Totally agree with what you're saying here.
Mrs Johnson's testimony regarding Roberts' credibility is devastating.
Roberts' story about the police car outside seems suspect for a number of reasons.
But a detail like Oswald wearing a jacket on his way out....what does that gain Roberts?
It seems like a totally plausible, almost irrelevant detail. It only takes on importance because we all have it under the microscope for various reasons.
The way I look at it at the moment, the only reason Oswald returned to his room was to collect a gun.
It makes sense (to me) for him to wear a jacket to carry it in to make it as inconspicuous as possible.
I get the impression you're involved in a bitter LN vs CT situation that I'm not particularly interested in. It descends into a lot of nit-picking that often masks the valid points you have to make (IMO)
The LN narrative is an entrenched position that can only be really challenged by a strong counter-narrative that accounts for aspects of the assassination LNers struggle with. Endless arguments over little details have got nowhere, and never will (IMO)
But a detail like Oswald wearing a jacket on his way out....what does that gain Roberts?That's the wrong question to ask, as I do not believe that most witnesses testify hoping to gain something.
It seems like a totally plausible, almost irrelevant detail. It only takes on importance because we all have it under the microscope for various reasons.I disagree about it being an "almost irrelevant detail". It most certainly isn't. If Oswald did not leave the rooming house wearing a jacket, then the Tippit witnesses who saw a man wearing a jacket possibly did not see Oswald and the jacket found under a parked car likely didn't belong to Oswald either, which in turn leaves the door wide open for the possibility that Oswald's gray jacket was in fact in Irving and found by the officers during the first search of Ruth Paine's house. They arrived back at the police station before Westbrook submitted the jacket (with no chain of custody) to the identification bureau.
I get the impression you're involved in a bitter LN vs CT situation that I'm not particularly interested in.Not really. I just don't like the hypocrisy. I have tried many times to have a normal conversation with LNs but whenever it gets to a point where they can not explain something, they start playing games and the conversation is over.
The LN narrative is an entrenched position that can only be really challenged by a strong counter-narrative that accounts for aspects of the assassination LNers struggle with. I disagree. You can never present a strong counter-narrative because as soon as you do the conversation is over.
Also, the LN narrative is the one claiming to be correct. The LNs should be able to defend it with convincing arguments. The LNs are the ones who are acting as prosecutors. They need to prove their case.
Endless arguments over little details have got nowhere, and never will (IMO) It depends what one considers to be a little detail. Sometimes evidence that seems insignificant at first provide the conclusive proof at a later stage. I don't think it's a good idea to predetermine what evidence is relevant and what not!