11-22-2024, 03:42 PM
This post was last modified 11-22-2024, 03:53 PM by putnam6. Edited 1 time in total. 
I can convince “any jury in America beyond a reasonable doubt” that the CIA was responsible for JFK’s assassination...RFKjr
This always sounded as plausible as any other theory, the question is who else is complicit What is the Ruby connection? How come the future head of the CIA couldn't recall if he was in Dallas?
and yes JFK UFOs and other conspiracies are what got me interested in ATS way back when... its time we learned the truth
https://x.com/Holden_Culotta/status/1860017585154326839
This always sounded as plausible as any other theory, the question is who else is complicit What is the Ruby connection? How come the future head of the CIA couldn't recall if he was in Dallas?
and yes JFK UFOs and other conspiracies are what got me interested in ATS way back when... its time we learned the truth
Quote:GOVERNMENT INTEGRITY
Bush and The JFK Hit, Part 3: Where was Poppy November 22, 1963?RUSS BAKER 10/02/13
What possible connection could there have been between George H.W. Bush and the assassination of John F. Kennedy? Or between the C.I.A. and the assassination? Or between Bush and the C.I.A.? For some people, apparently, making such connections was as dangerous as letting one live wire touch another. Here, in anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the JFK assassination in November, is the third part of a ten-part series of excerpts from WhoWhatWhy editor Russ Baker’s bestseller, Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. The story is a real-life thriller.
https://x.com/Holden_Culotta/status/1860017585154326839
Quote:
Holden Culotta
@Holden_Culotta
RFK Jr: I can convince “any jury in America beyond a reasonable doubt” that the CIA was responsible for JFK’s assassination “The evidence is so abundant and so definitive.” “The people who were involved were all part of the Miami station and who were angry at him for not invading Cuba, and for ending the war in Vietnam. Thirty days [before his assassination], he had signed National Security Order 263 ordering all troops home from Vietnam.”
61 years after JFK’s assassination, take 6 minutes to hear RFK Jr. unravel the trauma Americans have been put through since 1963. “Today, we ARE the military-industrial complex.” “It’s like a Kabuki theatre of democracy.” “Three days before [JFK] took office, President Eisenhower gave what I think we should today regard as the most important speech in American history. He warned Americans against the domination of this emerging military-industrial complex that would turn us into an imperium abroad and a security state at home. [JFK] takes office three days later, and then his 1,000 days in office are just a constant fistfight with the military-industrial complex to keep the country out of war. They tried to get him to go into Laos, he refused. They tried to get him to go into Cuba in ‘61 and again in ‘62 during the missile crisis, and he wouldn’t. They tried to get him to go into Berlin in ‘62, and he wouldn’t. They tried to get him to go into Vietnam… and he said it can’t be our fight. In October 1963 … [JFK] signed National Security Order 263 ordering all military personnel out of Vietnam. Thirty days after he signed that order, he was murdered. And a week after that, President Johnson remanded the order and then sent 250,000 troops in. My father ran against the war in ‘68. He wins the California primary, meaning he’s on his way to the White House, and he’s shot that night. Martin Luther King had become a peace activist two months before he was shot. These traumas—my uncle’s death, my father, King’s death, the Vietnam War itself, 9/11, and Covid—pushed us a little farther down that road that Eisenhower warned us against. Part of unraveling that and going back to our original idealism … means going back and looking at the original trauma and exposing what actually happened to my uncle.”
@RobertKennedyJr
His mind was not for rent to any god or government, always hopeful yet discontent. Knows changes aren't permanent, but change is ....
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart