That is not a response, that is elitism. I was gonna challenge to offer me definitive proof of anything, but you have a superiority complex, and I'm just about done talking to you.
THe ones that say the Mafia did all by themselves sure is, yeah.JFK conspiracy theories are bullshit.
MLK was promoted as Public Enemy Nr. 1 after his anti-VIetnam War speech. Former/retired FBI agents have publicly admited that the agency had a large role in taking his out, even though it wasn't an open operation or anything. Like the Kennedy's, he posed a threat to the national security structure, and could have caused the country to bring pressured against the war and against inequality wherein, and they didn't want that.Something did go on with the King assassination, though.
Reclaiming History is one of the most dishonest, vile pieces of propaganda. I suggest reading James DiEugenio's book The JFK Assassination, which details how it deliberately left out information, concealed critical information, and vilified critical people involved in the conversation for the murder, including Garrison and Stone themselves.As for the House Committee in the late 70s? Vincent Bugliosi's Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy has quite thoroughly debunked that report.
None of those "sources" confirm anything. Posner's case has long since been debunked, and Bugliosi's is equally untruthful with the intent to prove Oswald wrong and disprove the conspiracy.Obviously, no appeals to reason can overcome convinced conspiracy theorists (Stone himself suggests the absence of evidence for the conspiracy--particularly the lack of even ONE (from among the hundreds necessary for his theory to hold water) participant's leaking of it--acts as proof of the conspiracy's reality). But between Bugliosi, Posner's Case Closed and the physics of the most recent experiment (let alone many other compelling refutations), I feel quite confident Stone's version is a fantasy, as are the myriad conspiracy theories floating out there.
It is really such a relief to see someone who has a shred of sanity on this thread. I was starting to lose faith in humanity for a second.That would be the best decision. Some are content to regurgitate disproven "facts", reference habitual liars such as Posner, and ignore the witnesses who were told (by WC investigators) to either change their story, or were not called at all (e.g., Acquilla Clemons).
Isn't he also the one who held the Press Conference that announced in the President's death and answered a reporter's question by showing where he shot with "a bullet wound to the head" and showed a forward trajectory of the shot? Or was that a different person?In Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill's book, Man of the House, JFK's longtime friend/advisor (and White House Appointments Secretary) Kenneth O'Donnell--who rode in the follow-up car to the Kennedy vehicle--stated that he told the WC that he not only witnessed the gruesome sight of JFK being shot to death, but heard shots come from the front in the direction of the fence, but was told that (to paraphrase) "it could not have happened that way" and all but ordered him to change his testimony...to "spare" the Kennedy family (and presumably to protect the nation of any potentially "damaging" outcomes from a differing account). O'Donnell regretted that decision, and he is far from the only witness to reality who was told to change their eyewitness account, or their testimony never made the published volumes.
I did not know this story. Thanks for sharing. I will say this about Cronkite - he did speak against the Vietnam War eventually, but only after years and years after the US's involvement with it began and until then, he was a staunch supporter of the effort, privately telling hippies to "shut it" with their demonstrations and let the "adults work on it". Pretty shameful, and regrettable that he had to view the war firsthand to finally speak against it.On the opposite end of reality (or the acceptance of it), you have some still worshipping at the stained altar of propagandists such as Walter Cronkite, a man who--similar to "reporters" employed by other network news bureaus of the 60s--altered or omitted facts of important stories, which was inexcusable, and a marker of his character. For one example, during the summer of 1964, as the FBI and sailors searched for missing Civil Rights workers James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Godman, the corpses of several black people were found in the various swamps and rivers--a reported 8 including Charles Eddie Moore, Henry Hezekiah Dee, Herbert Oarsby, and 5 other black victims. Smaller, serious newspapers and radio stations of the time reported the series of discoveries, but the mainstream, network news channels--CBS at the top of that heap--did not. CBS' regional bureaus and field reporters were fully aware of the discoveries, but this information was suppressed, and Cronkite--the network's oft-seen town crier of the case--went along with it (expect the excuses that he was not ultimately responsible for anything he said on air...). He was hardly the bastion of absolute truth some have self-packaged and sold themselves for over the decades.
Further, this was not censorship because of gruesome details (which were not detailed on air in 1964 in any case), so there are not many truth-based reasons why part of one of the most significant stories of that decade was as buried as those 8 victims. So, trotting out certain names to bolster arguments naturally leads to the need to examine those names, their posiition on key historical events, and how the events were presented to the public.
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