You, now, seem to have backed away from your initial conclusion that Oswald wouldn't have gotten the TSBD job if Paine and Randle didn't have coffee together and that this in turn, according to you, meant : No "placement" means no "plot". There was no conspiracy.
No, I have not backed away (or even seemed to) from the statement in the title of my Subject:
Re: No coffee for Randle, no job for Oswald -- at the TSBD
You're saying that... with no justification.
I don't give a damn about the title of the thread. Anybody who reads the opening post knows exactly what your flawed
"No "placement" means no "plot". There was no conspiracy" conclusion was. And that was only the first one of several flawed conclusions that followed.
Oh by the way; you appear to have intentionally left out my challenge to you:
Explain how the conclusion [No coffee for Randle, no job for Oswald -- at the TSBD] is flawed. No "thumb-suckers", just proof. Saying that Oswald "could" have learned about a TSBD job some other way is not proof. You need a witness who claimed to have told Lee Oswald (after Paine/Marina told...) about a job at the TSBD. Additionally, that Lee Oswald said in reply--words to the effect: "Thanks, I already know about it" Got that have you?
That's not a challenge. It's not even a fair question. Instead it's you, once again, playing games and trying to let your flawed opinion prevail by not only shifting the burden of proof but also raising the bar in a completely absurd, unreasonable manner. Asking for an explanation is one thing, but subsequently adding on a demand for proof and then even qualifying in advance what kind of proof (i.e. a witness statement) would only be acceptable to you exposes your bad faith.
Nobody in their right mind needs proof to understand and accept that Oswald could have heard about the TSBD job from somebody else. The fact that he didn't doesn't mean it could not have happened. Asking for proof and even witness statements for an event that obviously could have happened but likely didn't is pure asinine.
If I were like you, I could easily ask you for conclusive proof that Oswald could not have heard about the TSBD job from somebody else, because that's what you need to believe to maintain your own flawed conclusion. Well, just out of curiosity, do you have such conclusive proof? Or is it one rule for you and another for everybody else?
To credibly dispute the statement in the Subject title, you need more than a "could have".
Speculative guesswork like "could haves" are meaningless. Anything "could" happen. I could win the lottery next week, but wont. People will not take you (or me) seriously, if we claim "something" for which there is no evidence. That's why I'm not taking your assertions seriously. I will if you:
Name a witness who claimed to have told Lee Oswald (after Paine/Marina told...) about a job at the TSBD. Additionally, that Lee Oswald said in reply--words to the effect: "Thanks, I already know about it".
Go ahead.
And once again you expose how disingenuous you truly are because you are implicitely saying that you won't take my assertions seriously no matter what. What you ask for is completely idioctic and you know full well (at least you would know, if you had a functional brain) that there isn't even a slight possibility that anybody could know that, even if it did happen. Nobody was with Oswald 24/7 and thus there is no way anybody could comply with that "request".
However, just in case you want to go there, just because nobody can provide that "evidence" doesn't mean it didn't or couldn't have happened. It only means that nobody knows about it and it also doesn't mean that you are right. Your conclusions are just as flawed as before and the argue otherwise would be just another demonstration of your bad faith.
People will not take you (or me) seriously, if we claim "something" for which there is no evidence.Remember this?
Incidentally: If Oswald does not get a job at the TSBD, President Kennedy leaves Dallas alive. Don't give me that "a backup plan was in the works" nonsense. We can only deal with the historical record. Accordingly, "No coffee for Randle, no job for Oswald -- at the TSBD" means that President Kennedy would have lived to complete his first term and probably would have been elected to a second term as President of the United States.
What's good for the goose is good for the gander. There is no evidence that Kennedy would have left Dallas alive if Oswald had not gotten his job at the TSBD. Yet you claimed exactly that, so now prove it! And don't give me just your opinion. You need provide actual proof that your claim is true.