Re: Betzner, Croft, Willis, Hughes....
Thank-you for reinforcing my point that in order to reconcile the early first missed shot fantasy you have to show that their evidence cannot be taken at face value. You make the point very well that one needs to provide detailed subjective interpretations of why they must have erred (rather than evidence) to show how their simple observations could all have been wrong in the same way.
That's quite a reaction. 1/4-to-1/2 second to decline to turn around and forget about how the President was.
I would suggest some people use the term "immediately" in different ways. Ready said the first shot occurred as:
"we began the approach to the Thornton Freeway"
"The shooting occurred as we were approaching the
Thornton Freeway [sign]"
Which photo better represents Ready "approaching" the Thornton sign? I would think that the Z150s/Z160s would even more so represent to Ready the beginning of the approach to the Thornton sign.
Jerry, he said he turned around to look behind him "immediately" after the first shot. Do you really think 3 seconds (z151-z199) before even beginning the turn could be considered "immediately" by anyone?
The issue is not what photo better represents Ready "approaching" the Thornton sign. He was approaching the Thornton Freeway sign up to the time he passed it, which would have been about z225 as he was about 25-30 feet behind JFK and JFK passed it about z200. There is no way to tell from just that statement how far in front of it he was. But he was definitely in front of it and moving toward it at z195.
Not a danger? Even more reason ....
Altgens....
Again, thanks for demonstrating that one cannot take Ready's or Altgens' evidence as they gave it if you want to stick to your early missed first shot fantasy (with two shots well before the midpoint between first and last).
Except how can Woodward see Jackie's face and her reaction, if the President is blocking the view by then? Also Jackie is not waving.
There you go again trying to second guess a witness' observation and say the witness did not observe what they said they observed. Woodward said:
(Dallas Morning News, Nov 24, 1963): The President was looking straight ahead and we were afraid we were afraid we would not get to see his face. But we started clapping and cheering and both he and Mrs. Kennedy turned, and smiled and waved, directly at us, it seemed. ....
As it turned out, we were almost certainly the last faces he noticed in the crowd.
After acknowledging our cheers, he faced forward again and suddenly there was a horrible, ear-shattering noise coming from behind us and a little to the right.
(24 H 520): She stated she was watching President and Mrs. KENNEDY closely and all of her group cheered loudly as they went by. Just as President and Mrs. Kennedy went by, they turned and waved at them.
The fact is that one can only see Jackie's head in the zfilm so we cannot say that she did not wave. Woodward said she waved. You were not there. She was.
And when does she see the Kennedys look around as if bewildered after the first shot if it's not when Mrs. Kennedy turns her head in the Z170s? Woodward probably could see some of Jackie's pillbox hat. The President turns his head rightward in the late-Z150s-to-early Z160s. That's about the only time we know for sure the Kennedys looked around before they disappeared behind the sign.
Again, you are changing evidence. First of all, Woodward said the first shot occurred AFTER the President acknowledged their cheers.
"After acknowledging our cheers, he faced forward again and suddenly there was a horrible, ear-shattering noise coming from behind us and a little to the right. "
Second, if that turn of JFK from looking to his left at z154 to looking forward and slightly right at z161 as the turn acknowledging Mary Woodward, then you have to conclude that she was wrong that JFK waved and she was wrong that Jackie even turned toward them let alone smiled and waved and acknowledged them. The JFK wave does not begin until z173 and Jackie does not being to turn until z172. Their actions post-z172 are the only actions that fit what Woodward described.
As far as the President and Jackie looking around after the first shot, it appears that even she was not sure about events post-first-shot:
"Things are a little hazy from this point, but I don't believe anyone was hit by the first bullet. The President and Mrs. Kennedy turned and looked around, as if they too didn't believe the noise was really coming from a gun."
Really. Eyewitness assessment by consensus. The Parkland witnesses mostly described a head wound further back than the Zapruder film and autopsy photos show. Many witnesses (ask Palamara) said the limousine stopped after the fatal shot.
There was blood everywhere on JFK's head and Jackie had tried to put his skull back together. I am not sure that anyone other than those who closely treated JFK's head wound could give an accurate observation of its location. On the other hand, the witnesses who could see what JFK did in response to the first shot or hear the relative shot spacings, were able to make those observations without difficulty. As far as "consensus" is concerned, it depends on how you define consensus. It is not a simple majority. Significant proportions of witnesses giving conflicting accounts indicates confusion or inability to observe accurately. But if there are statistically significant numbers of witnesses who agree on a simple fact observations and only a smattering who disagree, one cannot ignore that evidence.
Here we have 20+ witnesses who observed JFK react to the first shot as if hit by it and 40+ witnesses who observed a shot pattern that necessarily MEANS he was hit by the first shot, and 20 or so witnesses who put the first shot at a time/location that means there could not have been a missed first shot before JFK began reacting, then we can draw a reliable conclusion that JFK was hit by the first shot.
I suppose you're now going to suggest that I'm claiming most of the shot-spacing witnesses had a mass hallucination?
No. You are going to change their evidence so that none of them actually heard the 1.......2...3 shot spacing that they said they heard.