Truly bizarre "impressions" to take from the audio, Mr. Collins! Once again, you show yourself congenitally incapable of anything other than listening, reading, thinking and arguing past the sale. Anything that doesn't comport with the official story, you just explain away with recourse to preposterous argument.
Mr. Norman explicitly distinguishes between "us" and "the carpenters". When asked to name a single "carpenter", he cannot. Yet he has no trouble (elsewhere in the interview) remembering the names Lovelady, Shelley, Givens, Williams. Ergo, the carpenters were not one of "us".
And, in the 1993 interview, he fleshes this simple fact out: outside crew, with Depository employees helping them out
Lol, the only one trying to put words in Mr. Norman's mouth is you.
Here are Mr. Norman's words: "we went up there sometimes to move stuff around for the floor construction guys. They didn’t work for the Book Depository, but if our work got slow, we would give them a hand"
Here is your 'analysis': Norman isn't actually saying the floor construction guys didn't work for the Book Depository
Truly bizarre "impressions" to take from the audio, Mr. Collins! Once again, you show yourself congenitally incapable of anything other than listening, reading, thinking and arguing past the sale. Anything that doesn't comport with the official story, you just explain away with recourse to preposterous argument. Mr. Norman explicitly distinguishes between "us" and "the carpenters". When asked to name a single "carpenter", he cannot. Yet he has no trouble (elsewhere in the interview) remembering the names Lovelady, Shelley, Givens, Williams. Ergo, the carpenters were not one of "us".The only name that Norman could remember in the Sixth Floor Museum Oral History interview in 1991 was Givens. Here some of my notes (not verbatim) from the interview:
Question: Do you have any idea who was working on the sixth floor at that time? Who were some of the guys?
Answer: Some of the guys who work here and they had some carpenters or something.
Question: Do you know who in particular was working up there?
Answer: Givens I think might have been.
Question: Anyone else?
Answer: No cause there was just a few of us cause a lot of the old hands were still at the other warehouse.
Question: Do you remember who the carpenters were? No, there was one tall white guy that I used to talk boxing with. [but Norman doesn't remember his name] Norman doesn't remember seeing him that day and doesn't remember if he was there that day.
One thing that actually is explicitly clear in the Sixth Floor Oral History interview is that Norman does not remember a whole lot of the details from that day. There is nothing that explicitly distinguishes that there were "outsiders" who didn't work for the TSBD in that building that day. Based on the testimonies of all the employees who were at the TSBD that day, the only workers who were present that Norman might have labeled as being "outsiders" were the ones who normally worked at the other warehouse and had been called in to work on flooring in the Elm Street building. Yet here you are taking words which were put into Norman's mouth by Mr. Sample in 1993 and using your interpretation of them to make up all kinds of nonsense. How much more bizarre can one get?
And, in the 1993 interview, he fleshes this simple fact out: outside crew, with Depository employees helping them outAs stated above, Mr. Sample put words in his mouth. However, again, there is nothing that explicitly says the "outside workers" were not from the other TSBD building. And, again, everyone who identified the workers on the sixth floor indicated nothing that would support your nutty idea.
Lol, the only one trying to put words in Mr. Norman's mouth is you.No, I indicated that I was describing my impression. I haven't interviewed Mr. Norman so how could I possibly do that.
Here are Mr. Norman's words: "we went up there sometimes to move stuff around for the floor construction guys. They didn’t work for the Book Depository, but if our work got slow, we would give them a hand"
Here is your 'analysis': Norman isn't actually saying the floor construction guys didn't work for the Book DepositoryWhat I said about the Sixth Floor Museum Oral History interview is: "There is nothing in it that led me to believe there was an “outside crew” on the sixth floor."
What I said about Mr. Sample's 1993 interview is that he tried to put words into Norman's mouth.
Those are my impressions. And I cannot imagine how anyone could possibly believe the nonsense fairytale you are trying to pass off.