..... But IF you fire blind, you MIGHT hit your target.
I occasionally run into people online or in person who believe that the "course of fire" in Dealey Plaza that day was difficult for some reason. None of them were proficient with a firearm. I always explain that anything under 100 yards is short range for a rifle and that anyone who could make it through Marine Corps boot camp had to be capable of what Oswald did.
Ranb
This is a target almost identical to the type I used to shoot at during my Basic Training and in annual qualification shoots for the 20 years I was in our Air Force... 1973-1993
It is a life size target; the centre rectangle is about 3" wide, and the next is about 6" wide
We used to shoot these...
A Belgian made FN-FAL 7.62mm gas operated SLR...notch & pin "iron sights" only!!!
The qualifying shoot was something like this; you had three magazines of 20 rounds each
2 x "warmers" into the bank behind the target
3 x sighters after which the people tending the butts gave you MPI (Mean Point of Impact) indications to tell you where your shots were falling.
From now on, every shot counted
@ 100 metres
15 shots prone (in your own time)
MPIs
Reload
10 shots standing (in your own time)
10 shots standing "snap" in 5 two-shot pairs, on the command "Fire"
MPIs
Reload
10 shots rapid fire (15 second time limit)
MPIs
Move back to 200m
@200 metres
10 shots lying (in your own time)
To pass qualification, you had to score 75% (42/55) by hitting the second to smallest rectangle (or at least nicking the edge)
To be awarded a Marksman's Badge...
You had to score 90% (49/55)
This was not easy, but I qualified every year (as did most people) and even managed the Marksman's Badge about a third of the time. Only once got a perfect score though.