Does "THE OSWALD PUZZLE" make any sense?

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Author Topic: Does "THE OSWALD PUZZLE" make any sense?  (Read 7527 times)

Online John Mytton

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Re: Does "THE OSWALD PUZZLE" make any sense?
« Reply #14 on: February 13, 2025, 10:19:56 AM »
Kennedy the Castro hater??
Really John?
So in Oswald's eyes General Walker and JFK are cut from the same cloth are they?

Mental gymnastics anyone?
           

This newspaper article was printed on the 19th in the Dallas Times Herald, the Tuesday before Oswald assassinated Kennedy.

Read this extract carefully"The President(Kennedy) said it would be a happy day if the Castro government is ousted" doesn't mean that Castro was welcome to come to the Whitehouse for tea and biscuits! So yeah, both Walker and Kennedy were opposed to Castro and we know that keen Marxist Oswald would have seen this as particularly disturbing. You should spend a bit more time investigating Oswald and who he was.





Oswald's possessions contained Marxist literature including Castro speeches!





JohnM
« Last Edit: February 13, 2025, 10:37:10 AM by John Mytton »

Online John Mytton

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Re: Does "THE OSWALD PUZZLE" make any sense?
« Reply #15 on: February 13, 2025, 10:32:16 AM »
You're not seeing it. If Oswald was involved with the plotters, possibly knowing that there would be an assassination attempt, perhaps that day, somewhere along the route or later on, his surprise at hearing the shots and then people running around saying that Kennedy had been shot or shot at, would have been enough for him to realise that it looked bad for him.

He wouldn't expose something which could result in the killing of his family by the plotters. Another well trodden theory: he was infiltrating the group and informing the CIA (or what he thought was a CIA agent - rogue agent) - something that couldn't be said openly to the press. He may well have said something along those lines during the interrogation by the DPD or FBI but it went over their heads. He apparently did ask for a call to be put through to the Langley district.

As usual, you are also forgetting the fact that President Ford told President Giscard d'Estaing in private that the Warren Commission knew that Oswald had been involved in a conspiracy.

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As usual, you are also forgetting the fact that President Ford told President Giscard d'Estaing in private that the Warren Commission knew that Oswald had been involved in a conspiracy.

Even if true, from Ford's acknowledgment of lack of evidence we can safely replace "knew" with "suspected".

JohnM
« Last Edit: February 13, 2025, 10:33:58 AM by John Mytton »

Offline Jim Hawthorn

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Re: Does "THE OSWALD PUZZLE" make any sense?
« Reply #16 on: February 13, 2025, 01:38:02 PM »
Even if true, from Ford's acknowledgment of lack of evidence we can safely replace "knew" with "suspected".

What Ford said to the French President:
"We reached a first conclusion: it was not an isolated crime, it was something organized. We were sure that it was organized. But we could not find out by whom."