I don't know who first said it but they were right: the JFK assassination is a Rohrschacht test, a mirror, a reflection. What one sees in it tells us more about them then it does about the actual event. So we have people with axes to grind, with grievances, with complaints who use the event to go after the source of those grievances. It's why the major conspiracy advocates have been people who think the Cold War was due to the US, to our policies. The Chomsky/Zinn view. Now it's migrated to the Right who think the CIA got JFK like they tried to get Trump. Put the mirror down, please.
Even for a dyed-in-the-wool Lone Nutter, which I'm really not, it does have enough twists and turns and genuine anomalies to be one of the more interesting historical events. Oswald. even if he was just the Actual Oswald I believe him to have been, was a fascinating character. If one can approach the JFKA as just another hobby, as I try to do, I think one can maintain some sort of rational perspective. It's the foaming-at-the-mouth emotional involvement on the part of many, Lone Nutters and CTers alike, that puzzles me; truly, those who have a near-religious fanaticism for the Lone Nut perspective are as puzzling to me as their conspiracy counterparts. I try to keep abreast of the discussions, but I'd be equally interested if the Truth could be conclusively proven to have been the most elaborate conspiracy imaginable - that would be absolutely fascinating. Like Fred Litwin, I once thought the Lone Nut perspective was inconceivable. The more I learned, the more I realized quite the opposite was true. In my modest forays into JFKA Research, I have tracked down perhaps 10 or 15 little factoids of Conspiracy Gospel uttered by such conspiracy Gods as Armstrong, Newman and DiEugenio.
Every damn one failed to stand up to scrutiny, but the proponents just yawned, moved the goalposts and went their merry way. My bottom line is, I haven't seen the conspiracy theory yet that can accommodate the Actual Oswald. I haven't yet finished Hancock's and Boylan's new book, The Oswald Puzzle, but I'm now only a couple of months from 11-22 and so far their Oswald has been exactly who I believe him to have been.
"Nutcase" was probably too harsh a term for Newman. He has shown some flexibility. Anyone who has read extensively in the UFO debate or particularly the
Who Wrote Shakespeare? debate has encountered the Newman Type, who eventually becomes more comical than anything. I do think his book on Jesus the Yogi Master provides an interesting insight into his mindset.