Friday, August 7, 2015

The Perfect Lie

The Perfect Lie
I've become interested in Lee Harvey Oswald because I think that he shares characteristics with the online assassins who steal my songs and blogs. Studying him helps me gain insights into the minds of my enemies. This led me to borrow two more Oswald documentaries from the library yesterday, the first of which turned out to be a real eye opener. It's called JFK: The Smoking Gun and it very skillfully applies the science of ballistics to new evidence which has been unsealed since the success of Oliver Stone's JFK.

This newly released information includes eyewitness accounts of smelling gunpowder at ground level, accounts of seeing a Secret Service man in the car behind the president with his AR-15 assault rifle cocked, as well as accounts by hospital staff that the president's body was illegally removed before it could be examined by objective authorities, an examiner's statement that he was ordered to falsify an X-ray of the president's skull by taping metal bullet fragments to it first, the seizure and subsequent disappearance of the president's brain, and statements by others with inside knowledge of the investigation that they were served with gag orders by the Secret Service. The rest of this documentary's case is made with ballistics evidence which supports that the third, fatal shot which blew apart Kennedy's head was inconsistent with the two that preceded it.

According to this ballistics evidence, the bullets used by Oswald would not have shattered the president's head but drilled a hole straight through it. Also, the entry wound from one of Oswald's bullets would have been larger than the one found on the back of the president's head. Nor does the trajectory of this third shot line up with a shot from above and behind but with one from below and behind. While three shells were found in Oswald's wake, apparently one of them, found off to the side of the other two, was defective and likely only used in storage to keep his gun's barrel clean.

All of this can be explained by an accidental discharge of an AR-15 assault rifle in the car following behind the president on that fateful day. A rookie Secret Service agent had his gun cocked with the safety off and was about to return fire when his car accelerated, throwing his elbow against his backrest and causing him to accidentally discharge his weapon, which was loaded with the type of bullets that produce the kind of head injury which killed the president.

If this is true, it means that there was a cover up to protect the Secret Service. If it's true, it means that the illusion of perfection is of greater importance to some authorities than the truth. The truth is that we are imperfect and that each of us is capable of making mistakes. The truth is that a Secret Service man can be forgiven for making such a mistake, for he would not have had his gun up where it could do harm were it not for Oswald firing at the president. And broadcasting corporations, at least the ones that stole my posts, appear to also need to pass themselves off as perfect, rather than admitting their mistakes.

The Secret Service agent named by this documentary successfully sued for damages, though there was some trouble caused by his two-year-long hesitation to do so. If anyone is planning to interfere with my lawsuit based on the time that has passed as I reconstruct all my old work, I should say that I thought I was going to be financially compensated from my last legal action in 2013. In the meantime, I am waiting for a reasonable amount of time and saving my disability checks before returning to court from outside of this hopelessly compromised region, in order to get what my last legal action failed to provide me.

The power of illusion wielded by broadcasters sometimes reminds me of that old pilot episode of Star Trek, the Cage, featuring aliens who could flood the human mind with illusions that could not be told apart from reality. My favorite scene from that was when the captain held a gun to the alien's head and asked the alien to help him test out a theory that his weapon was fully functional.

The next documentary also looked interesting but I couldn't watch it because it skipped too much. So much for progress. I think Thomas Edison's home movies perform better than some of these modern DVD's.

  
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