How can you possibly interpolate what happened behind the Stemmons freeway sign while Kennedy and Connally were hidden from Zapruders camera?
One critic wrote, “…the trajectory of a bullet may be accurately interpolated when starting and ending positions are known. The positions of relatively motionless humans absolutely cannot. You have no inertia to establish a path. Perhaps you could interpolate the motions of say, a quarterback throwing a pass or other highly predictable patterns, but certainly not the actions of individuals randomly responding to being shot.” Wrong. Categorizing “highly predictable patterns” as numeric interpolation is a complete misunderstanding of the concept. Allow me to explain. Numeric interpolation involves three elements: a start point, an end point, and a time factor. A motionless object has the same start and end point. An interpolation of the position of a motionless object over a given period would show that the object remained motionless. So, motionless objects can in fact be interpolated. But, of course, that would be a rather silly exercise. In the case of the JFK assassination, both Ken