What is it with this obsession of yours with conspiracies, you claim don't exist?
Are all those self-serving arguments why a conspiracy, in your opinion, could or would not have worked, supposed to somehow justify the conclusion that Oswald was a lone gun man?
You claim to be an ex-lawyer, so you should understand that the best way to disprove a conspiracy is by presenting a solid, conclusive case against Oswald.
So, why not do that instead of constantly arguing that a conspiracy is improbable or even impossible?
Oh, golly, what to say? CTers in every area of Weirdness in which I have encountered them are the most relentlessly humorless folks on earth. A CTer's pet conspiracy theory is the functional equivalent of a fundamentalist religion.
I morphed over the decades from being mildly interested in the JFKA when it occurred (I was 13) ... to being a True Conspiracy Believer in my 20's and 30's as I gobbled up books like
Best Evidence ... to just assuming the existence of a Huge Conspiracy with no particular involvement during most of my legal career ... to becoming more involved, still as a True Believer, in my mid-60s, but this time with the research and analytical skills of a seasoned, academically-oriented lawyer ... to gradually having the scales fall from my eyes as I began to see the absurdity of Conspiracy World ... to reaching a strong conviction that, alas, boring as it may be, the Warren Commission basically got things right.
For a while, as I've stated, I explored factoids of Conspiracy Gospel and discovered, time and again, that they had no factual basis. I observed the mental gyrations of CTers and became fascinated by the conspiracy-prone mindset, to the extent of delving deeply into the massive psychological and sociological literature establishing a profile of those who are prone to see conspiracies where others don't. I discovered that absolutely the last thing JFKA CTers want to hear is that they perhaps aren't thinking clearly, to put it mildly. Jim DiEugenio came almost completely unglued at my posts in this vein and my analogy between the JFKA community and the UFO community (take my word for it, the Roswell debate is a near-perfect parallel to the JFKA debate).
I fought the battle for a while at the Ed Forum, arguing the LN position (or at least the "Let's Deal With the Actual Oswald" position) and attempting to expose conspiracy factoids as the nonsense they are. I quickly realized it was pointless - an endless game of Whack-A-Mole and a complete waste of my time. I have a real life and better things to do. Why tne handful of LNers who persist with this year after year bother with it is a mystery to me. Apparently, the LN position is their own fundamentalist religion, so the whole JFKA game is basically LN Catholics and CT Baptists, Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses pissing on each other. Yawn. To be honest, except as an academic exercise I really don't give a bowl of steaming bat guano who killed JFK.
Now, instead of a JFKA researcher I'm more of a JFKA philospher. I observe the scene from the 30,000-foot level and laugh. I laugh at the absurdity of every conspiracy theory in which Oswald was a mere patsy. Try to picture what it might
actually have looked like and how it might
actually have worked in the real world - the point of my silly OP - and the absurdity becomes obvious. Why would I waste my time taking any of it seriously? I'm much more fascinated by how CTers - some seemingly very intelligent and highly educated - can actually believe the stuff they purport to believe. This is true across the many areas of Weirdness and even Theology in which I have been involved over the decades. It's an epistemology that is completely alien to me, where up is down, illogic is logic, and goofy inferences are preferred to rational ones.
Even the wackiest conspiracy theories can never be "disproved" to the satisfaction of their True Believers. How would anyone "prove" the late Queen wasn't a shape-shifting reptilian alien? I remember Budd Hopkins of "alien abduction" fame. He lost me when he finally resorted to the idea that we never see these occur because the aliens have a cloaking technology that renders everything invisible. So I don't even try to disprove anything - I merely observe, shake my head, and laugh.
A mountain of evidence has convinced government commissions, historians, independent researchers and little old me that the LN scenario is basically correct. In every complex event, there are outliers, things that don't seem to fit neatly, and even things that seem damn near impossible. That's just life in the real world. "This was a routine 12 mph fender-bender. How on earth did that mirror from the Ford end up on the roof of that building over there?" Hell, I don't know, but it did.
I don't have to prove anything to anybody. If a CTer wants to overturn the verdict of history, provide an evidence-based alternative theory that is more compelling even to those who don't share the conspiracy-prone mindset and agenda. Publish it in reputable, peer-reviewed journals. Stop asserting factoids that are demonstrably false and scenarios that don't even make internal sense. Simple as that.
You want folks like me to play on your turf in Conspiracy World, to argue endlessly about the SBT, the postal money order, Oswald as a false defector, blah blah blah, yada yada yada. It's fun for you, and you apparently delude yourselves that it's accomplishing something. I'll let Fred Litwin, DVP and others do that since they seem to enjoy it and think it's worthwhile. For me, it just brings to mind the old adage about wrestling with a pig.
I actually haven't posted anything JFKA-related in years. I bought
The Oswald Puzzle on the basis of my respect for Larry Hancock and the hope that here at last might be something new. Years ago, I bought Greg Parker's books with the same hope. Nah, it's just the same old nonsense. It inspired my few posts here, but now I'm going back to working on my golf swing.