Key word there..."theoretical"
"Sideways"?
Instead of 'Magic' maybe we should call it the Sidewinder Bullet.
Real world tests show that many bullets, including the WCC/MC start to yaw and will travel ?sideways? upon hitting a target like a neck. ?Sideways bullets?, or ?Sidewinder Bullets? if you like, do occur in real live and what is expected, by the experts, as a result of a WCC/MC passing through a neck.
Currently, there is no small device that can be embedded in a WCC/MC bullet, survive the violent acceleration when it is fired and record the accelerations over time (from which the velocity can be calculated) as the bullet passes through bodies. High speed photography won?t tell the speed of the bullet through opaque bodies, like a goat carcass. Theoretical calculations sometimes have to be relied on in science.
Some things can be told without relying solely on theory. They can hit bones embedded in ballistic gel. And get good estimates of the speed of the bullet through the transparent ballistic gel as it strikes the bone to find out the speeds at which bone will break and bullets will deform. And these tests confirm that their theories of at what speed will a bone deform a bullet, at what speed a bullet will break a bone, are good.
To CTers, ?Theoretical? is a funny word. Why rely on theory when one can have certainty? The SBT is a wacky theory. This is known for a certainty because it is assumed so. So, there is no need for any real world testing to check this, no need to consult with experts who do these sort of tests.
For cranks, there is no need for real world tests, for consulting with experts, for relying on theory. They have absolute certainty.