No you didn't. You never said it "must never occur".
Are you lying or just amazingly confused?
Saying something is "never appropriate" is just a more polite way of saying it "must never occur". Or did you really think that I meant that sometimes it should occur? In case you still find it confusing, I will say it this way "Cherry-picking is never appropriate: ie. cherry-picking must never occur". I take it that you disagree with that statement. You think it is ok to cherry-pick - to select a single piece of evidence that is contrary to the preponderance of the evidence. I guess we will have to disagree.
None of the other witnesses who were looking directly at JFK at the time of the assassination report this.
Doesn't that mean anything to you?
It would if there was no independent confirmation that what he observed actually occurred. But the zfilm shows it occurring:
It just means that Hickey was particularly observant to have noticed an event which, without question, occurred. And if one watches these frames carefully one realizes that it is the only bit of hair on anyone that moves and it moves INTO the apparent wind. What do you think could have caused it? Just asking.
Does it mean anything to you that Brehm describes JFK's hair flying up at the moment of the headshot?
Brehm gave two statements. In his first statement to the Dallas Herald (23Nov63) his statement is quoted and mentions only two shots. In his November 24/63 statement, after no doubt hearing all sorts of media reports that there were 3 shots, repeats what he said a few days earlier but adds that "a third shot followed" without saying anything more. I am unable to find any reliable independent corroboration for a third shot following the head shot and much evidence that conflicts. I assume Brehm was trying to be accurate but I cannot be sure that he recalled more than two shots and he was of the view that the second of those two shots struck JFK in the head. It is, perhaps, unusual to describe the head shot as hair flying up but it is fairly clear that this is what he was referring to because he said that the President then rolled over to his side. But just because Brehm described the head shot that way from his position does not mean that Hickey was describing it that way. Hickey made a deliberate distinction between the last two shots, the first of which coincided with JFK's hair lifting and no apparent damage whereas the third appeared to strike him in the head.
Does it mean anything to you that Hickey fails to mention JFK's exploding head?
People describe what they recall. He recalled seeing evidence that the shot hit JFK in the head. He also recalled seeing no evidence that the second shot hit JFK in the head and did recall seeing JFK's hair on the right side fly forward without any sign of hitting him.
Of course it doesn't, because you cherry pick Hickey's faulty observation of JFK's headshot to support your utterly destroyed theory that there was a bullet strike at z271.
How is it "cherry-picking" to simply point out what he said he observed and to point out that precisely what he said he saw is seen in the zfilm at about the time he said it occurred (shortly before the head shot)? What evidence conflicts with it?
Brehm described JFK's hair flying up at the headshot, isn't that counter-evidence?
No. For the reasons stated, Brehm was describing the headshot. Hickey was describing a shot before the headshot that did not strike JFK that coincided with the movement of JFK's hair and then he described the third and last shot striking JFK in the head.
JFK's hair does not "fly up" at this point. His fringe slightly ruffles and no more than that. In your intense, cherry picking desperation you have to grasp onto anything you can and then cry "evidence".
It is plain to see that the hair on JFK's right side lifts together - and it is the only person whose hair moves. Here, I'll make it bigger for you: