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Posted

And, of course, the post I made about the stroke patient went right over Cliff's head, as usual.

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Posted (edited)

Really? Yet you can diagnose bullets that hit JFK in the larynx and then make a magical 90° turn downward to the trachea and another 90° turn back to the horizontal in order to make a horizontal wound on the trachea, and leave no trace of the original impact on the larynx.

Edited by Robert Prudhomme
Posted (edited)

Really? Yet you can diagnose bullets that hit JFK in the larynx and then make a magical 90° turn downward to the trachea and another 90° turn back to the horizontal in order to make a horizontal wound on the trachea, and leave no trace of the original impact on the larynx.

Excuse me?

Hematoma and contusions right side of the larnyx, Bob.

Check the x-ray -- Mantik declared it legit.

The round struck the right T1 transverse process.

Edited by Cliff Varnell
Posted (edited)

Here is a question for you, Cliff.

If you believe the round entered JFK's larynx, describe the path it took in order to hit the right transverse process of his T1 vertebra.

P.S.

Don't forget to include the almost horizontal wound to his trachea, between the 2nd and 3rd tracheal rings.

Edited by Robert Prudhomme
Posted

Here is a question for you, Cliff.

If you believe the round entered JFK's larynx, describe the path it took in order to hit the right transverse process of his T1 vertebra.

P.S.

Don't forget to include the almost horizontal wound to his trachea, between the 2nd and 3rd tracheal rings.

"Almost horizontal"?

That's called diagonal, Bob.

The round didn't take a straight line path in the neck, Bob. Contusions in the larnyx and damage to the trachea and T1 transverse process indicate as much.

Posted

Ok, you're right, Cliff, it was a diagonal wound. However, it was diagonal on a downward path from back to front of the trachea; exactly the opposite of the "deflected" bullet path you claim the bullet took from the larynx to T1 vertebra.

Explain that one for us, Einstein.

Posted

Ok, you're right, Cliff, it was a diagonal wound. However, it was diagonal on a downward path from back to front of the trachea;

Citation, please.

exactly the opposite of the "deflected" bullet path you claim the bullet took from the larynx to T1 vertebra.

Explain that one for us, Einstein.

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