Your ”think” shows conciderable lack of rigor. This is not a football game with teams competing in an arena. This is critique of US/Texas officialdom and their explanatications of the assassination of JFK.
That's what you're apparently attempting to do. Meanwhile, we're critiquing your critique, and you're failing - badly.
I don’t need to present a comprehensive theory in order to point out errors and fabrications in another theory. It’s enough to point them out in order to refute said theory.
Hence your concentration on the *supposed* errors and *supposed* fabrications. But when we examine them more closely, we find they are built up out of quotes out of context, logical fallacies, and misinterpretations (like your grainy photo of supposed smoke on the knoll. Remember being challenged to exclude other possibilities and to post a better image than the grainy one that apparently showed even more smoke on the overpass?)
Lets say this ’logic’ would be the rule in judicial procedure. The accused suspect has to present the real guilty parties before being released. Lack of real evidence of his/her guilt be damned.
We tried the judicial procedure way with you not too long ago. Don't you remember?
I cited the testimony from J.C.Day, William Waldman and Harry Holmes to establish the rifle found on the sixth floor was shipped to Oswald's PO box. I did it as if this was a court. After each witness, I turned the witness over to you, exactly as if you were the defense attorney, and said "Your witness", leaving each witness on the stand for you to cross examine them. I asked you repeatedly if you had any questions for those three men. You ignored the multiple requests to follow up.
You don't get to pretend that's a better way to get to the truth now when you had your opportunity to do exactly that and wouldn't go near it.
You had no questions for these men. The jury would hear their testimony, and then "no questions" from the defense counsel. They would conclude the evidence indicated Oswald's rifle was the one found in the Depository shortly after the shooting.
J.C.Day's testimony:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=12256386&postcount=1021
William Waldman's testimony:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=12257354&postcount=1078
Harry Holmes testimony:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=12257552&postcount=1087
I know that the US has a considerable part of its population behind bars, mostly based on skin color, but with this procedure in place, the prison business would boom like a new Klondike. No one gets released before the real culprits are found and convicted.
Do you buy your straw by the ton or the half-ton?
I ask because that's another straw man argument you're suggesting. This is not a court inquiry, but a discussion group.
Oswald is dead. So are most of the witnesses, all of the Warren Commissioners, and most if not all of the junior counsel. This isn't a court inquiry, and there's no danger of Oswald being convicted and put in jail.
The fact that you can't put the evidence together in any way that makes sense even after a lapse of 54 years without contradicting yourself and common sense is clear to everyone here. In this discussion group.
Your putting Oswald at the scene of the Tippit murder at the time of the Tippit murder is classic in that regard (something critics have been arguing was impossible for 54 years), as was your suggestion he ran from the killer while the woman you denigrated (Mrs. Helen Markham) ran to the shooting victim. So mostly conspiracy addicts don't try to advance a scenario, because they crush their own arguments elsewhere (like your three inches is a 'minute' amount, but four inches is 'a lot of real estate!').
You would like to run with this?
Still a straw man argument. In historical inquiry, we can compare and contrast alternative scenarios against the evidence. There is one scenario on the table that fits most of the known evidence and leaves the fewest unexplained gaps. So far you automatically lose, because you haven't advanced a competitive scenario.
Hank