Sunday, October 2, 2022

The book-distributing at the TSBD was a fraud. It was a pretense, a facade, for what they were really doing, which was clandestine CIA activities. Nobody would conduct a book business this way.


How could anyone find anything in that mess? Is that any way to run a book company? Supposedly, the "order-fillers" like Oswald were given titles to retrieve, and apparently, not that many units, since they were not given wagons to roll the boxes on. And, you see all the open boxes, which implies that they were taking out individual books. But, they sold only to schools who ordered for classes. They were not selling retail to the public, like Amazon. So, shouldn't it have all been boxes? 

The small print on the boxes appears to be illegible. Notice the one box below with "Chicago order" written on it. How could that possibly be useful? Who is supposed to see it and act on it? It's most likely a background effect that somebody added because they thought it looked good. Remember, I'm a filmmaker. 


This is the most legible print that I could find. You see the word Mathematics, but I can't make out the word before it. At the bottom, it says 24 books, and, I think, 32 pounds. 


One thing they tell you is to never stack boxes more than 3 high because the weight of the books will crush the ones at the bottom. Plus, it's dangerous to create tall stacks. And note that we are aware of no ladders at the TSBD. So, how did they get to the top of the stacks? 


Below, there are books stacked vertically, which you are never supposed to do. Who would even think to do that?


Below is the northwest corner of the first floor. You see the stairwell in the corner, which are the stairs that Truly and Baker went up. Notice the old-fashioned scale. What did they have to weigh them for? And by the way, they never revealed how books got shipped. Was it through the post office? But, if so, it would be weighed at the post office. And notice again the open boxes, implying that they were selling individual units. But, what does that have to do with schools, who were their only customers? 


Here is a single box which is not the right shape to be books. No one would ship books in an oblong box with such an unwieldly shape. And look at the ridiculous caption: ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF FINE YEARBOOKS. Who labels boxes that way? Nobody. It's not an ad. Who were they trying to impress with that? 


Look at all these open boxes. What, did they just let the rats crawl into them at night? It was an effin' warehouse. 


Here's an image of the Sniper's Nest.


So, there we see a column 7 boxes high. Who would do that? Why would they do it? And how did they do it without a ladder? In the center is the Sniper's Nest. Supposedly, Oswald built that. But, when did he do it? He got off work the same time as everyone else. He went down to the Domino Room and ate his lunch: cheese sandwiches and an apple. He also browsed through the newspaper, as he always did. He reported seeing Junior Jarman and Harold Norman there (who he described as a short negro). But, supposedly, he had to retrieve his rifle from wherever he hid it. Then, he had to take the parts out of the paper bag, assemble the rifle, using a dime as a screwdriver, since no screwdriver was found. And then, presumably, he had to build that Sniper's Nest by moving those boxes one at a time. So, if he got off work at 11:50 and the motorcade was expected to pass the building at 12:25, how could he possibly do all that? And how could he do it when Bonnie Ray Williams was up there eating his fried chicken and drinking his Dr. Pepper on the 6th floor?

And look at this stacking. How is anyone supposed to know what is in those boxes? You face them and what do you see to distinguish them? 

And here are some more boxes with totally illegible print.


And tell me: since the "order-fillers" were working all morning gathering stock, what did they do with it? There was a "mailer" and a "mailing station" with brown paper and even a tying machine, but that was only for small parcels. You wouldn't wrap a big box of books in brown paper. Why would you need to? If they could be shipped to the TSBD without brown paper wrapping, why couldn't they be shipped from the TSBD without brown paper wrapping? And who were they sending small parcels to? Not to schools. What's a school going to do with 3 copies of a book? And even shipping 3 copies in brown paper would be flimsy because paper tears easily.  But, whatever it was, why don't we see a collection of parcels that were ready to go out the door? I mean wrapped, labeled, tied, etc. Ready for transit. Why is a hodge-podge of boxes the only thing we ever see? How come no finished product?  

The TSBD was not a book distributing company. It was a fake book distributing company. The book distributing was just a facade for what they were really doing. It was really a CIA front company that was doing espionage, drug running, and gun running, and that's according to William Westin, who researched it. There is no reason to believe that real book distributing was actually going on.

The lie that Oswald killed Kennedy is grotesque for many reasons, but one of them is the sheer impossibility of the timeline. He had no time to do all that prep work on the 6th floor, plus Bonnie Ray Williams was up there. Bonnie Ray Williams was on the 6th floor eating and drinking during the lunch break. How do you get around that? You don't. You just ignore it. 

 
 

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