[quohttps://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/Themes/FadedCurve/images/bbc/img.gifte author=Dan O'meara link=topic=4212.msg161930#msg161930 date=1742434482]
If I was attributing a quote to you I would have put it in quotation marks.
But I didn't.
For anyone unfamiliar with John's 'all colours turn white in daylight' theory just go to "The Man On The 6th Floor" thread where you will see it treated with the contempt it deserves.
In short, four of the five eyewitnesses who described the man on the 6th floor have him wearing an open-necked sports shirt that is so light coloured it almost appears white. Almost but not quite. This is a massive problem for those, like John, who believe it was Oswald who took the shots because Oswald wasn't wearing such a shirt that day.
The assassin was wearing clothes that Oswald wasn't.
It's just one piece of evidence among many supporting the view that it wasn't Oswald who actually took the shots.
So, how does John deal with this inconvenient piece of evidence?
His method is to take an overexposed photograph of Oswald that has the sun shining on some parts of his shirt. The part of the shirt that has the sun shining on it makes the colour of the shirt look almost white because the picture is overexposed.
He then argues that this is why the shirt the eyewitnesses saw the man on the 6th floor wearing looked almost white - because the sun was shining on it. He tries to argue that the effect of sunlight on colour in an overexposed photograph is the same effect seen in normal sunlight. He is, in effect, arguing that daylight turns all colours white.
You might think I'm joking but I'm not.
Anyone interested in this nonsense can find it at "The Man On The 6th Floor" thread.
[/quote]
...sports shirt that is so light coloured it almost appears white. Almost but not quite.
Interesting so you admit your quote of what I supposedly said 'all colours turn white in daylight' was a lie! Despicable!
Brennan who got the best look for a length of time describes Khaki coloured.
Mr. BELIN. Do you remember what kind of clothes he was wearing?
Mr. BRENNAN. Light colored clothes, more of a khaki color.And for the nth time Oswald's shirt appeared a light Khaki when exposed to the sun.


JohnM