My position is that the case against Oswald for the murder of JFK is weak, circumstantial, and tainted, and cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Iacoletti,
Earlier in this thread, you replied to an Ostensible Lone Nutter (who doubted that the bad guys would have allowed Oswald to venture outside where he could be caught on film or noticed by other people) by glibly suggesting that Oswald was framed after-the-fact, and that if he
hadn't gone to work that morning, or if the bad guys
had noticed his doing jumping jacks or some-such thing in full sunlight, that the bad guys could just as easily have framed some other TSBD employee, instead.
Am I correct?
-- MWT
