I'm waiting on John too. It seems if he can tear into a CT related issue/image(s), he does so Immediately. His failure to respond indicates he has been unable to find anything to debunk or even challenge the issue at hand. At some point, the frustration of being unable to debunk a CT posting usually produces a "cartoon" response. This is not uncommon on this Forum. Personally, I regard cartoon responses and general joke responses as the waving of a White Flag. In short, "They got nothing".
As I've said for many years, if WC apologists want us to believe that Brehm's son could have performed those movements in the time required by the Zapruder film, all they have to do is duplicate the alleged performance in a reenactment and post a video of the reenactment. This should be a simple, easy thing to do, to believe their polemic on the issue.
My OP does not even mention some of the most glaring, unsolvable conflicts between eyewitness accounts and the lone-gunman theory. Some additional examples:
-- All three autopsy doctors said there was a fragment trail that ran from the EOP entry site up to a point just above the right orbit, and the autopsy report describes this fragment trail. However, (1) even the WC recognized that JFK would have had to be leaning about 60 degrees forward for a bullet from the alleged sniper's nest to have created this fragment trail, and (2) astonishingly, no such fragment trail appears on the existing autopsy x-rays.
-- The autopsy report and the autopsy doctors never mentioned the high fragment trail, yet the trail is brazenly obvious on the lateral skull x-rays. A first-year medical student could spot it. That trail is at least 2 inches above the trail described in the autopsy report and in the autopsy doctors' other statements.
-- Numerous, and I mean numerous, eyewitness accounts document that pieces of brain tissue from JFK's brain were blown onto at least 16 surfaces, and several eyewitnesses who saw JFK's wounded head (including mortician Tom Robinson) said that at least one-quarter to over one-half of the brain was missing, as I document in my book. But, according to Vincent Bugliosi, no more than two ounces of brain tissue were missing from JFK's brain. Why did Bugliosi make this stunning claim? Because the autopsy brain photos show virtually no missing brain tissue. Dr. Baden assured Bugliosi that the brain photos showed no more than "an ounce or two" of missing brain tissue.
Moreover, the autopsy skull x-rays show that at over half of the right side of the brain was missing, in harmony with the witnesses who said that a substantial portion of the brain was blown out. Heck, Humes himself told JAMA that "two thirds of the right cerebrum had been blown away." No such damage is seen in the autopsy brain photos.
-- Every single autopsy witness who commented on the location of the rear head entry wound said it was where the autopsy doctors placed it in the autopsy report: they said it was slightly above and to the right of the EOP. But that's impossible if the autopsy brain photos are authentic, because a bullet entering at the EOP site would have torn through the cerebellum and part of the rear area of the right occipital lobe, yet the brain photos show a virtually undamaged cerebellum and right occipital lobe, as the HSCA medical experts pointed out to the autopsy doctors.
I document all these points in my book.
And on and on we could go.