Saturday, October 5, 2013

So, Mr. 19 effectively admits that there is no plaid pattern on the shirt of Wiegman Doorman. There is no plaid pattern on the shirt of Altgens Doorman either. The most you can say about his is that in the Groden scan, it looks splotchy or varied, but it does not look plaid. Just look at it large. There are no lines there, and there are certainly no boxes.


Lance doesn't even attempt to claim any vertical lines, just horizontal ones. But, it's a trick. The mind's eye is open to suggestion. It is capable of seeing what isn't there and filling in the holes if asked to do so. Imagination is a wonderful thing, but it is insane to think that these two below are reflecting the same pattern.



And what Lance said about Wiegman Doorman and why his shirt is completely lacking in plaid, where not even imagination can save it, is equally erroneous. Lance says that he's blurry, and that's true.



But, why is he blurry? Lance blames it on the fact that Wiegman's car was moving. But, it wasn't moving very fast because the motorcade had already bogged down. A few seconds later, Wiegman jumped out of that moving car. The guy was a middle-aged cameraman; he wasn't Maddox. So, how fast could it have been going? And it was a motion picture, remember? Motion was built in to the idea of it. But, if you started with a flashy plaid pattern such as Lovelady's, and you added some motion to it, would the result be a uniform, non-varied, consistent pattern such as we see on Wiegman Doorman? 



Here's an idea: Wiegman Doorman's shirt doesn't look plaid because it wasn't. He was Oswald. These are all Oswald. 






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