The issue here isn’t whether someone is an amateur or a professional — it’s whether the claims match the documented evidence.
A reconstruction that relies on weeks of secret detention, executions, helicopter staging, soldiers transporting all bodies and items, and a missile test at a specific place and time that isn’t evidenced anywhere in the case file isn’t “explaining the facts,” it’s replacing them.
>Saying “this could have happened” is not the same as showing that it did happen. And shifting the burden to “prove it couldn’t have happened” is just reversing logic. The burden of proof sits with the person making the positive claim, especially when that claim contradicts the existing record.
A theory that can explain everything only because it allows itself to change the weapon, the location, the mechanism, the timeline, and the handling of the bodies whenever needed isn’t really explaining the facts — it’s absorbing them into a story.
That’s why Glenn’s point about the tu quoque fallacy matters. Critique isn’t hostility. It’s how we separate evidence‑based reasoning from narrative invention.
Nobody is being hard on amateur investigators. Plenty of excellent ones exist. The point is simply that evidence has to lead the theory, not the other way around.
To title a thread " a version that explains ALL the facts" is a claim that i cannot support. It is a stupid and pointless claim. It is not evidence . It doesn't even suggest that Mikhail Orlov read the case files?.
You say that the materials of the criminal case do not mention the activities of the military. If it were said, it would not be a case, but a sincere confession.
Say "substitutes facts." Okay, let's be specific. Which fact is "substituted", what it really is. Can't you bring it? So don't say that.
To prove it is to provide facts, documents or witness statements. And where is the EVIDENCE of avalanches, yetis, gas clouds, panic, and more? In this respect, ALL VERSIONS ARE EQUAL.
Criticism can be different. Specifically, "NO, author, you're wrong, because...". And demagogy (the Russians, again, have a good joke on the subject) And "prove it!" can be applied to any version. AND NO ONE CAN PROVE ANYTHING.
An anecdote about an elephant.
The new Russian shows off to his sidekick:
- I bought an elephant here, great!!! He knows how to do everything: he opens the gates when I arrive, and waters my garden, and works instead of guards, in short, I get high.
Well, the second one, of course, also wanted to.
"Sell it to me!"
- I can't, I need it myself.
- Well, sell it like a sidekick, I'll give you five million!
- No, I can't.
"Ten!"
- no.
"Fifteen!"!!! Well, sell it!!!!!!
- Well, okay, it's not a pity for a friend.
The next day, the call:
- What the **** did you sell me??? I brought the elephant home, and he broke my fence, trampled my lawn, took a **** everywhere, and crushed my car!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Not a brother, you can't sell an elephant like that...
The evidence has already been discussed above. Mikhail Orlov read the materials of the criminal case. Have you read it? Apparently not, as do most of the "researchers," because the autopsy reports of Dubinina and Zolotarev, along with the testimony of the medical examiner, at least kill most versions at once. If you're interested, I can show you where to look.