To: Herodes
I read something a long time ago that Kennedy wrote Executive Order 11110 which he signed in April of 1963. The central bank (FEDs) didn’t like that and had him killed. Although EO 11110 is still valid, the government shortly after Kennedy’s death removed all the money printed with “United States Note” while leaving Federal Reserve Notes in circulation. Google “Executive Order 11110” for more information.
107 posted on
10/22/2014 11:01:52 AM PDT by
GYPSY286
(Politicians must USE their heads or Americans will LOSE their heads.)
To: GYPSY286
From:http://www.gunsamerica.com/blog/lee-harvey-oswalds-carcano-rifle-shooting-it-today/ The FBI reported to the Warren Commission that they actually could not zero the scope on Oswalds gun without putting some kind of shims in it, but as you can see in the pictures, I dont see where such shims would even go. Our scope is clearly a replica and not the same model as the Oswald scope, but it is the same power and the mount is identical. It was difficult to zero because of the very old and rudimentary design, but zero it we did. The recoil is very manageable on the Carcano, so there would be little worry of it affecting even a cheap scope. One thing I have never seen explained online is that the scope on the Oswald rifle is a side mount, like an M1 Garand sniper modesl. You can still use the open sights just as you would without a scope, and you dont have to look under the mounts like you would with a modern see-thru mount. The open sights are zeroed for 200 yards and shoot about 8″ high at 50 yards. There are published theories that Oswald used the open sights on the gun, because the thinking is he could not zero the optics anyway, and that using the awkward side optic would take too long between shots to aim. Our open sights are not adjustable, but they were pretty close to point-of-aim horizontally, but would require about an 8″ hold under. Oswalds rifle had the same non-adjustable sights as this test gun, and it is very possible that at that distance, only 58 yards or so, he used the iron sights
To: GYPSY286
I read something a long time ago that Kennedy wrote Executive Order 11110 which he signed in April of 1963. The central bank (FEDs) didnt like that and had him killed. Although EO 11110 is still valid, the government shortly after Kennedys death removed all the money printed with United States Note while leaving Federal Reserve Notes in circulation. Google Executive Order 11110 for more information. From what I understand, countermanding that executive order was the first thing LBJ did once in office. The FED has always been my favored target in this particular conspiracy. When you look at big things happening in history, it always comes down to money in the end.
147 posted on
10/22/2014 1:34:59 PM PDT by
zeugma
(The act of observing disturbs the observed.)
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