Irish Mike wrote:
> If you want a true, factual and complete account of
> the Death of Kennedy, read O'Reilly's book, "Killing Kennedy".
>
> Irish Mike
http://www.salon.com/2012/10/08/killing_kennedy_bill_oreilly_wimps_out/
Once upon a time, Bill O'Reilly had balls when it came to investigating
the Kennedy assassination. Back in 1991 - as a reporter for the tabloid
TV news show, "Inside Edition" - O'Reilly had the guts to track the epic
crime all the way into the dark labyrinth of the CIA. Following up on
the important work done by investigators for the House Select Committee
on Assassinations in the late '70s, O'Reilly boldly told his "Inside
Edition" audience that there were "crucial" links between alleged
assassin Lee Harvey Oswald and the CIA. O'Reilly also reported that the
CIA had infiltrated the office of New Orleans District Attorney Jim
Garrison, who brought the only criminal case in the JFK assassination to
trial, in an effort to sabotage Garrison's investigation.
That was then - when O'Reilly was a scrappy reporter for low-budget
syndicated TV. But now, of course, he's BILL O'REILLY - Fox News icon, a
lavishly paid centerpiece of the Murdoch empire. Everything he says -
every windy pontification and dyspeptic remark - is writ LARGE. He can
no longer afford to have the courage of his suspicions. In O'Reilly's
new ideological mold, the CIA is not the incubator of an unspeakable
crime against American democracy - it's the defender of the greatest
nation in the world.
And so we have the Fox News star's latest instant bestseller, "Killing
Kennedy: The End of Camelot," co-written by Martin Dugard, who
collaborated with O'Reilly on his earlier runaway success, "Killing
Lincoln." There is almost nothing in this Kennedy for Beginners book
that indicates O'Reilly once did some original research on this murky
and still deeply haunting subject. Most of this surprisingly dumbed-down
book is a biographical rehash of the Kennedy story that will contain
nothing new for even casual readers of People magazine and viewers of
Kennedy soap opera biopics over the years. Once again, we get the story
of JFK's PT-109 heroics in the South Pacific; the lurid tales of Jack's
womanizing and Jackie's anguish; the requisite cameos of Sinatra,
Marilyn and the Mob; the familiar snapshots of a deeply disgruntled
Lyndon Johnson, continually humiliated by the Kennedy brothers and their
elite Harvard crowd. None of this is worth the book's $28 price of
admission.
When it comes to the assassination of President Kennedy, these days Bill
O'Reilly embraces the lone nut theory, pinning sole blame on Lee Harvey
Oswald. But his case against Oswald is feeble, and he's obviously still
haunted by the suspicions of the younger, freer Bill O'Reilly. In
"Killing Kennedy," he can't help returning to those earlier suspicions,
in fleeting moments of the book, as if darting a tongue at a nagging
tooth.
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Barb