This is in response to Robert Orourke, who made a joke about the idea of an ice bullet. But, in 1975, then CIA Chief William Colby testified to the Church Committee that the gun worked; that it was effective. After Mythbusters did a program that ridiculed ice bullets, these two young men did an experiment of their own, using a dummy whose texture and resistance was comparable to a human torso. And they got a very different result.
But, keep in mind that in the JFK assassination, the ice bullet did not have to be lethal. All it had to do was penetrate an inch. The physical damage was minimal, and killing him was not the purpose of it. Ice is an unstable substance, expecially when the water contains minerals that interfere with hydrogen bonding. The extra hydrogen bonds that form when water freezes increases the space between the molecules, causing a decrease in overall density. So, there is a lot of empty space in ice. It is hard, but it's also a delicate crystal. And they used that to their advantage. The idea was for the ice to penetrate and burst, thereby delivering its toxic payload as it vanished.
So no, an ice bullet couldn't reach a man's heart. But, that wasn't the idea. They didn't even shoot JFK on the side of his heart, his left side. They shot him on his right side. Think about what the Bethesda doctors found. They found an entrance wound in his back which they palpated and found to be very shallow. The bullet path seemed to stop; to come to an end. Now, the story became that the bullet went all the way through Kennedy and came out his neck. Think about how easy it would have been to dissect him and confirm that. But, they didn't do it. The story goes that the Admirals in the room wouldn't let them do it. But, when I put myself in Dr. Humes's shoes, knowing that I had the responsibility to determine exactly what happpened to the President, my response would have been:
"I am going to dissect him now to find out exactly what happened to him, and you better step aside and let me do it because if you don't, I am going to scream bloody murder. I will go to the Secretary of the Navy and file a complaint against you. I will go on talk shows. I will write to every newspaper in the country. I will write a book about it. If there is going to be a dereliction of duty tonight, it's not going to be by me."
But, Dr Humes wasn't that kind of man. None of them were. They were cowards, all of them, including JFK's own physician. There was only ONE reason not to dissect JFK from back to throat, and that was: the risk of not finding that presumed bullet path. And the Admirals knew it.
And one final thought before you watch the video: The men who did this, and I mean who shot JFK in the back with a drug-laced ice bullet to immobilize him and take the fight out of him before he reached the Kill Zone, they knew that it would be off the radar, that nobody would anticipate it, and even if told about it, nobody would believe it. They counted on it then, and it's counted on today. They're counting on you to be close-minded and mentally indurated, enough to dismiss it as far-fetched. But, it happened.
You need to reject the Single Bullet Theory- completely. You need to look bare-bones at what Humes and his team actually found: a clean, very shallow wound in JFK's back. That's it! That's the reality! All the rest is gibberish. Well, a FMJ bullet could never stop that fast. The flight speed of the bullets from the Carcano rifle was about 2000 feet per second. How could a metal bullet travelling 2000 feet per second come to zero velocity in one inch of travel through soft tissue? It's impossible. That would break a law of physics. It would violate Newton's laws of motion. But, if it was an ice bullet that was designed to burst on penetration, then it could stop that fast because the delicate crystal was no more. It was gone. It collapsed. Once you realize that JFK really did have nothing but a very shallow wound in his back, then, in the chess game that this is, the ice bullet becomes an obligatory move, a forced move. You have to go to it.
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