In article <
ca1de43e-d137-405f...@r10g2000pbd.googlegroups.com>,
aeffects says...
>
>On Dec 1, 4:04=A0pm, Bud <
sirsl...@fast.net> wrote:
>> On Dec 1, 4:24=A0pm, Ben Holmes <
ad...@burningknife.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> > Despite the enduring popularity of conspiracy theories about President =
>John F.
>> > Kennedy's death on November 22, 1963, it's a mainstream consensus that =
>these
>> > theories have always been essentially the work of cranks, popularized b=
>y a
>> > national appetite for mystery and entertainment. In recent years, this =
>consensus
>> > has been reinforced by Vincent Bugliosi's massive, critically acclaimed=
> book,
>> > Reclaiming History, along with Tom Hanks's related HBO special.
>>
>> > But for all the crazy ideas out there, there remain sober and careful
>> > alternative views of the assassination. These theories may or may not u=
>ltimately
>> > be right, but they represent the continuation of serious discussion of =
>the
>> > subject. As the debate continues past the 47th anniversary of President
>> > Kennedy's death, let's take stock of five common myths about the state =
>of the
>> > debate itself.
>>
>> > 1. The belief that secret plotters killed Kennedy was first made popula=
>r by
>> > Oliver Stone's 1992 movie, JFK.
>>
>> > Popular belief in a conspiracy was widespread within a week of Kennedy'=
>s murder.
>> > Between November 25 and 29, 1963, University of Chicago pollsters asked=
> more
>> > than 1,000 Americans whom they thought was responsible for the presiden=
>t's
>> > death. By then, the chief suspect, Oswald -- a leftist who had lived fo=
>r a time
>> > in Soviet Union -- had been shot dead while in police custody by Jack R=
>uby, a
>> > local hoodlum with organized crime connections.
>>
>> > While the White House, the FBI, and the Dallas Police Department all af=
>firmed
>> > that Oswald had acted alone, 62 percent of respondents said they believ=
>ed that
>> > more than one person was involved in the assassination. Only 24 percent=
> thought
>> > Oswald had acted alone. Another poll taken in Dallas during the same we=
>ek found
>> > 66 percent of respondents believing that there had been a plot. There w=
>ere no
>> > JFK conspiracy theories in print at that time. Oliver Stone was in high=
> school.
>>
>> Conspiracy retards never seemed to be interested in pertinent
>> information. How many people thought Oswald killed Kennedy?
The point was the LNT'er factoid that "The belief that secret plotters killed
Kennedy was first made popular by Oliver Stone's 1992 movie, JFK"
I can understand your cowardice in addressing what you cannot refute.
>> > 2. All serious historians believe that Lee Harvey Oswald shot President=
> Kennedy,
>> > alone and unaided.
>>
>> > Since 2000, five tenured academic historians have published books on JF=
>K's
>> > assassination. Four of the five concluded that a conspiracy was behind =
>the 35th
>> > president's murder.
>>
>> > David Kaiser, a diplomatic historian at the Naval War College, and the =
>author of
>> > a 2008 book, The Road to Dallas: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy, =
>concluded
>> > that Kennedy was killed in plot involving disgruntled CIA operatives an=
>d
>> > organized crime figures. Michael Kurtz of Southeastern Louisiana Univer=
>sity came
>> > to the same conclusion in his 2006 book, The JFK Assassination Debates:=
> Lone
>> > Gunman Versus Conspiracy.
>>
>> > In a 2005 book, Breach of Trust: How the Warren Commission Failed the N=
>ation and
>> > Why, Gerald McKnight of Hood College suggested that a high-level plot i=
>nvolving
>> > senior U.S. intelligence officials was probably responsible for the pre=
>sident's
>> > death. In his 2003 book about photographic evidence, The Zapruder Film:
>> > Reframing JFK's Assassination, David Wrone of the University of
>> > Wisconsin-Stevens Point argued that the famous amateur film footage of =
>the
>> > assassination proves that Kennedy was hit by gunfire from two different
>> > directions. Wrone did not advocate a theory of who was responsible.
>>
>> > A fifth historian, Robert Dallek of UCLA, wrote a 2003 biography of Ken=
>nedy, An
>> > Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963. While not about the assass=
>ination
>> > as such, An Unfinished Life embraced the Warren Commission's lone-gunma=
>n
>> > finding, relying squarely on Gerald Posner's 1994 anti-conspiratorial
>> > best-seller Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK=
>.
>>
>> Conspiracy books have a better market, fools with money.
Of course, the topic is "serious historians", you know, academic types... so
once again, you've demonstrated either your ignorance or your cowardice in
refusing to address the actual topic.
>> > 3. No one high-up in the U.S. government ever thought there was a consp=
>iracy
>> > behind JFK's murder.
>>
>> > In fact, many senior U.S. officials concluded that there had been a plo=
>t but
>> > rarely talked about it openly.
>>
>> In other words, hearsay reports of their opinions. Apparently nobody
>> can come out and say what they think, it has to go through secondary
>> sources first.
This seems to be a pattern with you... yet again you refuse to address the
actual point... probably because you *KNOW* that you can't refute it.
Which, of course, simply underlines the accuracy of the original post.
>> > Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson, publicly endorsed the Warren Commi=
>ssions
>> > conclusion that Oswald acted alone. Privately, LBJ told many people, ra=
>nging
>> > from Atlantic contributor Leo Janos to CIA director Richard Helms, that=
> he did
>> > not believe the lone-gunman explanation.
>>
>> > The president's brother Robert and widow Jacqueline also believed that =
>he had
>> > been killed by political enemies, according to historians Aleksandr Fur=
>senko and
>> > Tim Naftali. In their 1999 book on the Cuban missile crisis, One Hell o=
>f a
>> > Gamble: Khrushchev, Castro, and Kennedy, 1958-1964, they reported that =
>William
>> > Walton -- a friend of the First Lady -- went to Moscow on a previously =
>scheduled
>> > trip a week after JFK's murder. Walton carried a message from RFK and J=
>ackie for
>> > their friend, Georgi Bolshakov, a Russian diplomat who had served as a
>> > back-channel link between the White House and the Kremlin during the Oc=
>tober
>> > 1962 crisis: RFK and Jackie wanted the Soviet leadership to know that "=
>despite
>> > Oswald's connections to the communist world, the Kennedys believed that=
> the
>> > president was felled by domestic opponents."
>>
>> > In the Senate, Democrats Richard Russell of Georgia and Russell Long of
>> > Louisiana both rejected official accounts of the assassination. In the =
>executive
>> > branch, Joseph Califano, the General Counsel of Army in 1963 and later =
>Secretary
>> > of Health Education and Welfare, concluded that Kennedy had been killed=
> by a
>> > conspiracy.* In the White House, H.R. Haldeman, chief of staff to Presi=
>dent
>> > Richard Nixon, wanted to reopen the JFK investigation in 1969. Nixon wa=
>sn't
>> > interested.
>>
>> > Suspicion persisted in the upper echelons of the U.S. national security
>> > agencies, as well. Col. L. Fletcher Prouty, chief of Pentagon special o=
>perations
>> > in 1963 (and later an adviser to Stone), believed that there had been a=
> plot.
>>
>> > Winston Scott, chief of the CIA's station in Mexico City at the time of
>> > Kennedy's murder and an ultra-conservative Agency loyalist, rejected th=
>e Warren
>> > Commission's findings about a trip that Oswald had taken to Mexico six =
>weeks
>> > before the assassination. Scott concluded in an unpublished memoir that=
> Oswald
>> > had, indeed, been just a patsy.
>>
>> > None of these figures was a paranoid fantasist. To the contrary, they
>> > constituted a cross section of the American power elite in 1963. Neithe=
>r did
>> > they talk about a JFK conspiracy for public consumption; they talked ab=
>out it
>> > only reservedly, in confined circles.
>>
>> > 4. Former Los Angeles County prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi refuted all JF=
>K
>> > conspiracy theories in Reclaiming History.
>>
>> > In the course of 1,600 pages Bugliosi effectively refuted many unfounde=
>d
>> > conspiracy scenarios and reasserted the lone gunman conclusions of the =
>Warren
>> > Commission. But he has never engaged the extensive scholarship of Commi=
>ssion
>> > skeptics such as journalist David Talbot, historian Kaiser, historian J=
>ohn
>> > Newman, or biographer Anthony Summers, or analyzed the innovative resea=
>rch of
>> > attorney William Simpich.
>>
>> > Kaiser, author of seven books on U.S. history, notes that Bugliosi's
>> > prosecutorial approach limits the scope of his historical analysis: "He=
> falls
>> > back on the old argument 'no one could have ever used Ruby and Oswald i=
>n a
>> > conspiracy' which relieves him of the necessity of addressing any of th=
>e
>> > conspiracy evidence seriously."
>>
>> If nobody could have used Ruby or Oswald in a conspiracy then there
>> could be no conspiracy. This relieves the necessity of barking up the
>> wrong trees for all eternity.
A complete non-sequitor.... once again, you refuse to address the topic.
Are you trying to outdo Billy in the cowardice department?
>> > 5. All the CIA's records related to the Kennedy assassination have been=
> made
>> > public.
>>
>> > The agency acknowledges that it currently holds thousands of pages on K=
>ennedy's
>> > murder that the public has never seen. The CIA disclosed the existence =
>of the
>> > still-secret JFK files while responding to a Freedom of Information Act=
> lawsuit,
>> > filed as it happens by me, seeking the release of other records related=
> to the
>> > assassination.
>>
>> > In a sworn affidavit, Delores Nelson, the CIA's chief information offic=
>er,
>> > stated that the Agency has approximately 1,100 assassination-related do=
>cuments
>> > that it plans to keep under wraps until 2017, if not longer. These file=
>s --
>> > containing more than 2,000 pages of material -- cannot be made public f=
>or
>> > reasons, Nelson says, of national security.
>>
>> > In other words, somewhere in the Washington metropolitan area there is =
>a
>> > collection of CIA documents related to JFK's murder that, if collated, =
>would
>> > stand about ten inches tall. None of those documents has ever been seen=
> by the
>> > U.S. Congress or the National Archives, let alone by journalists, histo=
>rians,
>> > bloggers, Oliver Stone, Tom Hanks, or the general public.
>>
>> > That's not a conspiracy theory or a myth. It's a fact.
>>
>> The dog ate my evidence.
The truth remains unrefuted by you... rather cowardly, aren't you?
>yep, this is the best .john(aka lone nut) troll's can produce... It
>boggles the mind why silly moron's from aaj support the idiotic
>assumption LHO killed JFK alone... Rush to Judgement written in 1967,
>stands as testament to the lies of the WCR.
>
>130+ threads (re Rush to Judgement) on this USENET board, ALONE and
>the best lone nuts have is adoration from Tim Brennan (aka Tim Shell--
>failed standup comic for Ben Holmes constant reminder that lone nuts
>can't mount a defense of the WCR...
>
>Carry on Dud, great to see you haven't forgot your ineptitude...
I thought "Bud" would at least address the topics in this thread... instead he's
emulating Billy "The Coward" Clarke.
Not even a *SINGLE* LNT'er factoid was refuted, or even seriously threatened by
the kook's response.
>> > [Taken from:
http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/11/the-ken=