- From
http://www.shroud.com/bucklin.htm. 1997
Upon examining the chest, the pathologist notes a large blood stain over the right pectoral area Close examination shows a variance in intensity of the stain consistent with the presence of two types of fluid, one comprised of blood, and the other resembling water.
Dear Mr. Savage:
Please notice, and internalize, the fact that "consistent with" "blood" and something "resembling water" is not, in fact,
evidence of the actual presence of human blood, human serosanguinous fluids, or human plasma.
Even if it were, the mere
presence of blood and serosanguinous fluids, even
human blood &ct., provides not a scintilla of evidence regarding the
source of those substances.
Not to mention, the "right pectoral area" is protected by ribs...a spear thrust to the heart, from a professional soldier standing
below the target, would result in a penetrating puncture to the
left abdominal area.
There is distinct evidence of a gravitational effect on this stain with the blood flowing downward and without spatter of other evidence of the projectile activity which would be expected from blood issuing from a functional arterial source. This wound has all the characteristics of a postmortem type flow of blood from a body cavity or from an organ such as the heart. At the upper plane of the wound is an ovoid skin defect which is characteristic of a penetrating track produced by a sharp puncturing instrument.
Follow: if the "blood" flowed
downward from the penetrating puncture located
in the wrong place, the "blood" would have had to be an artifact of the body's suspension; further, the body would have had to be inserted between two flat planes of the CIQ
without being washed, making it 1) ritually unclean, and , 2) a flat contradiction of the canonic description in "John's" 'god'spiel.
There seems to be an increase in the anteroposterior diameter of the chest due to bilateral expansion.
The abdomen is flat, and the right and left arms are crossed over the mid and lower abdomen. The genitalia cannot be identified.
Can you identify
both sets of special pleading in these three sentences?
By examination of the arms, forearms, wrists, and hands, the pathologist notes that the left hand overlies the right wrist On the left wrist area is a distinct puncture-type injury which has two projecting rivulets derived from a central source and separated by about a 10 degree angle. As it appears in the image, the rivulets extend in a horizontal direction. The pathologist realizes that this blood flow could not have happened with the arms in the position as he sees them during his examination, and he must reconstruct the position of the arms in such a way as to place them where they would have to be to account for gravity in the direction of the blood flow. His calculations to that effect would indicate that the arms would have to be outstretched upward at about a 65 degree angle with the horizontal. The pathologist observes that there are blood flows which extend in a direction from wrists toward elbows on the right and left forearms. These flows can be readily accounted for my the position of the arms which he has just determined.
Same objection: either the "blood" is a suspension artifact, in which case the 'god'spiel of "John" must be rejected as inaccurate.
What doth it profit a sidonist if he gain anomalous "blood" stains and lose the canonic account?
<snip>
...on a 780-year-old-pice of linen...