Why exactly, is a "list of names" required?
Because you need a testable alternative.
OK, I read 'em and your argument still makes no sense at all to me.
Then you're not likely to do well in this thread.
Why would you accuse me of cherry picking when I stated that the FBI and HSCA conducted tests...
Because those entities still concluded Oswald did it. If you quote one of their findings outside the context of their entire findings, you're cherry picking. Yes, the HSCA concluded it was "a conspiracy," but they studied the prevailing conspiracy theories of the day and could find no evidence for them. While they inferred from the acoustic evidence that other shots may have been fired, they concluded that all the shots that hit Kennedy were fired by Oswald. That means they took the alleged proof that Oswald couldn't have fired that fast, and evaluated them in the context of all the other evidence. That's what we mean by consilience.
BTW, have you found evidence that isolates Oswald as the only shooter?
This is the part where you try to change the burden of proof. In addition, you've changed the question. "Isolates Oswald" is not the question. "Who killed Kennedy?" is the question. So far there is a ton of evidence in favor of Oswald, and very little evidence in favor of anyone else -- in addition to or in place of Oswald.
Perhaps you could email me a list of instructions. I will certainly do my best to follow them.
We've collected our wisdom in this rather lengthy thread, which I will admonish you a third time to read before participating in. I seriously hope you do, because you will be able to see what kinds of arguments work and what kinds don't.
As a skeptic myself, I find it hard to accept that you know in advance, what I am going to say.
Every single JFK conspiracy theorist makes the same arguments in the same way, including you, below in this thread. In fact, every conspiracy theorist in every genre makes the same patterned argument. How do I know this? I've listened to many, many conspiracy theories. You don't need psychic powers to make observations and use them to predict future behavior.
Why don't you wait and see what I have to say before you start swinging your ball bat?
Or I can just read the remainder of your post here, in which you violate a number of my caveats straight off the line.
Not by honest members of the forum.
Sorry, you don't get to call people "dishonest" for trying to hold you to the same standard of proof you propose to impose on the conventional narrative.
Even without an alternative theory, it would be possible to prove that Oswald didn't act alone.
This is the part where you set the bar absurdly low for yourself. We want to know if you can better solve the crime than the conventional narrative. You just want to pick away at someone else's work.
For example ... that would constitute proof that Oswald didn't fire all the shots.
No, it's an inference piled on top of a faulty generalization.
As it happens however, I have a very strong, alternative theory, but that is not the critical issue.
Yes it is.
You seem to be trying to raise the bar, waaay higher than it belongs. That is not how critical thinkers do things.
Yes, it is. We hold claims to high standards, especially claims that go against how most people conclude who have been exposed to the same evidence. This is the part where you evaluate the conventional narrative against one standard and then set a very much lower standard for yourself.
I certainly hope you are wrong about that. I seriously doubt that most skeptics think that way.
They do. Read the thread.
They do not make up all kinds of rules and restrictions...
These are not arbitrary, made-up rules. As you see when you read the thread, we simply attempt to hold conspiracy theories to the same standard of proof their proponents impose upon the conventional narrative. In all but a few cases, the "rules and restrictions" are those which the conspiracy proponents have set. We simply apply them fairly. As we can see by reading your posts, you don't seem to believe in a fair treatment among competing theories. You seem to want a lower bar set for your theory.
ONE SIMPLE FACT can prove a theory wrong - your theory, mine, anyone's.
No, that's not critical thinking. The remainder of the facts that supported the original theory still have to be explained. That's the part conspiracy theorists miss, and why historians don't take them seriously. One adverse fact does not break the consilience of evidence otherwise. It may alter it and require a revision, but you're simply preaching the same old gospel as every conspiracy theorist ever. You want to cherry-pick a few outlying facts and ignore the bulk of evidence. If you were to read the thread, you'd discover how badly that has worked for your predecessors.
With all due respect sir, your claim does not improve with repetition.
Nor does yours. Do you have any idea how many times in the past few years the "Oswald can't have fired that fast" claim has been discussed?
What exactly, is the best evidence you have seen, which isolates Oswald as the only shooter?
Your attempt to shift the burden of proof is becoming more frantic.
No I don't. Forget that most people, most researchers, and the head of the HSCA believe this was a conspiracy. Forget that you represent a very small minority.
We have discussed the findings of the HSCA here at length. The public-opinion polls have been discussed here at length too.
Read the thread.
My burden of proof is no greater than yours.
Then carry it.
And since you cannot prove that Oswald acted alone, you aren't getting off to a very impressive start.
Standard shell game. You announce that you have a solid theory, but you refuse to present it. You announce straight off the bat that the entire discussion must be reset for your benefit and convenience, and you make a vague handwaving reference to a topic that's been discussed already several times at length. And you try to shift the burden onto your critics.
The prevailing conclusion is as it has been for fifty years. The evidence has been out there for fifty years in most cases. It was there before I participated in the discussion. It will be there long after I'm dead. It needs no further affirmative case made for it. It is this conclusion and its attendant evidence that you are trying desperately to undermine, so you know what it is and where it is. Let's dispense with the silly standard rhetorical games. You say "No, I have a different theory based on my belief that Oswald can't have fired his rifle that fast." Then you say, "And before I even present it, you must prove my theory wrong."
OK, with all due respect, I've had enough phony rules to last a lifetime.
And most conspiracy theorists have had a lifetime of being roundly ignored by serious historians, mostly because they want to reinvent the practice of historical inquiry to suit their own needs. I'm simply telling you
why you're categorically ignored. If you don't care to hear it, then I guess that's your business. But the "You must prove my theory wrong" approach doesn't bode well.