Didn't people see LHO in the window though? Also, wasn't there reports of people smelling gun powder near the knoll/at ground level?
Didn't people see LHO in the window though? Also, wasn't there reports of people smelling gun powder near the knoll/at ground level?
If you wouldn't run away from reading posts and answering questions, you'd know that the gunpowder smell has already been discussed.
Maybe you should rethink your running away?
Thank you. This is what I was getting at, that anybody who had ever been to Dealey Plaza would know right away that no sensible conspiracy would ever put a shooter there. Why would they put someone they wanted fingered as a patsy up in a not-easily-seen location like the Book Depository, and the actual shooter that they wanted concealed in a place he'd almost certainly be seen? This is an aspect of CTism that fascinates me- in an effort to make a conspiracy, they make one that makes no sense. Anything but the evidence-backed mainstream narrative is to be preferred, even if it's something that no reasonable conspirator would have any part of. There's something almost religious about this thought process...
Lol. Please. What post/page has this been discussed where I've previously been involved?
Lol. Please. What post/page has this been discussed where I've previously been involved?
Lol. Please. What post/page has this been discussed where I've previously been involved?
If I may, I will comment on the relevance of an actual visit to the crime scene. I have been there. Stayed longer than expected and received a parking ticket to prove it.
What impressed me immediately is that the place was much smaller than expected. The plaza photographs large, but in fact is a very tight space.
I walked the grounds, and visited the Sixth Floor museum. At that time the location of the bubble top at the time of each known shot was marked on the pavement, making reconstruction easy for visitors. The shot set-up from the sixth floor is quite good. At the time of the last shot the distance to target is not great, target is moving almost directly away from the shooter at low speed. This is not a difficult shot.
By contrast, the behind the fence location is much more problematic. It is actually quite exposed. The shooter would have been visible from several angles. Not a location a professional would have chosen, in my opinion. This is a "passing shot", with the target moving laterally, with a variable speed. At the time of the final shot a shooter at that location would have been at a high angle to the right of target, giving a trajectory that does not match the injuries to the head.
My opinions on the shooting aspects are based on my experience as a trained military shooter, weapons and tactics NCO and civilian small arms instructor.
Thanks. You wrote this better than I would have.
From the 6th floor, with the limo driving directly away at slow speed, you could have made that shot with a deer rifle. Maybe even a pistol. From the hill, it would have been a much tougher shot in a much shorter time window and afterwards you'd be standing there essentially with your dick in your hand and a thousand angry witnesses.
Jango-- Does this information in the above posts influence your opinion about the JFK assassination in any way? Again it's a yes or no question, so you can spare me the drama of me "hounding" you with this simple yes or no question. Four keystrokes max on your part. Thanks in advance.
Furthermore, to me at least, an explanation for this requires covering the actions of Mrs. Kennedy as she goes after the ejecta from her husband's head on the trunk of the car.
Again, perhaps if you weren't so prone to running away from answering questions? Where specifically from the front do you think JFK was shot? What ejecta on the back of the car?I understand what's being said, however, I'd like to hear his views on the headshot itself, namely, President Kennedy's movements and whether or not he believes that it is consistent with being shot in the back of the head. Furthermore, to me at least, an explanation for this requires covering the actions of Mrs. Kennedy as she goes after the ejecta from her husband's head on the trunk of the car.
What is your opinion?If those areas are covered in a logically satisfactory manner, yes, it would change my opinion.
If those areas are covered in a logically satisfactory manner, yes, it would change my opinion.
Thanks Jango.
As for JFK's brain "ejecta" on the trunk of the car being recovered by the First Lady, I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Maybe you could share some evidence here.
Either way, if you think that the shots came from somewhere else (like by the fence), what would be helpful is for you to put together a somewhat cohesive theory with a timeline. I'm sure that everyone here would like to read that. It would also help you get your story together and see if there are any flaws
Didn't people see LHO in the window though? Also, wasn't there reports of people smelling gun powder near the knoll/at ground level?
As for JFK's brain "ejecta" on the trunk of the car being recovered by the First Lady, I have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Maybe you could share some evidence here.
I understand what's being said, however, I'd like to hear his views on the headshot itself, namely, President Kennedy's movements and whether or not he believes that it is consistent with being shot in the back of the head. Furthermore, to me at least, an explanation for this requires covering the actions of Mrs. Kennedy as she goes after the ejecta from her husband's head on the trunk of the car.
If those areas are covered in a logically satisfactory manner, yes, it would change my opinion.
Lol. Please. What post/page has this been discussed where I've previously been involved?
It was a skull fragment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8UUkcagNE4
It appears to fly backward, but what is really happening is that it flew straight up and the limousine passed underneath it.