Dr. Andy Purdy and Dr. Michael Baden were recalling something 33-37 years before? Oh wait, 1996 and 2000 are 18 and 22 years after. Do you think Purdy and Baden were JFK's autopsy doctors in 1963? I bet you wish they were. The real ones told a different story.
Still ignoring what I wrote and rebutting straw men of your own design. You do this because you cannot rebut what I wrote, so you make up pretend arguments to attack. Bob Harris did the same thing repeatedly here.
Please stop pretending I said something I didn't. I put their recollections in the appropriate time frame -- about 20 years after the fact. I also put them in the timeframe of the assassination, about 33 & 37 years after the assassination. If all you've got is strawmen to rebut, you don't have an argument.
Now you're not only defending your use of ARRB recollections fro [from] 33 years after the fact, in the specific case where you ignored the actual encounter in the testimony of the HSCA from nearly two decades earlier, but also citing recollections from even further removed from the actual event - recollections from 37 years after the assassination.
I apologize if my putting these recollections you're citing in both the timeframe of the actual assassination (33 - 37 years later) AND the time of the original testimony to the HSCA (two decades later) confused you so greatly.
Now, with that cleared up, try addressing the points I actually made... the 1978 HSCA testimony confirms that what Purdy claims to recall by 1993 is false, and never happened. He is remembering the nonsense he read in a conspiracy book, rather than the actual event, and the 1978 testimony proves that. And your pretense that you rarely cited ARRB testimony in lieu of the earlier testimony is likewise nonsense. In the above, you are claiming the ARRB recollections in 1993 (and even later recollections in 2000) are better evidence than the actual testimony as transcribed in 1978.
Maybe you're right. Maybe we should look at what the official autopsy report from way back when said. Oh no, it says the wound was near the EOP. Maybe we should check to make sure the word "slightly above" isn't another word for "four inches above". Oh no, the doctors spent the rest of their lives saying it doesn't.
The problem is the autopsy doctors weren't precise and didn't specify what 'slightly above' meant. It's your
presumption that means less than an inch. The hard evidence of the extant autopsy materials was examined by numerous forensic pathologists and they determined it was approximately four inches. Your insistence to the contrary doesn't mean much next to the opinions of experts.
Cornwell admitted to coercing Humes in his book Real Answers.
Can you cite that? You know, with a quote of an admission by Cornwell that he subverted the truth to aid in a coverup? Or are you taking something out of context again?
None of this is new. You're just recycling your old disproven arguments from months ago.
For example, we covered all this ground in more detail in the past here:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11858660&postcount=66
Hank