The little details that will never be known with any certainty are not a part of what the inferences from the totality of the evidence tell us. I was just making a point that there are some alternate possibilities to taking the rifle apart and re-assembling it. That’s all.
Yeah, but calling the inferences from the totality of the evidence "reasonable" is in fact not reasonable at all, as there is not a shred of evidence that there was a rifle in Ruth Paine's garage on 11/21/63.
All we really know is that Marina said she saw a rifle about a week after her return from New Orleans, which means that
nobody saw that rifle for nearly two months before the assassination.
As for the paper bag, all we know is that an FBI expert said there were two prints belonging to Oswald on the bag, which, if you think about it, is by itself already strange, because he is supposed to have made the bag and have taken it to Irving.
His prints should have been all over that bag. Add to this that Frazier was shown the TSBD bag on Friday evening and instantly denied it was the bag he had seen.
What kind of "reasonable inference" can you make from that "evidence"?