Was Lee Harvey Oswald framed?

I've been reading up on uranium lately. U-235 is the fissile stuff, making up 0.72% of naturally occurring uranium. U-238 is the rest. Half-life of 4.5 billion years, so it isn't exactly highly radioactive. Processed uranium with less than .72% U-235 is considered 'depleted' and has interesting properties, such as being 40% more dense than lead and being excellent radiation shielding material. It also holds heat very well. It's quite strong, unlike gold. Well known as the material used in anti tank rounds, it also happens to make a very good armor, as well.

It isn't nearly as dangerously radioactive as I thought, in fact it's nearly inert. It IS pretty poisonous, though.

The US DOE has a lot of it and is trying to find commercial uses for it. It appears to have promise in drilling oil wells due to its density. Currently estimated value is about $2000/ton.

Funny what you read on DoD websites these days...

Not to be Debbie Downer here but the Oil Industry had the same idea.
Out of sight out of mind is just childish.
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I've been reading up on uranium lately. U-235 is the fissile stuff, making up 0.72% of naturally occurring uranium. U-238 is the rest. Half-life of 4.5 billion years, so it isn't exactly highly radioactive. Processed uranium with less than .72% U-235 is considered 'depleted' and has interesting properties, such as being 40% more dense than lead and being excellent radiation shielding material. It also holds heat very well. It's quite strong, unlike gold. Well known as the material used in anti tank rounds, it also happens to make a very good armor, as well.

It isn't nearly as dangerously radioactive as I thought, in fact it's nearly inert. It IS pretty poisonous, though.

The US DOE has a lot of it and is trying to find commercial uses for it. It appears to have promise in drilling oil wells due to its density. Currently estimated value is about $2000/ton.

Funny what you read on DoD websites these days...
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I haven't looked at them. Were the x-rays of jfk's brain included? I heard there were speres of lead. Something that would have only happened with a soft round. It melts going through the skull, then cools back down once it's in the grey matter. The SS guy in the follow car got slammed down on the back seat when they floored it, and his rifle went off. They had new M16's (before the troops had them) that were known to fire when bumped. Johnson wouldn't let the SS within a quarter mile when he was on his ranch in Texas.
 
I haven't looked at them. Were the x-rays of jfk's brain included? I heard there were speres of lead. Something that would have only happened with a soft round. It melts going through the skull, then cools back down once it's in the grey matter. The SS guy in the follow car got slammed down on the back seat when they floored it, and his rifle went off. They had new M16's (before the troops had them) that were known to fire when bumped. Johnson wouldn't let the SS within a quarter mile when he was on his ranch in Texas.
And that "SS"Guy was supposedly a driver ,the SS guys apparently got on the piss the night before and the guy who was supposed to be in that spot was hung over from drinking too much
 
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