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"Ladies and Gentlemen, the President of the United States is dead." November 22, 1963
The Warren Commission's impossible explanation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy produced decades of conspiracy theories that are worse than the official report.
The WC concluded that the first shot hit Kennedy in the back of the head, destroying his brain and making survival impossible. The second shot missed, hitting a wall and wounding a bystander who was hit in the hand by a concrete chip. The FBI easily duplicated both shots.
Lee Harvey Oswald then fired "the magic bullet," which passed through Kennedy's neck with little damage, struck Texas Governor John Connally in the back, struck the inside of Connally's front rib, came out the front, traveled through Connally's wrist and thigh bones, and then dropped, almost undamaged, to the floor of the car.
It is physically impossible for Oswald to have fired so rapidly with such accuracy. The problem is solved by the fact that the Warren Commission got the shots wrong. The first shot was fired seconds earlier, missing Kennedy and wounding the bystander. The second shot fatally wounded the President, and then came the magic bullet. This makes all three shots possible.
The magic bullet had tipped Kennedy's vertebrae and began to tumble. It hit the inside of Connally's front rib while traveling sideways, with the nose pointed upwards. When the magic bullet hit Connally's wrist and thigh, it was traveling backwards. This makes the magic bullet possible.
When this explanation ("Case Closed" 1993) was published, former President Gerald Ford and Republican Senator Arlen Specter, who had both served on the Warren Commission, agreed that it is correct.
Claiming to be accurate, the discredited movie "JFK" "proved" there was a conspiracy and cover-up by inventing fictional private discussions by the conspirators.
The Warren Commission's impossible explanation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy produced decades of conspiracy theories that are worse than the official report.
The WC concluded that the first shot hit Kennedy in the back of the head, destroying his brain and making survival impossible. The second shot missed, hitting a wall and wounding a bystander who was hit in the hand by a concrete chip. The FBI easily duplicated both shots.
Lee Harvey Oswald then fired "the magic bullet," which passed through Kennedy's neck with little damage, struck Texas Governor John Connally in the back, struck the inside of Connally's front rib, came out the front, traveled through Connally's wrist and thigh bones, and then dropped, almost undamaged, to the floor of the car.
It is physically impossible for Oswald to have fired so rapidly with such accuracy. The problem is solved by the fact that the Warren Commission got the shots wrong. The first shot was fired seconds earlier, missing Kennedy and wounding the bystander. The second shot fatally wounded the President, and then came the magic bullet. This makes all three shots possible.
The magic bullet had tipped Kennedy's vertebrae and began to tumble. It hit the inside of Connally's front rib while traveling sideways, with the nose pointed upwards. When the magic bullet hit Connally's wrist and thigh, it was traveling backwards. This makes the magic bullet possible.
When this explanation ("Case Closed" 1993) was published, former President Gerald Ford and Republican Senator Arlen Specter, who had both served on the Warren Commission, agreed that it is correct.
Claiming to be accurate, the discredited movie "JFK" "proved" there was a conspiracy and cover-up by inventing fictional private discussions by the conspirators.