I have no idea what you're talking about. WHAT is "all there ever was"?
You're kidding right? It's called burden of proof.
Out here in the real world, the LN narrative has been examined, challenged, debated ad nauseam, and I believe it stands as "proven" by any reasonable standard of proof.
As I stated previously, your approach just goes nowhere. You need either (1) an ironclad, no-question-about-it defeater for the LN narrative or (2) a more rational, coherent, plausible, evidence-based narrative. So far, there has been neither. "Frazier and Randle were correct and everything else surrounding the curtain rod story must be ignored" just goes nowhere.

...and once again, there is the preset.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
You have already decided the LN narrative is correct. Though you say you are open to other interpretations,
you mock and ridicule critical response to what is broken at every turn.
As these are pointed out to you by Martin, John I, or myself, excuses are made to back into the preset narrative.
If all that was Frazier & his sister, it might be accepted within a reasonable margin of error
But it goes on: The first 4 officers stepped on the 6th floor - 20 minutes after the shooting
Each testified specifically to a bag in the center of the SN - None saw this 36" container.
Sgt. Gerald Hill, the first DPD officer to arrive:"The only specifics we discussed were this. You were asking Officer Hicks if either one recalled seeing a sack,
supposedly one that had been made by the suspect, in which he could have possibly carried the weapon into the Depository,
and I at that time told you about the small sack that appeared to be a lunch sack, and that that was the only sack that I saw,
and that I left the Book Depository prior to the finding of the gun."
Deputy Sheriff Luke MooneyMr. BALL. Did you see a paper bag at any other window?
Mr. MOONEY. No, sir; I didn't.
Mr. BALL. .....Now, was there anything you saw over in the corner?
Mr. MOONEY. No, sir; I didn't see anything over in the corner.
Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig:Mr. BELIN. Was there any long sack laying in the floor there that you remember seeing, or not?
Mr. CRAIG. No; I don't remember seeing any.
Detective Boyd, who arrived with Captain Fritz before Day and Studebaker:Mr. BALL. Did you see any brown wrapping paper near the window where the hulls were found,
near the windows alongside which the hulls were found?
Mr. BOYD. I don't believe I did.

We are left with a picture of dotted lines. Something else. Another thing.
Another nutter excuse -
most times not even from the WCR. I'll point out the breaks as we go. You keep pitching the excuses.