Friday, August 21, 2015

Glenn V. 

7:11 AM (1 hour ago)


- show quoted text -
This is the logics of an infantile.

Of all people in the TSBD that day no one - not a single one - was
anywhere near Oswald's level a political animal. Oswald had spent the
major part of his short adult life to politics. In particular the politics
of the US vs socialism/communism.

The idea that Oswald didn't know of Kennedy's visit to Dallas, as the
question to Jarman was surely intended to demonstrate, is simply
hilarious.

No surprise that Ralph Cinque is incapable of understand the obvious,
that's business as usual.

Besides Oswald's many lies after the assassination, this was obviously a
poorly disguised attempt to create an alibi to be used after the
assassination.

This is hardly rocket science, Cinque. 

Ralph Cinque: 

Viklund, the word is "logic" not "logics" and regardless, you don't have any. 

However, you did stumble upon one important truth, quite by accident, although it has relevance far beyond what your feeble mind is capable of grasping. You talk to yourself for a moment because I have something to say to every CT in the world who doubts that Oswald was in the doorway, and that is: listen to Glenn Viklund:

"Of all people in the TSBD that day no one - not a single one - was anywhere near Oswald's level a political animal. Oswald had {devoted} the major part of his short adult life to politics. In particular, the politics
of the US vs socialism/communism."

And, that's why the whole notion of Oswald sitting in the lunch room eating lunch or doing nothing during the motorcade is preposterous. There could have been no one more interested in seeing Kennedy than Oswald. Remember, Lee and Marina had just been through the Cuban Missile Crisis, which almost resulted in nuclear war between the US and the USSR, and the one who got us through it without a war was John F. Kennedy. I should think they both would have felt something for the man. Marina definitely did. She said she did. And, she said that Lee liked and admired Kennedy and always defended him. So, of course Oswald was in the doorway. There was nowhere else he could have been at that moment precisely because he was such a political animal.  

But, back to Viklund, I never said that Oswald did not know about Kennedy's visit. He definitely did because he discussed it with his wife the knight before, and she said how much she wished that she could see Kennedy. What I said is that Oswald didn't know that Kennedy would be passing his building. Not that he didn't know he was coming to Dallas but that he didn't know he would be turning the corner from Houston to Elm and driving down Elm Street through Dealey Plaza. That's what Oswald didn't know, and it's what his conversation with James Jarman revealed.

And, if it was a poorly disguised attempt to create an alibi to be used after the assassination, then why didn't he use it after the assassination?

There is no reason to think that at all, based on the evidence. It was and is an exonerating statement, just as his presence in the doorway was and is an exonerating image. 



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