On Thursday, February 14, 2019 at 7:35:49 PM UTC-6, BT George wrote:
> On Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 10:01:02 PM UTC-6, Steve M. Galbraith wrote:
> > On Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 12:16:20 PM UTC-5, BT George wrote:
> > > On Tuesday, February 12, 2019 at 2:19:57 PM UTC-6, Steve M. Galbraith wrote:
> > > > On Monday, February 11, 2019 at 8:38:00 PM UTC-5, BT George wrote:
> > > > > I still have no reticence in think the Walker killing likely says a great
> > > > > deal about why he shot at JFK. There were doubtless others motives at
> > > > > work, including the desperate condition of his life and apparent loss of
> > > > > Marina, but there is really only one thing Walker and JFK has in common.
> > > > > They were both Cold Warriors in general, but enemies of Castro and the
> > > > > Cuban Revolution in particular. I’ll never believe that was
> > > > > uninvolved in his motive.
> > > >
> > > > Yes, but the attempt on Walker was well planned and we have some evidence
> > > > from DeMohrenschildt and Marina that Oswald hated Walker. I.e,. a motive.
> > > > The attempt on JFK - much more difficult admittedly - was spontaneous and
> > > > thrown together at the last moment. He didn't retrieve his rifle earlier
> > > > and practice with it, get it prepared. He got it the day before. If he
> > > > wanted to strike at JFK for Operation Mongoose and JFK's call earlier that
> > > > month (the Miami speech) for removal of Castro then why wait until the
> > > > last moment?
> > >
> > > I'm not sure what your last statement means. "...last moment." I never
> > > said Operation Mongoose was the reason he went after JFK---though it
> > > certainly could have been one factor. Also the Miami speech was not the
> > > only exposure he had to JFK's anti Castro leanings. In fact, the Marxist
> > > papers he read carried news of the attempts by the US Government to
> > > dispose of Castro by any means possible. And as for "last moment" when
> > > did he ever have the opportunity before to take a crack at JFK before fate
> > > handed him his golden chance?
> >
> > By "last moment" I meant literally the eve of the visit. No prep. with the
> > rifle, no maintenance of it, no escape plan, relying on a ride from a
> > 19-year old co-worker with a problematic car, he leaves his revolver at
> > the rooming house, he has no escape plan, he's got four bullets, he's
> > relying on JFK coming to him in a sort of passive act....
> >
> > This is apparently not a man obsessively driven to kill JFK. JFK has to be
> > brought to him, he's hoping that he'll get a shot, he's hoping that he'll
> > be unseen by his co-workers. He doesnt' go to the airport to stalk JFK.
> >
> > This is not, it seems to me, how presidential assassins driven by a larger
> > and long-standing purpose have acted. It is why, on one level, the
> > conspiracy advocates have a point: he didn't make any effort to go after
> > JFK, JFK was brought to him.
> >
> > Re Operation Mongoose: I was using that as shorthand for the entire war -
> > political, economic and military - waged by JFK.
> >
> > As I said earlier, I've gone back and forth in my thinking as to his
> > motive and how much his pro-Castro feelings were involved. Jean Davison
> > makes a persuasive argument that he was a political person, a person
> > devoted to Castro and that those factors had to play some role in his act.
> > It wasn't just fame or notoriety.
>
> I'm simply saying this. There is no reason---given his background, to
> believe that if say Connally alone, or Charles De Gaulle, or Khruschev had
> been passing through, that Oswald would have chosen this course of action.
> He certainly could have gained a real degree of notoriety by doing so, yet
> his desire to take an action to affect things in the direction of the
> advance of Communism/Marxism would have been unsatisfied by doing so and I
> do not believe he was so desperate that he would have been willing to do
> just "anything" at that moment to act out.
And just to show how unsafe speculation as to exact motive(s) is, consider
that BOZ (John Deagle) linked elsewhere to an interview Gerald Posner did:
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/alt.assassination.jfk/8IedIIYCldo/5dT6OCLgCAAJ
In it Posner *exactly* contradicts my argument above by naming Nikita
Krushchev as someone Oswald would have been willing to kill, citing
Anarchist leanings in Oswald. Ask a dozen people and you'll get nearly
that many answers, though some only differ subtly. Go figure.