I really don't understand your [John Corbett's] obstinancy on this.
You really don't? After all this time?
I'm sure you meant to say "obstinacy." There's no such word as "obstinancy." I mention this only because of your repeated references to your "IQ or academic honors."
Oswald was a very visible Pro-Castro Guy in the hotbed of New Orleans long before the JFKA. We don't know what contacts he may have made in the pro-Castro community or the anti-Castro-posing-as-pro-Castro community. JFK's trip to Dallas was announced even before he went to MC. In MC he reportedly said some wild-and-crazy things. We don't know what contacts he may have made there. It is not at all implausible that he would have been on the radar screen of anyone, up to and including Marcello's guys, long in advance of the JFKA. There was going to be a hit on JFKA in Dallas, and Oswald was one of Their Guys, either as a participant or a dupe. Possible locations in Dallas were scouted before the motorcade route was finalized - hence Oswald's inquiry at the Allright Parking Garage a week before. If he was a dupe in a Mafia or anti-Castro conspiracy, the conspirators would not have cared whether he was killed in the TSBD or lived to stand trial because anything he knew - or thought he knew - pointed exactly where they wanted it to point.
There is nothing inherently implausible about this scenario. The issue is, what evidence supports it? Gus Russo is clearly a Grade A researcher of the JFKA. I only wish he hadn't dropped from the scene and had been a little more forthcoming about his contacts with the G2 folks.
I agree with you completely: there's absolutely nothing inherently implausible about this scenario. I also agree that Gus Russo produced a lot of valuable research.
But, well, as you know, John Corbett says the scenario is inherently implausible and dismisses Russo's important discoveries with the juvenile response of "once again, nobody cares."
Your [John Corbett's] logic seems to flow backwards.
Now you're catching on!
You start with the unlikelihood that JFK's motorcade would pass at 11 mph directly in front of Oswald's perch - which is equally unlikely regardless of whether there was any conspiracy - and then declare it impossible that conspirators would have known this in advance. They DIDN'T NEED TO KNOW this long in advance. Once the motorcade route was announced, they realized they had indeed got extremely lucky. (We could go off on the tangent that the turn onto Elm was "arranged," but I am trying to keep this as realistic and plausible as possible.)
Actually, the HSCA proved that the turn was not necessary and that the WC and the Secret Service were wrong for claiming it was unavoidable. And, Vince Palamara, recognized as the foremost authority on the Secret Service aspect of the case, has documented suspicious conduct by certain SS personnel before, during, and after the assassination.
The Mafia and G2 are two of the scenarios that can't simply be dismissed with a wave of the hand. They may be 100% incorrect, but they can't just be dismissed.
You're absolutely correct, once again. However, as you know, John Corbett insists they are total "BS" and can indeed be summarily dismissed.
BTW, it's worth mentioning that Rockefeller Foundation fellow Henry Hurt, author of the best-selling book
Reasonable Doubt, allowed that Cuban intelligence may have played a role in the assassination.