Tag Archives: Lee Oswald
Murder Most Foul
Fake news as a social phenomenon
We are all Cartesians in that respect. God created us to follow his light, which is to say, our own inner voice. Nothing in the world, outside of our minds, contradicts that creative principle.
Ed Haslam and Cyril Wecht
Two video recordings on Kennedy’s murder.
November 22, 1963 – November 22, 1917
Fifty-four years later, the CIA prevented release of documents that would show Lee Oswald was a U. S. intelligence asset. Once you know that about Oswald, several other mysteries about his life – and his death – make sense. Once you know the CIA used Oswald, and I mean used him, you no longer have to wonder why Kennedy died.
First licks in politics, first place in history
If you have not yet read James Douglass’s JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters, do …
When a patriot becomes a patsy: part two
Once you realize that Oswald worked for the CIA and FBI, and learn what he did for them, questions about Kennedy’s assassination begin to resolve themselves.
When a patriot becomes a patsy: part one
Many argue, “If all those conspiracy theories were correct, someone would have talked. Where are they?” A simple answer is that people have talked.
Significance of Lee Oswald’s death
For all the sobering material in these publications, Happy Thanksgiving, for the day and for the whole season. November 24 happens to fall on Thanksgiving this year, but I didn’t see any reason to publish this post on the holiday. So it appears the day after.
“What happened?” vs. “Who did it?”
If you want to understand the despair that led to election of a strongman two weeks ago, look back to another leader, executed on a sunny Friday afternoon as he waved from his car.
When a patriot becomes a patsy
Once you realize that Oswald worked for the CIA and FBI, and learn what he did for them, questions about Kennedy’s assassination begin to resolve themselves.
November 22 – 24, 1963
The forty-eight hours from noon on Friday, 11/22/1963, to noon Sunday, 11/24/1963, represent the most critical events in American history …