Recent Posts

Recent Posts

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10
1
Ms. Wheeler's contributions seem awfully (suspiciously?) harsh for someone with a mere handful of posts. Perhaps there is a history of which I am unaware. The fact is, Tom's participation in the JFKA goes w-a-y back, and he made some good contributions before he went completely off the KGB/TDS cliff. I have simply put him on Ignore, which is simpler than haranguing at him. Ben likewise goes way back and has raised some good points over the years. His G2 stuff flows from the work of Gus Russo, whose contributions to JFKA research I highly respect. While I enjoy verbal jousting and have a Ph.D in Snarkiness Studies, I don't see that anything is gained by just calling people stupid and delusional. An internet forum that limited itself to non-stupid, non-delusional contributors would be very thinly populated. I happen to think that both the KGB and G2 angles are misguided for the reasons I've set forth, but they aren't insane.

I came to this board in February of this year but that hardly makes me a newbie. I have argued online about the JFKA off and on for the past 35 years. I wouldn't be at all surprised if Veronica Jayne Wheeler has a similar past but based on what she has written, it seems she has developed some strong opinions about the JFKA. I have no idea whether she is an LN or a CT but I would bet heavily that this isn't her first rodeo regarding the JFKA.

I remember when I was a newbie when I first joined the online discourse 35 years ago on the old Prodigy service. If I saw somebody today writing crap like I was posting back then, I would smack them upside the head (figuratively speaking, of course). 

As for TG, his TDS and PDS seem to color just about everything he posts lately. These conditions seem to be chronic.
2
But you were hoping to run the gas chambers, weren't you?

I have to say this. You are the most irrational LN I've come across in 35 years of discussing the JFK online. Even more so than Andrew Mason which is a rather high bar to clear.
3
Two thumbs up!!!

Ms. Wheeler's contributions seem awfully (suspiciously?) harsh for someone with a mere handful of posts. Perhaps there is a history of which I am unaware. The fact is, Tom's participation in the JFKA goes w-a-y back, and he made some good contributions before he went completely off the KGB/TDS cliff. I have simply put him on Ignore, which is simpler than haranguing at him. Ben likewise goes way back and has raised some good points over the years. His G2 stuff flows from the work of Gus Russo, whose contributions to JFKA research I highly respect. While I enjoy verbal jousting and have a Ph.D in Snarkiness Studies, I don't see that anything is gained by just calling people stupid and delusional. An internet forum that limited itself to non-stupid, non-delusional contributors would be very thinly populated. I happen to think that both the KGB and G2 angles are misguided for the reasons I've set forth, but they aren't insane.
4
No, no one needs your opinion on JBC’s state of mind. Nellie and Jackie state what occurred, as did all the other eyewitnesses. What did not take place was an early missed shot. That is why you are unable to prove it. 

Rosemary Willis, seriously, a child and none of the adults surrounding her knew what was happening. Just her. That is your answer?

So you base your beliefs on two women who saw their husbands shot right before their eyes and you think they are going to remember the details of the event clearly. That's actually funny.
5
I would wager that most of us are better informed about the JFKA than LBJ simply because we didn't get the bulk of our information from Hoover.
6
Somewhat off-topic, but Bart Kamp does a nice job of rendering highly dubious Mrs. Reid's supposed encounter with a zombie-like, coke-carrying Oswald: http://www.prayer-man.com/tsbd/mrs-robert-reid/.

Apart from this, Baker wrote in a handwritten affidavit at an early date (apparently Nov. 23) that Oswald was wearing a "lt. brown jacket" during the lunchroom encounter. He testified (at length) at the WC that Oswald was wearing a "light brown jacket." Mrs. Reid wrote on Nov. 24 that Oswald was wearing a "white t-shirt." She expanded on Nov. 26 to say that he was wearing a white t-shirt and not wearing or carrying a jacket." Ditto at the WC. Roy Truly told an interviewer immediately before his WC testimony that Oswald was wearing a white t-shirt during the lunchroom encounter. But then Mary Bledsoe sees him on the bus in a brown shirt with a hole in the elbow.

Oh, hell, I give up. Maybe I need to take another look at the whole Harvey and Lee thing.

Oswald would have been wearing his tan (light brown) shirt over his white t-shirt. He probably had it unbuttoned part way down so it is easy to understand why some would remember the t-shirt and Baker remembered the shirt as being a jacket. There was really no reason for Reid or Truly to pay close attention to what Oswald was wearing at the time they saw him. Truly didn't consider him a suspect and Reid had no reason to either. Why would they be expected to pay close attention to what he was wearing. Think of how many people you encounter casually during the course of a day. How accurately do you think you could remember what they were wearing? This is why I don't put a lot of faith in human recollections. We tend to remember bits and pieces of what we saw and fill in the blanks with the rest. People just aren't that observant or details. As an example, I saw the Amazon delivery guy drop a package on my porch yesterday. I sort of remember him wearing blue jeans, a blue shirt, and blue cap but I wouldn't bet my monthly Social Security deposit on any of that.

PS. I tried a Banquet pot pie. Not bad but I'm glad I only paid $1 for it.
7
A Trump hating poll.  Remember the pollsters that suggested Hillary would win in 2016 or the 2024 poll indicating that Trump was down double digits in Iowa?  Who cares? If his approval rating drops to zero, he is still the president and Kamala is not - and never will be.  That's what matters.  Cite all the polls that you want.  Trump will go down in history as a two-term president.   A transformational figure.

I think Kamala should have run for governor of California. That way she could have followed Richard Nixon's path to the White House.

Sitting Vice-President
Lose the presidential election
Two years later lose the governor's race in California ("You won't have Kamala to kick around anymore" speech would be optional)
Go into private practice (OK that's a tough one. What prestigious law firm would hire her?}
In 2030 midterms campaign for congressional candidates around the country, earning favors in return
In 2032 call in those favors and cruise to the nomination.
Win the 2032 general election.

There's one big problem with that scenario. In 1968, the majority of convention delegates were still chosen at state party conventions where Nixon used the creds he banked in 1966. He did well in the primaries but it was the unelected delegates that put him over the top. The decisive move was offering Spiro Agnew the Veep spot in exchange for Agnew delivering the Maryland delegation.

Now, most of the delegates are selected in primaries and caucuses. Kamala is such a bad candidate, there's almost no way she could win a majority through the primaries. I doubt she would still be viable after losing big in Iowa and New Hampshire.
8
Somewhat off-topic, but Bart Kamp does a nice job of rendering highly dubious Mrs. Reid's supposed encounter with a zombie-like, coke-carrying Oswald: http://www.prayer-man.com/tsbd/mrs-robert-reid/.

Apart from this, Baker wrote in a handwritten affidavit at an early date (apparently Nov. 23) that Oswald was wearing a "lt. brown jacket" during the lunchroom encounter. He testified (at length) at the WC that Oswald was wearing a "light brown jacket." Mrs. Reid wrote on Nov. 24 that Oswald was wearing a "white t-shirt." She expanded on Nov. 26 to say that he was wearing a white t-shirt and not wearing or carrying a jacket." Ditto at the WC. Roy Truly told an interviewer immediately before his WC testimony that Oswald was wearing a white t-shirt during the lunchroom encounter and testified at the WC that Oswald had nothing in his hands. But then Mary Bledsoe sees him on the bus in a brown shirt with a hole in the elbow.

Oh, hell, I give up. Maybe I need to take another look at the whole Harvey and Lee thing.
9
Why does Thomas Graves and Ben Cole start all of these inane, non sequitur threads that invariably lead to nowhere, answers no questions, always touch on the "unknowable" and pretty much just fill up forum space with these profound inanities uttered by one, Thomas Graves?

Did you two ever think that the things you two think of, and then actually go so far as to actually make a thread about, are mere "inquiries" by yourselves and yourselves alone, made up in your own heads, to attempt to appear erudite in this case when all you really end up doing is making fools of yourselves.

Can either of you two post a topic that might actually lead somewhere instead of these brain farts that you receive from God only knows where?

You know, that thing they call "research"

Believe it or not, there are many other researchers out there, good ones too, that never and I mean NEVER, dream up the kind of inane questions and topics that you two do.

There is a reason for that.

Can you two brainstorm together and come up with the correct answer as to what that reason may be?

 :'(

Two thumbs up!!!
10
Ambassador Thomas Clifton Mann served as the United States Ambassador to Mexico from May 1961 to December 1963, during the John F. Kennedy and early Lyndon B. Johnson administrations.

Mann told the HSCA he was warned off looking at LHO-Cuba ties. In fact, by 1964 Mann's career was over.




https://www.archives.gov/files/research/jfk/releases/2018/180-10142-10016.pdf

---30---

Then we have the sad tale of Charles Thomas, a State Department'er with a great record, who was then run off the reservation for wanting to follow LHO-Cuba leads.

From The Guardian:


Charles Thomas was a rising star at the state department in the early 1960s, a career diplomat who had served across Latin America and Africa. His colleagues were convinced he would earn the rank of ambassador. They agreed that the tall, jut-jawed, preppy, handsome Thomas – described by colleagues as “the diplomat from central casting” – adored his wife Cynthia and two young daughters.

But then something went horribly wrong. In 1971, at the age of 48, Thomas killed himself.

The death certificate showed that on Monday 12 April, at about 4pm and in the second-floor bathroom of his family’s rented home on the banks of the Potomac river in Washington, Thomas lifted a gun to his head. Cynthia, downstairs, thought the boiler had exploded.

The reasons for the suicide were not a complete mystery. Thomas had been despondent after he had been denied a promotion two years earlier and forced out of the state department. In the 1960s, the department had an up-or-out policy – diplomats were either promoted or they were “selected out”, to use the department’s Orwellian term.

For Cynthia and the rest of the family, the nightmare was compounded months later by a terrible discovery – Thomas had been “selected out” in error. A clerical mistake had apparently cost him his cherished 18-year career.

According to the department, Thomas was denied a promotion because part of his personnel records, including a glowing job evaluation from the embassy in Mexico, had been accidentally misfiled. The family received a formal written apology, signed by Gerald Ford. Congressional outrage led the state department to overhaul its promotion system.

But now, four decades later, Thomas’s widow and others say they are convinced they are still being denied the full truth about what put Thomas on a path to killing himself. In that cause, they are pleading with Donald Trump to release classified documents from the National Archives.

The documents are long-secret government files about – of all things – the assassination of John F Kennedy.

‘True nature of the Kennedy assassination’

The Thomas family acknowledges that theirs is a bizarre and complicated story. But they are convinced – with good reason, given what they have discovered – that if Thomas’s personnel records were misfiled it was intentional, and that it was never the real reason for his firing.

They are certain that Thomas lost his career – and ultimately his will to live – because senior officials were determined to shut down his persistent, unwelcome and ultimately fruitless effort to reopen an investigation of JFK’s murder.

There is a long paper trail. Documents released to the public show that during a posting in Mexico in the mid-1960s, Thomas came across evidence that showed Lee Harvey Oswald – who visited Mexico City in September 1963, weeks before killing Kennedy – had been in contact there with Cuban diplomats and spies who wanted JFK dead and might have offered help and encouragement.

In internal memos not made public until years after his death, Thomas told supervisors such information from Mexico could undermine the findings of the presidential panel that determined in 1964 that Oswald acted alone. In one memo, Thomas warned that the Mexico information “threatened to reopen the debate about the true nature of the Kennedy assassination and damage the credibility of the Warren report”.

For historians, Oswald’s trip to Mexico has never been adequately explained. Available records shows that the CIA and FBI knew much more about it – and the threat Oswald posed – than they ever shared with the Warren commission. The agencies appear to have withheld evidence out of fear they might be blamed for bungling intelligence that could have saved Kennedy’s life.

Oswald, a Marine Corps veteran and self-declared Marxist who had once tried to defect to the Soviet Union, met in Mexico with Cuban and Soviet diplomats and spies and, according to a long-secret FBI report, talked openly about his plan to kill Kennedy.

Given Trump’s deadline next week – a deadline he set himself – to release thousands of still-classified documents related to the assassination held by the National Archives, the Thomas family says questions about their family tragedy are urgent once again.

Many of those documents are known to have come out of the files of the CIA station in Mexico at about the time of Oswald’s visit, which suggests they could bolster Thomas’s suspicions about what happened there.

In an interview, Thomas’s youngest daughter, Zelda Thomas-Curti, a Minneapolis business consultant who was born in Mexico, described her father as “one of America’s most important – if mostly unrecognized – 20th-century government whistleblowers”.

On behalf of her family, including her own three children, Thomas-Curti said she had written to Trump, to ask him to do justice to her father’s memory by releasing all remaining JFK files.

“Washington overpowered my father like a steam shovel, tossing him into a heap like discarded dirt,” she wrote. “But he was a hero who was out there fighting for the truth.” She told Trump that she wanted “my three children to know that their grandfather was a real-life hero”.

Thomas’s widow, Cynthia, who went on to her own career in the state department and now lives in Minnesota, said the family deserved to see all the JFK documents. “My grandchildren are entitled to know the truth about Charles,” she said.

‘As much access as possible’

In 1992, Congress passed the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act. Lawmakers hoped it would damp down raging conspiracy theories created by the release of Oliver Stone’s conspiracy-laden film, JFK, the year before.

Kennedy Assassination: Kennedy in Car
Prior to the assassination, President John F. Kennedy, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, and Texas Governor John Connally ride through the streets of Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963. Included as an exhibit for the Warren Commission. (Photo by © CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
Files will shed light on a JFK shooting conspiracy – but not the one you think
Read more
The law called for release of all assassination-related documents. As a result, millions of pages were made public in the 1990s. Several thousand other documents, initially held back because of national security concerns, were supposed to have been released last October, the 25th anniversary of the law’s passage.

But Trump delayed the release for another six months, citing security concerns raised by the CIA and FBI. The new deadline is 26 April.

The White House has given no clue about whether the president will now allow the full library of documents to be made public. But Trump, who is no stranger to conspiracy theories, including about the Kennedy assassination, has vowed transparency. “The American public expects – and deserves – its government to provide as much access as possible” to the JFK records, he said last year.

The exact number of assassination-related documents still held is in question, since there is no definitive public inventory. A research group, the Mary Ferrell Foundation, said last month its tally showed more than 21,890 documents were still being withheld in full or in part.

The National Archives has produced a bare-bones index, which shows that many of the documents are drawn from the CIA station in Mexico City. For Thomas’s family, as well as for many JFK historians, that suggests those documents may refer to surveillance of Oswald and his contacts in Mexico.

Previously declassified files show that CIA officers in Mexico conducted close surveillance of Oswald as he apparently sought a visa to defect to Havana. The files show that he visited both the Cuban and Soviet embassies and that he may have had a brief affair with a Mexican woman who worked in the Cuban consulate.

In a once-classified 2013 internal CIA report, the agency’s chief historian concluded that the CIA had conducted a “benign cover-up” to withhold “incendiary” information. The cover-up, the report said, was intended to keep the commission focused on “what the Agency believed at the time was the ‘best truth’ – that Lee Harvey Oswald, for as yet undetermined motives, had acted alone in killing John Kennedy”.

Previously declassified records referring to Thomas show that he was repeatedly rebuffed when trying to reopen an investigation of Oswald’s Mexico trip.

In a memo written in 1969, in his final days at the department, Thomas made a last plea that someone go back to Mexico. Though he made no allegation that Fidel Castro had any personal role in any plot to kill Kennedy, Thomas wanted the US to investigate whether the Warren commission had missed evidence of a conspiracy in JFK’s death between Oswald and Cubans loyal to the Castro regime.

“Since I was the embassy officer who acquired this intelligence information,” Thomas wrote, “I feel a responsibility for seeing it through to its final evaluation.”

The memo outlined a story that Thomas first heard in 1965 from a friend – Elena Garro de Paz, a prominent Mexican writer whose husband, Octavio Paz, later won the Nobel prize for literature. Garro said she had encountered Oswald at a family dance party in Mexico City in the fall of 1963 that was attended by Cuban diplomats and Mexican leftists who supported the Castro revolution. According to Garro, people at the party had spoken openly of their hope that Kennedy would be killed.

According to Garro, who died in 1998, Oswald was invited to the party by her cousin Silvia Duran, a vivacious young woman who worked at the Cuban consulate. Garro told Thomas she was certain Oswald and Duran had a brief affair.

In the years since Thomas’s paperwork was made public, Duran, who is still alive, has insisted that she did not have an affair with Oswald and only met him inside the Cuban consulate. But other Mexicans, including members of Duran’s extended family, have disputed her account. A Mexican journalist recalled seeing Oswald at a separate reception, at the Cuban embassy.

---30---

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/apr/22/jfk-documents-could-show-the-truth-about-a-diplomats-death-47-years-ago

It is safe to say, government employees did not pursue LHO-Cuba leads in 1964.

Given LHO's association with G2 and KGB elements through much of 1963, the directive to the WC, to avoid leads into Cuba and Russia...well, not my my idea of how an investigation should proceed.

Why does Thomas Graves and Ben Cole start all of these inane, non sequitur threads that invariably lead to nowhere, answers no questions, always touch on the "unknowable" and pretty much just fill up forum space with these profound inanities uttered by one, Thomas Graves?

Did you two ever think that the things you two think of, and then actually go so far as to actually make a thread about, are mere "inquiries" by yourselves and yourselves alone, made up in your own heads, to attempt to appear erudite in this case when all you really end up doing is making fools of yourselves.

Can either of you two post a topic that might actually lead somewhere instead of these brain farts that you receive from God only knows where?

You know, that thing they call "research"

Believe it or not, there are many other researchers out there, good ones too, that never and I mean NEVER, dream up the kind of inane questions and topics that you two do.

There is a reason for that.

Can you two brainstorm together and come up with the correct answer as to what that reason may be?

 :'(
Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10