Right, so massive evidence that autopsy photos F3, F5, F6, and F7 have been doctored is what you call "diversion."
Well, since I don't think they were doctored and you CTs haven't proven otherwise, it is diversion.
In your brain, massive evidence that the large head wound was in the back of the head is "diversion." Your only other answer to all this evidence is that "they were all mistaken."
Critics' opinions can be mistaken. Photos and the Zapruder film (all authentic) are more reliable. An example, since you brought it up, is the "back-of-the-head" witnesses:
The McAdams site has been tracking this for years, comparing critics' claims with actual evidence.
Dealey Plaza | | Link |
Photographic Evidence | | Link |
Parkland and Bethesda | | Link |
And, uh, just FYI, I copied and pasted only a few lines of that long list of evidence. I typed most of it.
You should take a few writing courses;
Like making your font size bigger than everyone else?
learn a little English. While you're at it, get someone to explain to you the difference between "imply" and "infer," because you don't seem to know the difference.
Mr. Decorum.
Now, the paragraph you quote and the paragraph before it were summary/closing paragraphs. Yes, I was aware that I had mentioned the items in the second summary paragraph earlier in my long reply, but I had not yet mentioned them in my closing. I guess you could not distinguish between the body of my reply and the closing/summary.
I notice you still have not tried to defend your comical statement that Humes did not need to measure the entry wound in the skull and only glanced at it. How long have you been studying this case? A few weeks? This is the kind of nonsense that one would expect from a newcomer who had only read a handful of books on the case.
I'm still waiting for you to produce a measurement of the bared-bone skull. Maybe the autopsy report, WC or HSCA. Your idea that "corresponding" automatically means he would have measured the bone wound as well doesn't cut it. Not when Humes is telling the Commission:
"When we reflected the scalp, there was a through and through
defect corresponding with the wound in the scalp. This wound
had to us the characteristics of a wound of entrance for the
following reason: The defect in the outer table was oval in outline,
quite similar to the defect in the skin."
Nothing about a ruler being used to measure the skull wound. It was "quite similar", meaning in appearance and location on the head.
One reason that autopsy doctors have to carefully study bullet holes in skulls is to examine them for beveling, chipping, etc. One reason that pathologists have to measure bullet holes in skulls is that the scalp hole and the skull hole will not always correspond.
We both know why you are straining and reaching so badly here: You simply cannot afford to admit that Humes measured the skull hole. Nor can you admit that his use of the term "corresponding wound" was common forensic verbiage to say that the skull hole was the same size as the scalp hole.
They actually teach that "corresponding" means confirmed to the micro-millimeter in forensic pathology courses? Gee, who knew.
This is all too mindful of your claim that the President's shirt "bunched in perfect millimeter-for-millimeter concert with the coat".
You can't afford to admit these things because this would mean that the rear head entry wound was not made by a 6.5 mm missile.
And you want to falsely have people believe the scalp measurements were identical to skull measurements never made. That way you can disingenuously claim that a 6.5mm bullet couldn't have caused the skull inshoot.
And I would bet good money that six months from now, if someone were to post another thread on this issue, you would repeat the same nonsensical claims and just hope that nobody viewing the thread knew better.
Well, a few folks around here are certainly on to you.