grunion
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2003
- Messages
- 11,498
Like many self-proclaimed "skeptics," I've long believed that the Warren Commission Report was preposterous and a combination of lazy thinking by some members and a conscious effort to undermine the truth as to what happened to JFK by others.
I think that feeling derives from the credo that one should look at the simplest, most obvious explanation for something and scrutinize it. If it holds water, fine, uphold it as the "correct" explanation until new evidence indicates otherwise. Then go for the next simplest explanation and afford it the exact same treatment.
And in the case of the JFK assassination, the simplest explanation is the lone gunman one. Under scrutiny, though, it faces a lot of challenges as to its simplicity, the most compelling in my opinion being the "Single Bullet" issue. Unfortunately the Warren Commission's entire case seems to rest on the apparent supposition that a single bullet passed in and out of Kennedy's neck, in and out of Connally's chest, in and out of Connally's wrist, and into Connally's thigh, causing considerable damage throughout, all while the two victims were sitting in a position to make the bullet have had to perform acrobatics in mid-air.
We look at the challenges that that one bullet could have cause so much havoc and deem it impossible and declare that case closed, and move on to the conspiracy theory.
And then we go down that path for awhile and find equally improbable assertions or uncritical acceptance of certain disconnected bits of evidence as a "compelling case" strung together more by paranoia than by a critical review of the evidence. So we seek other explanations.
And then we're off in the realm of aliens and Ley Lines and Nessie and we're back with the Warren Commission, implausable as it may be.
Normally an exercise in critical thinking when examining two equally improbable versions of an event is to go to the question of motive of those relaying the facts in the case. On one hand we have a government commission whose interests were to calm down the public that there was not a larger conspiracy at play and that the real assassins were not somewhere still in our midst. On the other hand we have theorists that either want to sell books or somehow prove that our government cannot be trusted to provide us with the truth.
I tend to agree with that point of the conspiracy theorists, actually. But they are just so quick to jump into the most outlandish conspiracies that I am very hesitant indeed to cast my lot with them.
What's a skeptic to do? I know I need to constantly challenge my initial assertions as apparently contradictory evidence arrives to refute it. It is indeed a refreshing and fun thing to do, especially with those notions I thought to be irrefutable.
I think that feeling derives from the credo that one should look at the simplest, most obvious explanation for something and scrutinize it. If it holds water, fine, uphold it as the "correct" explanation until new evidence indicates otherwise. Then go for the next simplest explanation and afford it the exact same treatment.
And in the case of the JFK assassination, the simplest explanation is the lone gunman one. Under scrutiny, though, it faces a lot of challenges as to its simplicity, the most compelling in my opinion being the "Single Bullet" issue. Unfortunately the Warren Commission's entire case seems to rest on the apparent supposition that a single bullet passed in and out of Kennedy's neck, in and out of Connally's chest, in and out of Connally's wrist, and into Connally's thigh, causing considerable damage throughout, all while the two victims were sitting in a position to make the bullet have had to perform acrobatics in mid-air.
We look at the challenges that that one bullet could have cause so much havoc and deem it impossible and declare that case closed, and move on to the conspiracy theory.
And then we go down that path for awhile and find equally improbable assertions or uncritical acceptance of certain disconnected bits of evidence as a "compelling case" strung together more by paranoia than by a critical review of the evidence. So we seek other explanations.
And then we're off in the realm of aliens and Ley Lines and Nessie and we're back with the Warren Commission, implausable as it may be.
Normally an exercise in critical thinking when examining two equally improbable versions of an event is to go to the question of motive of those relaying the facts in the case. On one hand we have a government commission whose interests were to calm down the public that there was not a larger conspiracy at play and that the real assassins were not somewhere still in our midst. On the other hand we have theorists that either want to sell books or somehow prove that our government cannot be trusted to provide us with the truth.
I tend to agree with that point of the conspiracy theorists, actually. But they are just so quick to jump into the most outlandish conspiracies that I am very hesitant indeed to cast my lot with them.
What's a skeptic to do? I know I need to constantly challenge my initial assertions as apparently contradictory evidence arrives to refute it. It is indeed a refreshing and fun thing to do, especially with those notions I thought to be irrefutable.