The premise of this thread is a non sequitur. Correct me if I'm wrong, but is your premise that the smell of a bigfoot is akin to the smell of gun powder from a puff of smoke, which some CTs saw in a 57 year old, B/W, grainy, overexposed photo allegedly taken 7 seconds after the headshot, and your analogy was intended to suggest that witnesses who smelled smoke were having olfactory hallucinations (phantosmia), and you attempted to link the 2 by suggesting that if bigfoot smell is phantosmia because bigfoot doesn't exist, then the gun powder smell wasn't real, because there was no knoll shooter? (whew) If that's about right then your non sequitur faulty analogy is also circular. We have a BINGO!
I will correct you about what you say I am saying.
I make two separate claims:
1. Under the outdoor, windy conditions, it is unlikely that any witnesses riding in a vehicle of the motorcade received enough gun smoke to actually smell gun smoke. Regardless of whether there was only one rifle firing three shots or four rifles firing eight shots.
2. Witness can easily smell what they anticipate they should be smelling.
I don’t have proof that none of the witnesses could smell gun smoke.
But on the other hand, the reports of witnesses smelling gun smoke should not be taken as a
reliable indicator that there really was enough gun smoke in the air for they to smell. One should not treat these reports as “proof” that there was enough gun smoke in the air to smell, as many CTers do. It is actually an unreliable indicator.
I’m not saying I have proof that there was insufficient gun smoke in the air to be smelt but that CTers do not have enough proof or compelling reasons to believe there probably was.
Claim 2 is supported by the strong association of sightings of Bigfoot with the strong unmistakable smell of Bigfoot and the sound reasons we have to believe that Bigfoot does not exist.