29-06-2013, 09:02 PM
Gordon
You claim a problem with others' reading comprehension yet won't read the analysis upon which you pronounce your predictable thumbs-down.
Would you save bandwidth and use "ibid" instead?
Anthony
I read your analysis when it was 295 pages and found it very useful for a list of reasons including but not limited to:
It returns to the event Allen Dulles found most damaging, that of Dr. Malcolm Perry's description of the throat wound.
It addresses the suspicious manufacture of a replacement or of replacements for the windshield on the 25th reported by Whitaker (in a position to know).
It combines the known phenomenon of JFK throwing his hands up to his throat (I won't agree he did not) and that hole which the authorities refer to as the Scottish play.
David
Your most recent query was thought-provoking indeed, we have the front seat agents holding their hands up.
At 12:35 pm it was not to block the glaring Western sun.
I might add that all the speculative lay person's worry to the contrary notwithstanding we are not dealing with clumsy hunters shooting themselves navigating Farmer Brown's fence--
--but the elite military and criminal cleaners not to mention the world-class assassins available to say a Clay Shaw associate of the OAS and the model for The Day of the Jackal.
It is quite productive to pursue all aspects of the assassination on the section with such a description.
And is it not ironic that we deal with the Unspeakable which would first shoot the martyred president in the throat.
You claim a problem with others' reading comprehension yet won't read the analysis upon which you pronounce your predictable thumbs-down.
Would you save bandwidth and use "ibid" instead?
Anthony
I read your analysis when it was 295 pages and found it very useful for a list of reasons including but not limited to:
It returns to the event Allen Dulles found most damaging, that of Dr. Malcolm Perry's description of the throat wound.
It addresses the suspicious manufacture of a replacement or of replacements for the windshield on the 25th reported by Whitaker (in a position to know).
It combines the known phenomenon of JFK throwing his hands up to his throat (I won't agree he did not) and that hole which the authorities refer to as the Scottish play.
David
Your most recent query was thought-provoking indeed, we have the front seat agents holding their hands up.
At 12:35 pm it was not to block the glaring Western sun.
I might add that all the speculative lay person's worry to the contrary notwithstanding we are not dealing with clumsy hunters shooting themselves navigating Farmer Brown's fence--
--but the elite military and criminal cleaners not to mention the world-class assassins available to say a Clay Shaw associate of the OAS and the model for The Day of the Jackal.
It is quite productive to pursue all aspects of the assassination on the section with such a description.
And is it not ironic that we deal with the Unspeakable which would first shoot the martyred president in the throat.