Richie, just for the record, I do not rush to conspiracies nor do I believe that Oswald had any help on November 22, 1963, despite a popular culture that wants to cultivate a theory that taking down a President was too big a job for any one man to do. The Grassy Knoll has absolutely no relevance to me.
I read what Street Sense wrote and though I\'m not going to research it, I don\'t remember it his way. What I remember is that Byrne jumped stables to be Stronach\'s private trainer at Adena, giving up on his undefeated, 2YO champion and horse of the year Derby prospect. Somehow, even with Stronach stock, Byrne could not get the job done and was replaced before very long. Another question for Doc Allday is \"Did he follow Byrne over to Adena Springs and treat horses there?\" I can tell you the answer. I\'m confident I know the answer without even having to ask the question and my confidence has nothing to do with consipiracies nor prior knowledge. Byrnes tandem of lightning in a bottle 2YO champions didn\'t fair well after his departure and have joined the premature Plecher dead. All these horses have something in common besides dying prematurely and that commonality is of course that they were treated with Allday\'s Magic Bullet.
Irwin and Hooper are in a position to hasten the end. They don\'t have the integrity to get the ball rolling faster though, but if I had 10 minutes with Plecher or Allday we\'d accelerate the process thats already begun.
richiebee Wrote:
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> Street Sense Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Richie, remember Favorite Trick and Countess
> > Diana? Campaigning the champion 2yo filly and
> > colt in a year is a feat worthy of D Wayne, yet
> > here it was being accomplished by Patrick Byrne
> > (who?). Who was the vet? Allday. Shortly
> after,
> > another one of Byrne\'s horses got a positive
> and
> > never has another trainer taken such a fall
> from
> > grace. Both owners of Favorite Trick and
> Countess
> > Diana moved their horses to other trainers.
> That
> > just doesn\'t happen when a trainer won you an
> > Eclipse and apparently did such a good job for
> > you. Rumor was that Allday set up Byrne to get
> > that positive.
> >
> > At some point one has to come to the
> realization
> > that where there\'s so much smoke there must be
> > some fire.
>
> Street:
>
> Even if I had forgotten, a certain denizen of the
> Big Top (I am not talking TG
> #s here) would never let us forget, as the Byrne/
> Allday alliance is almost as
> essential to CTC\'s mantra as is the Dead Pletcher
> Trio (which might be a good
> name for a punk/bluegrass band) and the nebulous
> connection between Tour de
> France cyclists and performance equines. Chuckles
> is still trying to determine
> if the Grassy Knoll was firm or yielding that day
> almost exactly 45 years ago.
>
> Street you were going along pretty strong,
> presenting a compelling case,even
> though your evidence was a bit aged, 10 years to
> be exact. Unfortunately you
> finish like a claimer in need of a myectomy when
> your last sentence in the first
> paragraph begins with the word \"Rumor\".
>
> I refer you to NCT\'s post where the Jesuit
> jurisprude (and my choice to cover
> himself in glory in Vegas in 2008) opines that
> \"Prosecution by circumstantial
> evidence is dangerous to our civil liberties\".
> Learned Hand, Benjamin Cardozo,
> or William O. Douglas may have been able to say it
> better, but it would have
> taken them 5 pages and the help of a law clerk.
>
> Further Affiant Saith Naught.