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This much is true.
John F. Kennedy was fatally wounded by
gunshots
while riding with his wife
and Texas Governor John Connally in a Presidential
motorcade
in
Dallas, Texas
on
Friday, November 22, 1963 at 12:30 p.m. The rest is up
to question.
A ten-month investigation by the
Warren Commission and other government investigations concluded that the
President was assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald,
who also wounded Texas Gov.
John Connally. The Commission's findings have long since proved
controversial, and have been both challenged and reaffirmed.
The Warren Commission findings concluded that Oswald acted alone and had
fired his shots from the upper floor of a book repository in Dallas as the
motorcade drove by.
Many of the alternate scenarios posed by sceptics
afterwards propose theories about who did it, motives of why, death
bed confessions, and assorted sidewise issues all posited as proof that the
official story is wrong.
They are not needed to prove that the official Warren
Report is a cover story. All you need to do is to remove the central claim
that Lee Harvey Oswald did the shooting. The actuality is that Lee Harvey
Oswald could not have been the one who did the shooting for the simple
reason that he was clearly
seen standing in the doorway of the repository when the cavalcade went by.
The upper left of Figure 1 below, from the October 26,
2008 website blog of
Tom Heneghan, shows Oswald standing in the doorway of the main floor
of the repository clear as a bell as the cavalcade was going past.
In Figure 2, a further blow up and enhancement done afterwards in Paint Shop Pro, shows that it it is definitely Lee Harvey
Oswald and not just somewhat of a look alike.
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