSBD if he did, yada yada.

It’s irrational, but it’s what those prone to the conspiracy mindset do – simple as that. This mindset has been established in a vast body of psychological and sociological research. It’s the elephant in the room that no one wants to discuss. The answer to those who treat Frazier and Randle as dispositive is, “You aren’t thinking clearly” – simple as that. THAT is the elephant in the room: You are thinking the way that those prone to the conspiracy mindset think. It isn't the mere fact that you believe the JFKA was a conspiracy that establishes this. It's the games you play with the evidence and the irrational inferences you draw that establish this.

Poor old Earlene Roberts? Well, at the WC she repeatedly used the phrase “didn’t pay much attention,” specifically in regard to Oswald’s coming and going, because she was understandably preoccupied with the JFKA news on TV and her problem with the TV’s reception. She also stated she was “completely blind in my right eye.” The day of the assassination, she described a “short gray coat,” then later a “dark” zipper jacket or coat. Here in the Real World, these are simply facts to be taken into consideration in assessing her contribution to the identification of the jacket found in connection with the Tippit murder. Nothing more nor less. There is nothing dispositive, or essential to the identification of the jacket, about anything she said.

What he said; yada yada.

Frazier and Randle insisted the package they saw was several inches shorter than a disassembled Carcano. It would have been nice for the WC narrative if they could have been convinced, coerced or intimidated into changing their stories, but they were firm. Randle in particular was impressive in regard to the package.

Here in the Real World, we take account of the circumstances under which they saw the package, how much attention they paid and how different their observations were from what they would have seen if Oswald had been carrying the disassembled Carcano (6.3” in the case of Randle, 28.5" vs. 34.8"). If Frazier and Randle had been firm that Oswald was carrying an ordinary little lunch sack, the WC would have had, and the LN narrative would have, a much more significant problem. As it was, they established a longish, stiff package.

We factor what Frazier and Randle observed into the totality of the circumstances, from the purchase of the rifle to its storage in the Paine garage; to Oswald’s curious Thursday trip and curtain rod explanation; to the rifle being found in the TSBD and identified as the assassination weapon. The rational conclusion is that Frazier and Randle were simply mistaken regarding the length, which is entirely understandable given the circumstances under which they saw the package and how much attention they would have paid; at the time, there was absolutely nothing significant about Oswald or the package.


Look at him, making excuses to avoid having to deal with what the only two witnesses, who saw the bag, actually said and assuming "facts" not in evidence while speculating about the reason for Oswald's trip, which is only curious in a LN mind.
The whole thing is hot air being described as a "rational conclusion". Where a witness can indeed be mistaken about an estimate of length, it's just about impossible to be mistaken about the way Oswald carried the package (in the cup of his hand and under his armpit). That's why the LNs never ever talk about that description.

In the real world you don't dismiss the statements of the only two witnesses when there is not a shred of evidence that even remotely suggests they could be wrong. In the real world you let the available evidence guide you to a conclusion and you don't dismiss evidence because it does not fit a predetermined conclusion!

Poor old Earlene Roberts? Well, at the WC she repeatedly used the phrase “didn’t pay much attention,” specifically in regard to Oswald’s coming and going, because she was understandably preoccupied with the JFKA news on TV and her problem with the TV’s reception. She also stated she was “completely blind in my right eye.” The day of the assassination, she described a “short gray coat,” then later a “dark” zipper jacket or coat. Here in the Real World, these are simply facts to be taken into consideration in assessing her contribution to the identification of the jacket found in connection with the Tippit murder. Nothing more nor less. There is nothing dispositive, or essential to the identification of the jacket, about anything she said.


It seems that the only thing "essential to the identification of the jacket" is that Roberts remembered a zipper.
Never mind that there isn't even evidence that the grey jacket was actually at the rooming house on Friday and there is evidence that it may well not have been!

54
Paul Simon co-wrote it but did not record it. What you didn't know, because you did not have an exhaustive collection of thousands of 45s, is that Simon and Garfunkel originally recorded "Hey, Schoolgirl" as Tom and Jerry, of which I had three copies. It had a pink label.

Wrong again.  I know "Hey Schoolgirl" and Tom and Jerry very well.

And a Simon and Garfunkel live recording of Red Rubber Ball appears on the "Old Friends" box set.

The problem with being so arrogant is that you look extra foolish when you are wrong.
55
Some more evidence that only one hand was involved.

 
57
Wow John. Such vitriol. All I did was point out your wild speculation seemingly without full knowledge of Linnie May’s statement and suddenly you become a poster child for everything you don’t like about everyone else’s posting. Maybe it would be better to post Cool Story Bro or LOL.


 Here I will post it again and you can take another shot at it. It would be nice to see a better answer.

"My fault for not posting her complete statement on how the bag was being carried as you obviously were unaware of what she had already stated about the top of the package before she focuses on the bottom of it . She had already explained how the top was being carried and then she shifted her explanation to the bottom by stating “and”--- “and the bottom”. So, you are now speculating she now explains again how the top was being held? By using the word “bottom” That actually makes sense to you? John. logic is your specialty don’t let it fail you now."

It's not vitriol.  You think your wild speculation is somehow superior to any other wild speculation.  And you thinking couching it in smug, condescending language somehow makes it something other than wild speculation.

Meanwhile, Linnie Mae said exactly ZERO about the left hand.
58
Once again, we are provided with a textbook lesson in Conspiracy Think.

Frazier and Randle insisted the package they saw was several inches shorter than a disassembled Carcano. It would have been nice for the WC narrative if they could have been convinced, coerced or intimidated into changing their stories, but they were firm. Randle in particular was impressive in regard to the package.

Here in the Real World, we take account of the circumstances under which they saw the package, how much attention they paid and how different their observations were from what they would have seen if Oswald had been carrying the disassembled Carcano (6.3” in the case of Randle, 28.5" vs. 34.8"). If Frazier and Randle had been firm that Oswald was carrying an ordinary little lunch sack, the WC would have had, and the LN narrative would have, a much more significant problem. As it was, they established a longish, stiff package.

We factor what Frazier and Randle observed into the totality of the circumstances, from the purchase of the rifle to its storage in the Paine garage; to Oswald’s curious Thursday trip and curtain rod explanation; to the rifle being found in the TSBD and identified as the assassination weapon. The rational conclusion is that Frazier and Randle were simply mistaken regarding the length, which is entirely understandable given the circumstances under which they saw the package and how much attention they would have paid; at the time, there was absolutely nothing significant about Oswald or the package. (A homely analogy, but I've played golf with my good friend at least 50 times. I couldn't tell you if his putter is 36" or 30".)

This is not how Conspiracy Think works. Frazier’s and Randle’s observations are dispositive. Oswald was carrying a package too short to be the rifle, period. From this, Conspiracy Think spirals off in both directions – i.e., whether Oswald owned a rifle at all, who removed it from the Paine garage and planted it in the TSBD if he did, yada yada.

It’s irrational, but it’s what those prone to the conspiracy mindset do – simple as that. This mindset has been established in a vast body of psychological and sociological research. It’s the elephant in the room that no one wants to discuss. The answer to those who treat Frazier and Randle as dispositive is, “You aren’t thinking clearly” – simple as that. THAT is the elephant in the room: You are thinking the way that those prone to the conspiracy mindset think. It isn't the mere fact that you believe the JFKA was a conspiracy that establishes this. It's the games you play with the evidence and the irrational inferences you draw that establish this.

Poor old Earlene Roberts? Well, at the WC she repeatedly used the phrase “didn’t pay much attention,” specifically in regard to Oswald’s coming and going, because she was understandably preoccupied with the JFKA news on TV and her problem with the TV’s reception. She also stated she was “completely blind in my right eye.” The day of the assassination, she described a “short gray coat,” then later a “dark” zipper jacket or coat. Here in the Real World, these are simply facts to be taken into consideration in assessing her contribution to the identification of the jacket found in connection with the Tippit murder. Nothing more nor less. There is nothing dispositive, or essential to the identification of the jacket, about anything she said.
59
He was sure how it was held.... Doh!

Mr. BALL - You say he had the package under his arm when you saw him?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes, sir.

Mr. BALL - You mean one end of it under the armpit?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes, sir; he had it up just like you stick it right under your arm like that.

Mr. BALL - And he had the lower part--
Mr. FRAZIER - The other part with his right hand.

Mr. BALL - Right hand?
Mr. FRAZIER - Right.

Mr. BALL - He carried it then parallel to his body?
Mr. FRAZIER - Right, straight up and down.

Representative FORD - Under his right arm?
Mr. FRAZIER - Yes.

and the bottom:
Mr. FRAZIER - I didn't pay much attention, but when I did, I say, he had this part down here,
like the bottom would be short he had cupped in his hand like that...".
60

  JOHN -  (1) Oswald was a Marine. He knew how to follow orders and that it takes several bricks working in concert to construct a wall. His constructing the sniper's nest would follow this military thought process.
              (2) If you're gonna have a "patsy", (rifle stolen/ fired/, planted), you need to know EXACTLY where the Patsy is when everything goes down. Oswald following orders and being inside the 2nd Floor Lunchroom achieves this.

              (3) Oswald bought a Coke inside the 2nd Floor Lunchroom. Very natural for him to do this. He did Not have to be chained to a table inside that Lunchroom.

             (4) I do Not buy the Oswald leaving the stairwell and then running into the 2nd Floor Lunchroom. Do you know that as you exit the 2nd Floor Stairwell, to your Immediate (R) is a window? Directly Underneath that window is the ROOF that runs directly Above The HUGE GATES? It would be quicker/easier to go out that window onto the Roof of the Huge Gates vs fleeing into the Lunchroom. There is film footage of a suited man Entering this same window from that same roof top. I do Not know who shot this film or how long after the kill shot it was shot.
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