EventHorizon
Atheist Tergiversator
Sour grapes.
Cool, he's moved on from meat products. On to bad fruit.
Sour grapes.
Dr Marion Jenkins from his signed statement, Warren Report, P. 530
"There was a great laceration on the right side of the head (temporal and occipital)... so that there was herniation and laceration of the great areas of the brain, even to the extent that the cerebellum had protruded from the wound." -- M.T. Jenkins M.D. Warren Report, Page 530.
Here is a very good treatment of Jenkins' various statements. Robert, like Gary Aguilar, ignores everything he doesn't care for (such as the mention of the wound on the right side of the head in the very statement Robert quotes above).
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/aguilar/agg1.txt
Of course, the fact that Jenkins said the wound was on the right side of the head in plain English doesn't faze Robert one bit. Nor that the wound extended from the temporal to the occipital region of the head.
His dishonest treatment of Jenkins' statement has been pointed out to him numerous times in the past.
Robert's typical response in the past was the use a bigger font for the mention of "occipital" and "cerebellum" (he would love to make the mention of "temporal" and "right side of the head" disappear completely, but he's limited in that regard).
Let's see if he can actually rebut any of this or if he resorts to his rebuttal by font size methodology.
Hank
Here is a very good treatment of Jenkins' various statements. Robert, like Gary Aguilar, ignores everything he doesn't care for (such as the mention of the wound on the right side of the head in the very statement Robert quotes above).
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/aguilar/agg1.txt
Of course, the fact that Jenkins said the wound was on the right side of the head in plain English doesn't faze Robert one bit. Nor that the wound extended from the temporal to the occipital region of the head.
His dishonest treatment of Jenkins' statement has been pointed out to him numerous times in the past.
Robert's typical response in the past was the use a bigger font for the mention of "occipital" and "cerebellum" (he would love to make the mention of "temporal" and "right side of the head" disappear completely, but he's limited in that regard).
Let's see if he can actually rebut any of this or if he resorts to his rebuttal by font size methodology.
Hank
I cant believe there are still people in this thread not onto Robert yet.Roberts problem is his witnesses can be proven to be right, but his understanding of their testemony is utterly wrong.
Here is a very good treatment of Jenkins' various statements. Robert, like Gary Aguilar, ignores everything he doesn't care for (such as the mention of the wound on the right side of the head in the very statement Robert quotes above).
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/aguilar/agg1.txt
Of course, the fact that Jenkins said the wound was on the right side of the head in plain English doesn't faze Robert one bit. Nor that the wound extended from the temporal to the occipital region of the head.
His dishonest treatment of Jenkins' statement has been pointed out to him numerous times in the past.
Robert's typical response in the past was the use a bigger font for the mention of "occipital" and "cerebellum" (he would love to make the mention of "temporal" and "right side of the head" disappear completely, but he's limited in that regard).
Let's see if he can actually rebut any of this or if he resorts to his rebuttal by font size methodology.
Hank
Here's my citation ---
http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.php?showtopic=16949&st=45&p=214702&#entry214702
Josiah Thompson writes:
"It is one of the oldest mistakes in JFK research to ascribe the the sketch in Six Seconds to Dr. McClelland. I've been telling people for years that McClelland had nothing to do with the preparation of this sketch. I took a Polaroid photo of the right back of my head and sent it to a medical illustrator in Philadelphia. I included the actual text of McClelland's description of the Kennedy back of the head wound and paid the medical illustrator to draw it. Hence, it is just false that Dr. McClelland made the sketch. I never even asked him for his opinion on the sketch. The sketch then is the interpretation of a medical illustrator of what Dr. McClelland described."
And so, your point is???? Are you saying Dr. Jenkins did not really state what he stated and signed on P. 530 of the Warren Report:
Medical Witness NO. 7 -- Dr.Marian Jenkins
Dr Marion Jenkins from his signed statement, Warren Report, P. 530
"There was a great laceration on the right side fo the head (temporal and occipital)... so that there was herniation and laceration of the great areas of the brain, even to the extent that the cerebellum had protruded from the wound." -- M.T. Jenkins M.D. Warren Report, Page 530.
GENE AIKIN, MD:
"The back of the right occipitalparietal portion of his head was shattered with brain substance extruding." (WC-V6:65.)
Mr. SPECTER. With respect to the head wound, Dr. Akin, did you observe below the gaping wound which you have described any other bullet wound in the back of the head?
Dr. AKIN. No; I didn't. I could not see the back of the President's
head as such, and the right posterior neck was obscured by blood and
skull fragments and I didn't make any attempt to examine the neck. (6
H 66)
Rushing through these, aren't we?
Let's look at Dr Akin. Would help if you got his name correct for a start.
So how did he see the back of the head, when he states he couldn't really see it.?
A distinction with out a difference... apart from somebody drawing what they think a third party may have meant, with out any confirmation or validation by the third party of accuracy, is very different from a supervised and endorsed dictation.
A distinction without a difference.
...a large blow-out in the back of the head. Nuff said.
Mr. SPECTER. With respect to the head wound, Dr. Akin, did you observe below the gaping wound which you have described any other bullet wound in the back of the head?
The answer is to the question regarding any hole beneath the large gaping head wound. Back of the head is a very general term. If Dr. Akin says he saw a gaping head wound, then he saw a gaping wound. The alternative is to parse his words in such a way as to make Dr. Akin out to be a liar. -- like all of the other 40 plus medical witnesses in the Lone Nutter's contrived ideasphere. These 40 plus witnesses are virtually unanimous as to a large blow-out in the back of the head. Nuff said.
Well in my judgment at the time, what I saw was more parietal. But on the basis of this sketch, if this is what Bob McClelland saw, then it's more occipital.
When you find a repudiation of the drawing from Dr.McCelland, I'm sure you'll let us all know.
A distinction without a difference.
When you find a repudiation of the drawing from Dr.McCelland, I'm sure you'll let us all know.