Martin's endless contrarian game is to frame a discussion on reconstructing some unknowable event and interpreting any possible outcome in a way most favorable to Oswald. For example, the movements of individuals in the building including Oswald down to a precise second. No one, not even the actual participants, had that granular level of detail in their recollection of events. This scenario, however, allows Martin to go on and on and on as though he has some point to make.
The fact remains that the evidence places Oswald on the 6th floor at the moment of the assassination and then in the 2nd floor lunchroom when Baker arrives. If Oswald was in both places, then it is implicit that we know he moved from point A to B without having to prove the unknowable second by second movements of everyone involved. The best evidence that it could be done is that it was done. Just because we can't know all the details doesn't mean we can't reach any conclusions. All the pedantic, selective nitpicking of witness testimony to construct a narrative that he desires does not negate the evidence. This is where he asks me to prove that Oswald was on the 6th floor at 12:30 as though that evidence is not widely known for nearly six decades. He rejects it but is too cowardly to admit that he is a CTer who believes Oswald was framed. Rather, like Inspector Clouseau, he suspects everyone and he suspects no one. Round and round it goes.
There he is again; dismissing everything he doesn't like and pushing the same old lies, for which, of course, he has not a shred of evidence.
It seems that Richard now actually believes the clear and obvious lies he has been repeating time after time.
The fact remains that the evidence places Oswald on the 6th floor at the moment of the assassination and then in the 2nd floor lunchroom when Baker arrives. There is
no evidence that places Oswald on the 6th floor. Period! Your imagination is not evidence!
If Oswald was in both places, then it is implicit that we know he moved from point A to B without having to prove the unknowable second by second movements of everyone involved.The best evidence that it could be done is that it was done. Hilarious, coming from the guy who can't prove that it actually was done and can't even explain how it could have been done. It's really pathetic.
If what's in your imagination is "the best evidence" than you've got nothing.
This is where he asks me to prove that Oswald was on the 6th floor at 12:30 as though that evidence is not widely known for nearly six decades. If that evidence really exists (which it doesn't) and is widely known for 6 decades, it should be easy to produce, so why are you still failing to do so?
Wash, rinse and repeat.....