HSienzant
Philosopher
2 things... 1. Kleins did not run out of stock on the 36" until September of '63. 2. Kleins did not start selling the 40" until April '63 which is after the time the WC said LHO bought the rifle.
These assertions of yours are based on what evidence?
Hank, your imagination is ripe! I took the liberty to highlight your inferences and WAGs. Not one of the speculations is supported by evidence outside of your fertile story telling mind.
And I am sure you can provide documentation to support your guess. The only person who can speak to LHO frame of mind is LHO... not you.
Tell me what part of the below you didn't understand:
I was once asked: [emphasis added]
(a) why Oswald bothered to fashion a paper sack out of wrapping paper from the Depository since the rifle was already wrapped within a blanket, and
(b) if he was going to that trouble, why didn't he make the sack long enough to contain the assembled rifle?
I was asked to speculate on Oswald's frame of mind. I did. Your complain goes nowhere.
My speculations were based on the available evidence, such as Oswald ordering a 36" rifle and being shipped a 40" one, which helps account for the 38" package found at his place of work with his prints on it. Again, thinking he owned a 36" rifle, he made a 38" package out of Depository paper and not having measured his rifle at any time, was no doubt surprised to find his 40" weapon didn't fit in his 38" bag. I also explained why he left the blanket behind appearing undisturbed.
If you have better speculations as to Oswald's frame of mind, let's hear them.
Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
Excellent Straw Men!
You apparently don't understand what a straw man argument is. Yours is, as I asked about what Frazier or Randle said not at all. Instead of answering the question, you changed the subject to those two witnesses and talk about their estimates. I am asking conspiracy theorists to fill in the gaps in typical conspiracy arguments. The fact that you don't even try and instead switch to something you'd rather discuss is most telling.
Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
First, a Witness that saw LHO carry the sack into the TSBD is required.
We have two, and you go on to mention them both. But both have nothing to do with the question I asked.
Why did the conspirators, who presumably planted the 40-inch weapon on the sixth floor, make a 38-inch sack and plant that instead of planting a 42-inch sack? Didn't they know the length of the rifle they were framing Oswald for owning?
Buell Wesley Frazier witnessed LHO bringing a sack approximately 27" long with him that morning but not a 38" sack. Buell's sister also witnessed seeing a sack the size that her brother saw... outside of that Nobody saw LHO carry a 38" sack into the building that day or any other day. The WC said Frazier was mistaken on the length and then they said his sister was also mistaken yet the cornerstone of the WC saying LHO brought the rifle to work is based on Buell's and his sister's testimony (except for their description of what they say).
You're bringing up points first raised 51 years ago by Mark Lane. They weren't sufficient then, they aren't sufficient now. Please tell us why you expect witnesses to be 100% accurate on the dimensions of something they never handled, never measured, and only estimated the dimensions of. Mark Lane never did enunciate his reasons for quibbling over the estimates, nor tell us what estimates he would accept. If Frazier had estimated 33 inches or 44 inches, would both those estimates likewise exclude Oswald's weapon, as the estimates are too short or too long to be a 38" package? What about 37 inches or 39 inches? What are the upper and lower boundaries you'll accept on estimates?
And if you're going to persist in arguing it wasn't a rifle that Oswald brought into the Depository, please tell us:
(a) what was in the package Oswald brought to the Depository that morning,
(b) what happened to what was in the blanket stored in the Paine garage,
(c) where'd the 'whatever' that Oswald brought into the Depository wound up,
(d) why was the sack found on the sixth floor determined to be long enough to contain the disassembled rifle,
(e) why that sack found on the sixth floor was made in the recent past with Depository paper,
(f) why it had Oswald's prints on it,
(g) How did Oswald's rifle get into the Depository, and
(h) please, tell us why Oswald denied in custody he brought any long sack to the Depository that morning, going as far as claiming Frazier must be mistaken and thinking of some other time?
Try to advance a coherent argument here actually responding to the points I raise. Bonus points if you can actually cite any evidence to support your claims.
So the only 2 people who can put LHO with a package were told they were wrong (the size of the package) by a Committee that never saw the package.
Along with the commission, Oswald was likewise insisting they were wrong, denying he brought any long package to work that day, claiming he only brought his lunch. Do you agree with Oswald here, or are you going to insist he was being less than truthful? If the former, explain why those two witnesses thought they saw a long package. If the latter, explain what Oswald was trying to hide or deceive the police about.
The 36" rifle broken down still had a measurement of 34.8".
Meaningless, since you haven't argued Oswald brought a 36" rifle to the Depository, nor have you argued he was shipped a 36" rifle.
Hank, this is classic, you were complaining about Micah dismissing evidence when it didn't fit his outcome and this is exactly what the WC did. So really your question means nothing; it is only a Red Herring.
Bunk. The Warren Commission dismissed estimates of the length of Oswald's paper sack. Please tell us what are the upper and lower limits of the estimates you would accept. Hopefully you understand neither Wes Frazier or his sister, Linnie Mae Randle, measured the package they saw in Oswald's possession, and thus, some leeway is allowed for them to err in their estimates. Yes? Or are you going to insist that if the witnesses said anything but 38" they were wrong and the erroneous estimate eliminates Oswald?
How did the blanket in the Paine garage which presumably normally contained the rifle Oswald didn't own or ever possess, happen to wind up empty on 11/22/63? If it never contained a rifle, what did it contain when Marina looked inside it and when Michael Paine moved it?
This is another ridiculous question; it is nothing but speculation within a circular argument.
You just dismissed the argument without telling us what was wrong with it. It isn't speculation as Marina Oswald and Michael Paine both testified to handling the blanket in the Paine garage and either seeing something inside (Marina said the butt of a rifle) and feeling something heavy inside (Michael thought there was 'camping equipment' made of iron, based on the weight).
It's likewise not a circular argument, as it relies on those eyewitnesses testimony just to establish that something was inside the blanket prior to the assassination, and that something was determined to be missing a few hours after the assassination. Tell us what was missing and where it went. If you could be so kind.
In order to believe what Hank is saying you need to believe:
That Klein's provided a rifle that had not yet been advertised yet
for sale and continued to advertise a firearm that they no longer had.
More bunk. You don't understand the real world, and publishing, apparently. They understood they would run out of the supply of the shorter weapon and started shipping the longer one, so they modified the advertisement. Remember that the date appearing on any magazine (go check your closest newsstand) is pre-dated so they don't appear out of date sitting on the rack -- that is, the April issue (containing the updated advertisement with the 40" weapon) appeared on newsstands in March, not in April. And was in the process of being prepared in February or sometime in early March at the latest. And Klein's needed some leeway to get the new advertisement to the various publisher(s) so it could be included in the issue being distributed in March (the April issue), so they might have changed the advertisement in early March or late February at the latest and sent it to the publisher then. You don't know the lead times they were working under, and you appear to think the issue marked "April" was actually prepared, printed, and distributed in April, and contained an advertisement that reflected Klein's April inventory. It wasn't. It couldn't. It would be distributed in March, and prepared before that.
My explanations account for what Oswald was actually shipped, according to Klein's records: a 40" rifle bearing the serial number C2766. Your complaint about the April issue is nonsense, as it doesn't take into account that Kleins was already shipping a 40" rifle in March of 1963.
And you still can't answer the simplest questions, like the one I asked here:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=11817782&postcount=3255
Hank
PS: At most, the issue is Reasonable Doubt, not beyond all doubt. But to understand Reasonable Doubt, you must be able to reason and understand what the word reasonable means. Reasonable doesn't mean insisting estimates must match the actual dimensions, for starters.
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