Sorry John. I did not intend to burst your bubble or "babble" about you! I was making an objective observation on the graphics within the composite image that was embedded in your post. How often images can be put together, a choice quote and the word "BS" all combined with a randomly assorted set of images to form an opinion. This then can be used to mislead or sway public opinion. It contains just one chosen picture of JFK's head? The rest are added for flavor. Whoever put it together certainly would not have used an initial statement Surgeon McClelland offered in 1964 in the WC report if the goal wasn't to discredit him and call him a fraud. He doesn't have a lot of skin in the game or does he! But then again, who does? To me, he presented an honest, nonpolitical statement and tried to voice it.
I apologize as I did not to intend to evoke negative feelings or criticism against you. As one can see, one picture is like a thousand words. In my opinion, McClelland's original observation made within the WC report has more weight than words, pictures and diagrams added or introduced 20 or even 50 years later. If we look at how many witnesses changed statements over the course of years or altered their opinions, it is disheartening and yet it is reality as memories fade. A good example is interviews of Nellie Connally who eventually in interviews saved her husband by closing off the sucking wound in her husband's chest so he could breathe. Moorman and Hill were certainly good for rabbit holes and trails as well and no more reliable witnesses as time passed.
McClelland's observations in the original WC report published within a year were prima facie and about as reliable and expert as you could get at the time without further evidence. His observations were made of the POTUS and was done in a matter of 30 minutes and was from the point of view of trying to do everything he could to save this man's life. Doctors are trained quickly to observe, assess and certainly do everything they can quickly to achieve that. He never changed his opinion and this first impression lasted for his entire life more than 50 years later! He did admit that the neck entrance hole was incorrectly assumed to lead to the blowout hole in the skull. He admitted that he and his team of doctors did not know about the hole between the shoulder blade and neck region at the back. To me that is honesty and comes from a man of integrity who can admit when he is wrong. He never suggested any hypothesis or misleading evidence during his questioning at that time either.
In contrast, someone like Jacqueline Kennedy was never interviewed or even asked what her opinion was for the WC report. It likely would not have fit their narrative either. She certainly could have told you where the shot came from. McClelland certainly felt the pressure from his interrogator and you could sense that in his responses during the questioning in the WC report. Read it and see for yourself. Are you investigating and seeking answers or are you making sure questions lead to the answers you want and required for closure? Look at his testimony from page 30 and on and you can feel the sense of where the questioning is leading in his statements! The man questioning was a lawyer, McClelland was an expert and surgeon and was being coerced - not a mere family physician either! I sense that tone and I am sure you can too, when you read it!
https://www.history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh6/pdf/WH6_McClelland.pdfThe lawyers were not questioning to seek information but rather questioning to make sure their shot from behind narrative was being supported. You can even see how they discredited his testimony to ask if he turned the body over to look for other wounds as if he was doing an autopsy first and not trying to save his life. Certainly tried to minimize him. The brain was blown out he said and he could see that from the top side! All in the hairline or back! Where did the bullet end up or fragments go to?
"...the parietal bone was protruded up through the scalp and seemed to be fractured almost along its right posterior half." It didn't seem you had to flip a body over to see that wound! McClelland gave a very descriptive picture of what he saw at the time. It was very fresh in his memory and his opinion of exit or entrance never changed 50 years later. Large wounds are exit wounds, small wounds are entrance wounds. That was his professional educated opinion and he stuck with it. If you watch the documentary movie, you will also see that someone from within the autopsy group in the room at Bethseda had suggested that there was another entrance hole coinciding to the large hole at the back that was overlooked and went unreported. Of course once the brain disappeared and the autopsy done and released by military doctors, the fix was pretty well in. Forensic pathologists and experts these military doctors in charge were not. They didn't even trace the bullet from the back shoulder area to the throat. They took x-rays and found no bullet and so assumed the path leading to the throat went straight out and through Connally's chest, wrist and thigh. Were they perplexed when they couldn't push a rod through to the throat from his back? Forensic experts they were!
I suggest watching the movie and, if you didn't watch it yet, maybe it isn't necessary as your opinion has already been formed and won't be changed anyway! One thing I did learn was that Jacqueline climbed onto the back to pick up a large piece of brain material and then retreated back to the car. I always thought she was fleeing the scene to protect herself. A bullet from behind would have pushed all that brain matter onto Connally and the front seat in a forward manner. Instead, it went back and some even onto the motorcycle policeman at the rear driver's side......Jacqueline had brain matter on her dress as well! She gave the retrieved part to one of the doctors. Which way was the wind blowing?!
Oh well! We all have our opinions of shot origin and whether it involved one lone nut or multiple shooters (front, back or both) which is the big question to answer!