You need enough to persuade 12 to acquit.
I agree. If the victim had been someone other than the President, there would be no issue. The idea that a nobody like Oswald could change history does not sit well with some people.
I agree. If the victim had been someone other than the President, there would be no issue. The idea that a nobody like Oswald could change history does not sit well with some people.Not everybody is that shallow. I don't care either way. Oswald either killed Kennedy or there was a conspiracy (in which Oswald must have played some part) to kill the President. It's water under the bridge. If Oswald was indeed the lone killer, then so be it, but I want to see the conclusive evidence that confirms it and I don't see it. There are way too many unanswered questions, too many "mistakes" by investigators, too many problems with physical evidence that are ignored and too many assumptions not supported by any evidence whatsoever.
So, don't give me any crap about being an Oswald defender, just because I can't believe he could have changed history. That's complete BS. I frequently play devil's advocate to scrutinize the evidence and the silly claims made by LNs and what I get back is just as frequently disappointing and unconvincing.
If I remember correctly, it was Former Deputy Chief Counsel of the HSCA, Robert Tanenbaum, who once said that if you had taken this evidence into court, Oswald would never have been convicted. Based on what I know now, I think he was right.
Btw, I could just as easily argue that some can't handle the possibility that, in America, there could be a conspiracy to murder a President. I can practically hear them say it; something like that happens in third world countries but never in America.