My apologies for no direct responses; my internet server is out again, 2nd time in 2 weeks, and I only get 1/2 hour at the local library. But I thought I'd share a background story about the 2020 thesis.
I committed to putting a JFK book together in 2003 and the next year took a camping vacation at my alma mater UMaine, hoping to think like I did 30 years previously as a young idealistic philosophy major searching for eternal truths. They had a copy of the Warren Volumes and I read Jack Dougherty's testimony for the 1st time. Those 5 pages took over an hour, as I tried to read as though it were a stageplay, imagining everyone's faces and reactions. I had a EUREKA moment and realized that he'd taken down the strangers from the 6th floor. And my years of TSBD work since have been cobbling around that fundamental insight.
It's really since 2009 with my Elevator Escape essay that I've put together a formalized thesis about TSBD worker complicity. Imperfectly. But I've honed that thesis into court-presentable evidence now in 2020. That's how truth in criminology finally emerges- a flash of insight, a trickle of possibilities, then a burst of irrefutable conclusions.
And anyone who wants to counter my 2020 thesis has to examine it and provide arguments to the contrary. It's a cop-out to pretend this thesis is about something that's not presented in the thesis, like JFK & UFOs. Kind of like ridiculing me because I believe Brian Jones was murdered, or because I'm ignored by Deep Politics and C.A.P.A. and hated by the Education Forum and (References & links to websites which contain pornographic images and/or abusive content directed at members of this Forum is strictly prohibited ).
One hope is that the reader of The Book Depository as a Potemkin Village looks at the TSBD Company having moved into Dealey Plaza for the express reason of killing President Kennedy. And I had a purpose for introducing the idea that the TSBD had served as a covert supplier for CIA activities, since that hypothesis had been introduced in the 90s.
Hopefully my internet will return soon but here in the hills of Southern New Hampshire there can be difficulties.