This stuff again??? If you would read Dr. Thomas's chapters on the acoustical evidence, you would know that Dr. Thomas has refuted O'Dell's arguments.
O’Dell has refuted Dr. Thomas’s arguments.
Again--I keep having to say "again" because you keep ignoring refutations of your arguments--there are five other time indicators on the police tape that show the gunshot impulses were recorded during the assassination, but you keep dismissing them and clinging for dear life onto Decker's "hold everything" crosstalk, even though it has the largest time offset of any crosstalk event.
I am bringing up a different subject. Do you deny that “Hold everything secure” occurs at 145.15? Isn’t it possible that the “gunshot” at 145.15 is not a gunshot, or formed from cosmic rays, but is formed from a voice recorded by crosstalk from Channel 2 saying “Hold everything secure”, which the BBN failed to recognize as a voice?
If you deny “Hold everything is secure” is recorded there, where is it recorded? At 50.0? At 200.0? Where?
Anyone who claims that the dictabelt's gunshot impulse patterns are not assassination gunfire needs to explain the powerful and intricate correlations between the dictabelt's gunshot impulse patterns and the patterns of shots fired in the Dealey Plaza test firing. They also need to explain the fact that N-waves and muzzle blasts occur on the dictabelt recording in the correct order and interval, and that these phenomena and windshield distortion occur on the tape when they should and do not occur when they should not. If the tape contains no assassination gunfire, then all of these incredible correlations must be unbelievable, mind-bogglingly improbable coincidences, the odds against which would probably be along the lines of 1 zillion to 1.
The explanation for correct order and interval has been explained by me before and is explained again later in this post.
One, your comments show you don't know what you're talking about. Two, due to the placement of the microphones and the shooting locations in the test firing, it is not a bit surprising that some false matches occurred, and Dr. Barger discussed this in his testimony. Three, the WA sonar analysis destroyed the false-match argument for the grassy knoll shot.
This is a good example of how you twist and mislead. As is mentioned in the article itself, Dr. Barger proof-read the article in which Dr. Thomas first discussed the errors that BBN and WA made in some of the values they assigned in their probability calculations, all of which errors caused WA to vastly over-estimate the probability that the grassy knoll gunshot impulse pattern was caused by non-gunfire noise. They did not make any actual calculation errors, but their calculations were overly conservative because some of the values they assigned in the calculations were incorrect.
I repeat: Dr. Barger proof-read Dr. Thomas's article--the fact that he did so is mentioned in the article. And that article explains in some detail why the correct odds against chance for the grassy knoll shot are 100,000 to 1.
Plus, as I've mentioned, Dr. Barger and Dr. Thomas are good friends, and Dr. Thomas consulted with Dr. Barger extensively when he wrote the acoustics chapters in Hear No Evil.
Dr. Barger has never stated that the correct probability is not 1 in 20, but 1 in 100,000. However, what Dr. Barger has done is:
• Dr. Barger proof-read the article that Dr. Thomas first discussed the errors that BBN and WA made in some of the values they assigned in their probability calculations,
• Dr. Thomas and Dr. Barger are good friends
• Dr. Thomas and Dr. Barger consulted when Dr. Thomas wrote his book
The fact that Dr. Barger proof-read the article of Dr. Thomas’s does not tell us that he agreed with everything in it. He might have agreed with this 1 in 100,000 probability. Or he might disagree with it. And tried to convince Dr. Thomas that this is wrong. But failed to do so. And Dr. Thomas left it in his article. We simply don’t know, on the basis of “Dr. Barger proof-read the article”.
If Dr. Barger agrees with this 1 in 100,000 probability estimate, it is exceedingly strange that he chooses to stay silent on this. Dr. Barger, Dr. Weiss and Mr. Aschkenasy got slapped down by the National Academy of Sciences back in 1982. Their work was reviewed and rejected by an elite panel of scientists, including past and future Nobel Prize winners. This is an embarrassing rebuke. Dr. Barger would seize on any strong evidence, any strong argument, to show that he was right all along.
If he agreed with Dr. Thomas on this, he would be making his views known in an unmistakable manner, and not hold these views close to his chest. I think I can infer that while Dr. Barger may be friends with Dr. Thomas, he does hold some serious misgivings about this 1 in 100,000 probability estimate.
This is about as believable as a claim that the original “discovers” of Cold Fusion, who published their work saying that it appeared that Cold Fusion was real, had their work rejected by the Scientific community, subsequently discovered not just new support but proof of Cold Fusion, but decide to say nothing to anyone. Yeah, I can believe a story like that.
As for Weiss and Aschkenasy, I have no information on their views on Dr. Thomas's calculations, although I am sure they agree with them if they have seen them, since the calculations can be verified by anyone who knows math well enough to do so. I would also note that WA said in their report that their "1 in 20 or less" odds were "highly conservative" and that the actual odds were much lower ("considerably less"). I notice you keep ignoring this fact.
Again, Dr. Weiss and Mr. Aschkenasy would not stay silent on this issue, if they thought Dr. Thomas discovered the ultimate vindication of their work in 1978, which was rejected by the National Academy of Sciences.
The bottom line is you cannot site any support from Dr. Barger, Dr. Weiss or Mr. Aschkenasy, that they agree with Dr. Thomas’s 1 in 100,000 claim. You basically figure that because Dr. Barger and Dr. Thomas are such good friends, then surely, he must. But for some strange reason, is totally silent on this question. While still not silent about his standing behind his 1978 Acoustic work.
You guys are still just dancing around the essential components of the acoustical evidence. No amount of obfuscation and diversion can change the fact that there are five impulse patterns on the dictabelt recording that match the impulse patterns of test-firing shots, and match them within windows of 6 milliseconds and 1 millisecond, and match them in the correct locational order. The odds against these impulses matching in the correct locational order by chance are 1 in 125 (i.e., less than 1%). Nor can any amount of evasion change the fact that patterns of N-waves, muzzle blasts, and windshield distortion occur on the dictabelt recording when they should and do not occur when they should not, and the fact that the WA sonar analysis proved beyond any reasonable doubt that the grassy knoll gunshot impulse pattern is in fact gunfire.
1 in 125? We are not calculating the volume of a cube with edge lengths of 5 feet here. Again, as I explained before. The number of ways of ordering all 5 members of a set is not 125 (5 to the third power or 5 ** 3). It is 5 Factorial, which can be expressed as 5!. That is 5 * 4 * 3 * 2 * 1 = 120.
There are 5 candidates to chose as the first number. After it is chosen, there are only 4 candidates for the second. After the first two are chosen, there are 3 candidates for the third. And so on. Hence, the number of ways of ordering all 5 members of a set is 5 * 4 * 3 * 2 * 1. A good high school Algebra 1 student should not miss this.
So, there are not 125 but 120 ways of arranging the shots in “the correct locational order”.
High school got out a long time ago. When are you going to start to get this right?
There is only a 1 in 120 chance that the ‘motorcycle location’ would come up ordered this way. You don’t think this came about through chance. And I don’t either.
I think BBN did something like the following in the last 10 days of August 1978:
Maybe after finding the second shot around microphone 2 ( 6 ) through 3 ( 5 ), which they assumed 2 ( 6 ) was the correct microphone, they didn’t start searching through the microphones at random, but started searching for where the first shot might have been recorded, before microphone 2 ( 6 ).
Maybe after finding the first shot around microphone 2 ( 5 ) through 2 ( 6 ), they didn’t start searching through the microphones at random, but started searching for where the third shot might have been recorded, after microphone 2 ( 6 ).
Maybe after finding the third shot around microphone 2 ( 11 ), they didn’t start searching through the microphones at random, but started searching for where the fourth shot might have been recorded, after microphone 2 ( 11 ).
Maybe after finding the fourth shot around microphone 3 ( 4 ), they didn’t start searching through the microphones at random, but started searching for where the fourth shot might have been recorded, after microphone 3 ( 4 ).
If this method was followed, to avoid searching through all 3,024 test recordings from 1978, which might not have even been possible in ten days, they would naturally find all the shots in the correct order. They’re not going to find the last shot before microphone 2 ( 5 ), because they never searched for it there.
And it was well known that the motorcade speed averaged 11 mph. It was explicitly stated that in the Warren Commission. I don’t care if Dr. Barger’s old memories don’t recall knowing that in August of 1978. He or someone on his team may well have known that. One can get a rough idea of the speed of the limousine just be watching the Zapruder film. And they could use that information on where to look for correlations first. Like for looking for the first shot not anywhere before microphone 2 ( 6 ) but at locations consistent with a 11-mph speed. This would account for the correct order and spacing of all five shots found.
My scenario explains why they got random results for correlations with the source of the shots (TSBD or KNOLL), random results for correlations with the location of the target ( Target 1, 2, 3, 4 ) but non-random results for the location of the motorcycle.
You guys are still just dancing around the essential components of the acoustical evidence. No amount of obfuscation and diversion can change the fact that there are five impulse patterns on the dictabelt recording that match the impulse patterns of test-firing shots, . . .
Yes. The shot at 137.70 matches the impulse pattern of a 1978 test shot from the TSBD. And also matches a 1978 test shot from the Grassy Knoll.
The shot at 139.27 matches the impulse pattern of a 1978 test shot from the TSBD. And also matches a 1978 test shot from the Grassy Knoll.
The shot at 145.15 matches the impulse pattern of a 1978 test shot from the TSBD. And also matches a 1978 test shot from the Grassy Knoll.
So, the fact that the Dictabelt recording “matches up” with the recordings of the 1978 test firings seem meaningless. It is abundantly clear that such a match up can occur through random luck alone, and seems almost inevitable if one checks a for a dozen or so possible correlations.