I am in law enforcement. I was in a shooting once and never realized the officer beside me, standing two feet away, was also shooting. I have no recollection of the sound of his gunshots.
Why am I picturing this when I read your post?
Fess up man: You and your "partner" are really working for Marsellus Wallace, aren't you?


----
Ok, to everyone else, and on a more serious note: It's amazing how conspiracy peddlers of any stripe - not just 9/11 truthers, but
any event that has a conspiracy fantasy made out of it - don't recognize the inherent problem with witness testimony and refuse to deal with it when that problem is identified. They cite the minutiae of witness statements and fail to see the real trends behind the aggregation of them. And that, I feel, is a direct result of wanting to find evidence that fits a conclusion instead of gathering evidence with the intent of
forming a conclusion.
In short, they don't know
how to properly consider eyewitness accounts. It's maddening. But it's also insight into how conspiracy fantasists totally don't get how empiricism and evidence based research should work.
Take a hypothetical shooting scenario: Witnesses may differ on whether he had a revolver or an semiautomatic. They may differ on which hand he held the gun in, or how many shots he took. They may disagree on whether he stood still or was moving when he shot. But you'd know that:
- If all of them were making single handed motions while describing the shooting, chances are strong they're all still referring to a handgun, as opposed to a rifle or a shotgun.
- If all of them identified the general direction that he came from, it doesn't matter if he came out of the door of a store, an alley, a car... he came from that direction, and further research can concentrate over there. As opposed to him coming from the opposite direction, at least when he started shooting.
- If they're all describing the shooter as "him", it's either a well-disguised woman, or it's genuinely a man. And obviously, the witnesses are working off of clues that indicate a male shooter, so you can at least temporarily disregard any person on the scene that was wearing a dress, looked like a bikini model, etc. Unless witness testimony arises that makes you to look at people wearing a dress, people that looked like a Vogue model, etc. you don't waste time investigating those leads. It's fishing at best and distorting the narrative at worst.
Evidence works in aggregation. People obsessing over contradictions in testimony don't account for poor witness recollection, outright witness mistakes/errors in recollection, etc., and they don't know how to properly consider evidence within context. But that's of the utmost importance in considering witness testimony: Contextualizing it with other verifiable evidence. If radar and other electronic data, the vast majority of witnesses, the crash investigators, etc. all provide evidence that a jetliner crashed in Shankesville, it's useless to continue to hammer on the minute details of, say, Susan McElwain's testimony about a military-looking jet (a twin-rear engined, rear "spoiler", twin-"fin" one??). Regardless of what she saw, Flight 93 is identified through other evidence, and the only credible part of her testimony is the stuff that's not outright contradicted (such as the explosion upon impact). She may indeed have seen a small military passenger jet (the
Air Force C-20, for example is indeed white and does roughly fit the description; so does the civillian
Dassault Falcon 20, one of which
was confirmed in - in fact, ordered into - the area, albeit not in the same timeframe that McElwain discussed). But even if what she saw wasn't FL93 nor a Falcon 20, no one can blatantly strip off context and ignore other evidence to raise her testimony to a level that trumps the conclusion reached by other evidence. Doing so uses witness testimony
improperly. And doesn't value it the way it should: In the context of all evidence.
Witness testimony is important, but it's used in all the wrong ways by truthers. Misuse like what they perform is more abuse than anything else. And that's simply bad.