The theory that some person shot JFK as you claim is hilarious. You are unable to prove anything except you just maybe as much of a blowhard as your cousin Jesse V. I'm starting to think you spent too much time watching your cousin's show for a guy who is bothered by it. You are failing miserably at persuading me to believe you are serious and you're Mr. Serious. What time do you have to be back in your cell? Fair question, right?
The theory that some person shot JFK as you claim is hilarious. I never made the claim you "claim" I made about "some person" shooting JFK. Your sentence is close to being incomprehensible.
You are unable to prove anything except you just maybe as much of a blowhard as your cousin Jesse V. I'm starting to think you spent too much time watching your cousin's show for a guy who is bothered by it.Branding me as being a relative of Jesse Ventura could be considered a "straw-man" argument. Hypocrite!!!
You are failing miserably at persuading me to believe you are serious and you're Mr. Serious. I'm not trying to persuade you that I'm "serious" or persuade you in any way.
I'm trying to get you to provide some insight into why a Mauser rifle would be on the 6th floor of the TSBD on 22 November 1963. Your lack of curiosity suggests you don't know or care to know why?
The logical mind demands an explanation as to where a declaration then leads. This a standard procedure in an investigation.
The "Mauser is suspicious/relevant" claim goes back to Mark Lane's best-selling book "Rush To Judgement" (August 1966).
Lane and other authors were either unable or unwilling to put forward a coherent, plausible explanation as to why the Mauser would be part of a JFK assassination plot.
I thought you might possess some new insight into the "whys and wherefores" of the Mauser theory backed up by evidence or even just imagination. It looks like I was overestimating your ability. However, I'm willing to be proven wrong.
What time do you have to be back in your cell? Fair question, right?Insults rather than responding to a challenge suggests an acknowledgement of defeat.