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Worldly & Other Worldly Mysteries - UFOs/UAPs - Bigfoot - Ghosts etc / The Most Convincing UFO Encounter
« Last post by Duncan MacRae on Yesterday at 09:58:00 PM »The Most Convincing UFO Encounter
The confusion regarding Kansas City, which was one of Sandy Larsen's big talking points and still appears on Armstrong's site, was: Under the agency agreement between the Federal Reserve and the Postal Service, the Federal Reserve was responsible solely for processing and paying a Postal Money Order. The agreement specifically said that the Federal Reserve had no responsibility for auditing a PMO for fraud or irregularities. The Post Office was responsible for that. In 1955, the process was streamlined so all PMOs went to an auditing center in Kansas City instead of a variety of auditing centers as they had previously done. So they did all go to Kansas City before being placed into storage at the Federal Records Center in Alexandria. The storage was for a fairly short retention period in case some claim was made and a PMO was needed as evidence. After that period, they were destroyed; tens of millions were sold, so storage would have been a major issue if they had been retained for years. I believe it was Sandy who found a newspaper article from 1955 saying that "all" PMOs would now go to Kansas City, and he and the H&L gang misunderstood what this meant. There were three functions: processing and payment (Federal Reserve), auditing (Post Office), storage (Federal Records Center).Lance

https://web.archive.org/web/20170806231524/http://www.jfk.education/node/13
.....Quotehttp://harveyandlee.net/Guns/Guns.html
Oswald Did NOT Purchase a Rifle from Kleins
by John Armstrong - allegedly found at the US postal facility in Arlington, VA, and not at the US postal facility in Kansas City where all other unpaid money orders that Oswald purchased from the Dallas post office were stored? ..?
.... FBI records allegedly show that on November 23, at 7:55 pm (CST), Secret Service Agent Grimes was told that a $21.45 money order had been located in Washington, DC by Robert Jackson, an employee of the National Archives. But why would an employee of the National Archives have access to archived U.S. Postal records late on Friday evening? And how is it possible that a never-deposited, never-cashed US postal money order could be deposited at the FNB of Chicago, routed thru the Federal Reserve Bank, and then sent to a postal facility for storage (there are no bank endorsement stamps from either the FNB of Chicago, the Federal Reserve Bank, or the US Postal facility in Kansas City)? And why was that unpaid money order allegedly found at the US postal facility in Arlington, VA, and not at the US postal facility in Kansas City where all other unpaid money orders that Oswald purchased from the Dallas post office were stored? The answer is that this $21.45 money order was never cashed, never deposited, and never routed thru the Federal Reserve banking system. This unpaid money order was most likely taken from a stack of new money orders on 11/23/63 at the Dallas post office by US Postal Inspector Harry Holmes, a long-time FBI informant identified by the bureau as "Dallas, T-2". Holmes was likely the person who date stamped the money order "March 12, 1962" and it was then sent directly to FBI headquarters. The serial numbers on this money order indicate that it was "pulled" from a stack of new money orders at the Dallas post office in late 1963. ....
Bagley thought LHO was a "witting" CIA asset when in Russia. Maybe "witting," but reporting to Solie?
Michael Griffith says there was a shooter on top of the linen truck.
And that "possibly" the Babushka Lady shot JFK with a gun camera (or camera gun, whatever).
And he believes Garrison's claims about triangulated fire, the plan developed by Ferrie, Shaw and Oswald. . . .
that was then supposedly carried out by the CIA. And the Mob. And others.
And he believes JFK was shot from the front in the head. And shot from the front in the neck.
But the HSCA acoustics analysis, which he also says he believes, concluded there were two shooters: one shooting from the TSBD and a second from behind the fence. Two shooters. Four shots.
Nothing in their analysis - which again he says he believes - concluded there was a shooter on the linen truck. Or that Babushka Lady fired a shot. Or that there were shooters from three locations, i.e., triangulation, or a shooter from the front who shot JFK the neck/throat and a shooter or a shot from the front who inflicted the head wound.
His arguments are a mish mash of claims and counter-claims and arguments that contradict other arguments. His conspiracy is a jumble of ideas and thoughts and allegations that make no sense, are at odds with each other. It's like he's playing "JFK Assassination: the Game" where the person who propose the most claims, whether they make sense or not, somehow wins.
The following passages come from Reclaiming History and McClain the actual man behind the supposed Dealey Plaza recording, strongly refutes this deceptive "audio evidence".[SNIP]
I've always wished somebody would do a reenactment of that first shot just to see what challenges it would have presented. I'm not asking for a duplication which is impossible. Just a re-enactment to highlight the difficulties.
AI has no special powers of discernment. It can only regurgitate what it gathers from other sources. It can be used as a source but its answers should be taken with a grain of salt. Garbage in. Garbage out.Nice try. But the chance that in a group of 25 people all would independently make an error that caused them to make the same false report is the same regardless of the kind of error.
What I suspect is that what some people perceived to be the first shot was actually the second. We know a number of people didn't recognize the first shot as the sound of a gunshot. We can only guess as to why that was. Maybe they thought the first shot was a firecracker. Maybe that thought it was a motorcycle backfire. Maybe it was the roar of the motorcycles accelerating out of the turn onto Elm. Maybe they were so intent on seeing a President and a First Lady for the first time in their lives that the sound of the first shot didn't register with them. Maybe it was a combination of these factors. Whatever the reason, if their focus was 100% on JFK and Jackie, that focus would have been broken when they saw JFK unmistakably react to the second shot by suddenly raising both arms to the level of his throat and then slump over to his left. That was the time I believe most people began to realize what was happening. I'm sure the sound of that first shot reached those people's ears but not their brains. If they didn't perceive what was happening at the time it was happening, there's no reason to believe they would piece it together correctly later one.
I don't post much there as I defer to those with much more knowledge than me.