Sure you can, he explicitly states the official flight path looks wrong and that he thought the plane flew into the building more perpendicular than at an angle.
Yea, you know there's a problem when mobertermy's theory is one of the saner ones.
What is his complete theory? I never saw a truther who had one.
Good question. mobertermy, perhaps you could do us a favor and spell out your theory?
Me: Oh, Hi Jim, I saw Frank in line at the movies. I was four spots back of him.
Jim: Oh did he save you a seat?
Me: What? I was ahead of him, so I saved him a seat.
Jim: lol wut. You said you were Back of him.
Me: Yeah, you know, “back” as in “away” from him.
Jim: Remind me, what color is the sky on your planet?
Me: Green… Why? Oh yeah, did you hear that 9/11 was an inside jobbity job?
Jim: “backs” “away” slowly.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome.
The tree is four cars down from you.
Imagine you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Imagine...
...you are in a traffic jam though. You get out of your car...
...and you look at a tree down the road in the direction you came frome. The tree is four cars down from you. Later on someone asks you where your car was in relation to the tree...you could say "four cars back." The reason is because you are using cars as a measurement of distance, not as position in line.
Mobertermy, this is a classic example of your problem. You start from a conclusion.
Which is exactly what you are doing in regards to Cissell.You then re-interpret every witness statement so that it supports that conclusion, even if it's necessary in the process to invert the most obvious meaning of the statement.
I don't have a conclusion. I literally can just post what the witnesses say? that's all I am doing. If you and CIT want to try and twist their statements that is your business. But don't try and pin that on me.Finally, you conclude that every witness statement supports your conclusion.
Wrong again Davey. Once again, I start with what the witnesses say. The cab driver said the photographs weren't right, that was my starting point.It's the same approach to witness statements that you take to photographic evidence: start from the conclusion, then force the evidence to fit it, however much you need to distort it in order to do so.
The bolded sentence is the key to your misunderstanding. The minute you insert the term "back" in the "four cars from" statement, you're no longer describing distance alone. You have now provided a positional descriptor into the sentence describing where you were located in relation to the object in question.
All I do is report what the witnesses say.
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