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[...]

You seem to think it was fine for a KGB agent [Nosenko] to know the names and faces of the people he was lecturing in the CIA and the FBI.

"Usually, suspected KGB assets are watched."

LOL!

In this case, your boy Nosenko would have been watched by people from probable mole Solie's Office of Security -- IF they suspected that he was fake.

When Malcolm Blunt showed Tennent H. Bagley that someone had arranged with the Records Integration Division and the Office of Mail Logistics for the incoming non-CIA cables on Oswald's "defection" to be routed to a part of the CIA other than where they should have gone -- the Soviet Russia Division -- Bagley realized that someone had sent Oswald to Moscow to "defect." Bagley didn't realize that that person was probably Bruce Leonard Solie -- the same guy who ended up "clearing" false-defector-in-place-in-Geneva-in-June-1962 / false (or perhaps rogue) physical defector to the U.S. in February 1964, Yuri Nosenko, until Blunt showed him that in April of 1964, Solie had tried to talk W. David Slawson into letting Nosenko testify to the Warren Commission, even though CIA Counterintelligence and the aforementioned Soviet Russia Division had serious doubts about his bona fides. At that point, Bagley said, "Let's put Solie on the list [of possible moles]."



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1. You are aware, aren't you, that after Nosenko was "cleared" by Solie he was given a gig at the Agency teaching "counterintelligence" to its and the FBI's new recruits?--TG

I am not sure what danger this posed to the US. The curriculum was likely approved.

Usually suspected KGB assets are watched, meaning if they leak info to the KGB, then they can be fed false info to leak.

2. The "national security state." Seems like a neutral expression. The US has 18 intel agencies, and a Department of War, biggest in the world. In some ways we all live in an panopticon, for reasons good and bad. If some leftie-weenie ideologues use this expression...so what? Frankly, the stalemate in Ukraine has been horrific in human terms, but a huge win for draining Russia to the bottom of the barrel. I am glad this happened. Maybe the national security state planned it out.

3. I am aware of your CT's regarding Solie, and many other CIA'ers, and the re-directing of cables. But Solie is not around to present his narrative. I will say this: Tennent Bagley said he thought LHO was a witting asset. If true, that would mean LHO was wittingly following orders of someone in the CIA, possibly Solie. Interesting.

4. There may be KGB-G2 files that exonerate or implicate Solie. We will never see them. It is a blind spot.



3
Until 2020, the radical agenda wasn't in the Democrat mainstream. That all changed when AOC shocked the Democrat establishment in 2018 by beating 10 term congressman Joe Crowley in the Democrat primary. Suddenly all the once sensible Democrats got scared and embraced the far left because most congressman and senators realized they were more likely to lose in the primaries than in the general elections. They lacked the guts to oppose policies that would have seemed unthinkable 10 years earlier. They embraced the goofiest policies such as open borders, cashless bail, and men in women's sports. Only fools would think those were good ideas but that's your modern Democrat Party.

ME: Is this statement correct?

"Until 2020, the radical agenda wasn't in the Democrat mainstream. That all changed when AOC shocked the Democrat establishment in 2018 by beating 10 term congressman Joe Crowley in the Democrat primary. Suddenly all the once sensible Democrats got scared and embraced the far left because most congressman and senators realized they were more likely to lose in the primaries than in the general elections. They lacked the guts to oppose policies that would have seemed unthinkable 10 years earlier. They embraced the goofiest policies such as open borders, cashless bail, and men in women's sports."

GROK: Partially correct on the timeline and AOC's win but overstated as a sudden "shock" that radicalized the entire mainstream party— the leftward shift on these issues was more gradual, driven by multiple factors including voter trends, activism, and reactions to Trump-era politics.

nytimes.com

AOC's 2018 Primary Win

This part is accurate. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC), a 28-year-old Democratic Socialist and former Bernie Sanders organizer, defeated 10-term incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley (a powerful House Democratic Caucus chair) in New York's 14th district primary on June 26, 2018, by about 57%-43%. It was a major upset that symbolized progressive energy against the establishment.

nytimes.com

It did energize progressives and highlighted primary threats from the left. Some moderate Democrats expressed concern about moving too far left post-2018, while others saw it as a signal to adapt.

cnn.com

Broader "Radical Agenda" and Mainstream Shift

The claim that the "radical agenda" was absent from the Democratic mainstream until ~2018-2020 is an oversimplification. The party had been shifting left on cultural and economic issues for years:

Pre-2016/2018 trends: Democratic voters and platforms moved progressively on issues like immigration, criminal justice, and identity. Pew data showed Democrats viewing immigrants more positively over decades (e.g., from ~32% in 1994 seeing them as strengthening the country to much higher later). Bernie Sanders' 2016 run already pulled the party left on economics and inequality.

npr.org

The 2016 platform and Obama-era policies were more centrist on some fronts (e.g., border enforcement rhetoric from earlier Democrats like Schumer or Clinton), but activism on criminal justice and social issues grew steadily.

trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov

AOC's win amplified visibility (e.g., via the Squad and Justice Democrats), and the 2020 primaries/campaign saw more progressive rhetoric. However, establishment figures like Biden won the nomination, and many "radical" policies didn't become universal party law. The House flipped in 2018 with many moderates in swing districts.

nytimes.com

Specific Policies

Open borders: Democrats have long supported legal immigration, asylum, and pathways to citizenship, but "open borders" is a rhetorical charge—not official policy. Pre-2018, leaders like Schumer criticized illegal immigration. Post-2016/Trump, the party unified more around humanitarian framing and opposed strict enforcement, with further shifts under Biden. This was evolutionary, accelerated by polarization, not solely AOC.

npr.org

Cashless bail / criminal justice reform: Bail reform (reducing cash bail for low-level offenses) predates 2018. Efforts date to the 1960s-80s, with modern pushes in the 2010s over racial disparities (e.g., Kalief Browder case). New York passed major reform in 2019 (effective 2020); similar in other blue areas. 2020 George Floyd protests and "defund the police" (mostly activist-driven, not universal Democratic policy) intensified it, but many Democrats later walked back amid crime concerns.

nytimes.com

Men in women's sports (transgender athletes): This became a flashpoint later. Significant Democratic support for inclusion aligned with gender identity grew in the mid-late 2010s with broader LGBTQ+ advocacy. Pre-2018, it was niche; it gained traction post-2018/2020. Many Democrats (and earlier polls) showed internal division or opposition to blanket policies, with recent post-2024 election pushback from some moderates.

npr.org

Primary vs. General Election Fear

There's truth here: Safe blue districts face more primary pressure from energized progressives (low-turnout primaries favor activists). This dynamic exists on the right too (e.g., Tea Party, Trump). Post-2018, more progressive challengers ran, but establishment candidates still dominated many races. The party's 2020 platform and Biden's win reflected a balance, not full capture.

theatlantic.com

Bottom line: AOC's win was a notable moment that boosted the left's profile and contributed to caution among incumbents. However, Democratic shifts on these issues were underway due to changing voter bases (more college-educated, urban, diverse), cultural trends, and reactions to national events—not a single 2018 "shock" turning "sensible" Democrats into radicals overnight. The party remains factional, with moderates often prevailing in national/general election contexts. Claims of sudden embrace of "goofiest" policies reflect partisan framing more than a clean pre/post-2018 break.

8 web pages

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The Hickey-did-it-accidentally theory is as goofy as any conspiracy theory I've ever come across. It's right up there with Greer shooting JFK with a handgun. The evidence for a first shot while Zapruder was not filming is as thin as gruel.
No, i do not agree.
Anyhow, tests on exemplars uzing AR15 hollow points & Carcano solids would show that Hickey did it.
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I don't think it is remotely plausible that happened. For one, Oswald would have to shoot through the tree at Z190. Why would he do that when he'd have a clear shot a little more than 1 second later. It would also mean Oswald fired a precise head shot in the bare minimum of 2.3 seconds after firing his second shot. I don't see any way the bullet that exited JFK's throat could have missed JBC on either side of him. Most of all, the Z-film shows us JFK and JBC both reacting simultaneously at Z226 when the both flipped their arms upward. That is the clincher for the SBT and shoots down all alternative scenarios.
You must be right because if that was the first shot that JFK is reacting to then JBC would not be reacting to being hit by it as he "clearly" is doing by z228.  If it was the first shot JBC would be reacting to it by turning around to try to see JFK and then shouting "oh, no, no" (as Nellie said he did before the second shot and, as Jackie said, this drew her attention to the Governor). And we can see that there is nothing like that occurring after z226.
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The real danger is if the Democrats ever gain control of the White House, Senate, and House of Representatives which they probably will. When that happens, they will end the filibuster, pack the Supreme Court, and grant statehood to DC and Puerto Rico, making it very difficult for the GOP to take back the Senate. They will then be able to ram through their radical agenda. It almost happened in 2020 but we were lucky to have a couple sane Democrats in Joe Manchin and Kristen Sinema to prevent that from happening. The only one we have now is John Fetterman and I don't think he will be enough to stop all this if the Democrats get 51 senators.

I highly doubt Americans will want a return to the Biden/Obama disaster. This whole Iran mess goes back to Jimmy Carter a good decent man, but weak weak weak like most liberals. The bulk of proud Americans aka conservatives know Iran can't have nukes, and any sane person want's the border to remain closed.
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When did you start fighting "the Democrats' radical agenda"?

1980?

Until 2020, the radical agenda wasn't in the Democrat mainstream. That all changed when AOC shocked the Democrat establishment in 2018 by beating 10 term congressman Joe Crowley in the Democrat primary. Suddenly all the once sensible Democrats got scared and embraced the far left because most congressman and senators realized they were more likely to lose in the primaries than in the general elections. They lacked the guts to oppose policies that would have seemed unthinkable 10 years earlier. They embraced the goofiest policies such as open borders, cashless bail, and men in women's sports. Only fools would think those were good ideas but that's your modern Democrat Party.
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                    "...the cops were understandably not wanting anybody to leave the scene until they figured out what was going on" 

      The more that You post, the more you reveal how little you know about the layout of Dealey Plaza. YOU, are a perfect example of why the Elm St Extension and this CAR to this day, remain JFK Assassination Research virgin ground.

Mainly because you're the only one who believes that car had anything to do with the assassination. Why would anyone else go down that rabbit hole.
Quote


      The Elm St Extension was the ONLY WAY for a car to Enter-and-Exit the railroad yard. The same goes for entry-and-exit of the parking lot behind the picket fence. Are You claiming for 3+ Hrs following the Kill Shot, DPD did NOT Permit cars to Exit from back inside this area?
      And, NEVER forget that the FBI PHYSICALLY TOOK possession of ALL the DPD Evidence late that night.
       

But not your getaway car which indicates neither the DPD nor the FBI thought that car had any relevance.
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If it’s fact that a whole bullet went thru JC’s right hand shattering his wrist bone and exited from the bottom of his palm, then a Z270 bullet exiting the right side of his chest and going thru his right hand has maybe about 1.5 ft? to travel to hit JC’s left inner thigh IF his left leg was turned right just as his right leg probably was.

What I’m suggesting is that maybe a Z190 shot exiting JFK missed JC entirely not even hitting his thigh because both his legs were turned right. Thus the rotated shoulder position at Z190 as per Andrew’s 3d figure drawing would be a much less strenuous on the torso.

And if that is plausible, then at Z270, JC’s left leg turned right also, would theoretically be in line of the Z270 bullet skewing thru JCs chest, and exiting and then it goes thru the right hand which was UP and NEXT to his chest with the palm rotated facing outwards as he held that hat upside down.

There would no end over end spinning of the bullet entering JCs wrist because his hand is  against his chest or very close to it  at Z270. Then it’s a question if it can be aligned to hit JCs left thigh if there was some more deflection cause by the wrist bone.

So a revised LN scenario is as follows:

1. Z190 bullet went  thru JFK, exited , and missed JC entirely because he had both his legs turned right.  The bullet went into the middle lower front seat cushion and springs at 1500ft/sec, was slowed down enough to either stop there or continued thru and stopped in the lower dashboard. That bullet was not found.

2. Z270 bullet goes thru JCs chest, then immediately thru his right hand as it was up and next to his chest. The bullet then exited and defected (or not) and hit  JCs left thigh at the reduced velocity. The bullet fell out then latter on the stretcher as in the conventional WC theory.

I don't think it is remotely plausible that happened. For one, Oswald would have to shoot through the tree at Z190. Why would he do that when he'd have a clear shot a little more than 1 second later. It would also mean Oswald fired a precise head shot in the bare minimum of 2.3 seconds after firing his second shot. I don't see any way the bullet that exited JFK's throat could have missed JBC on either side of him. Most of all, the Z-film shows us JFK and JBC both reacting simultaneously at Z226 when the both flipped their arms upward. That is the clincher for the SBT and shoots down all alternative scenarios.
10
As they used to say when I was an avid runner, "If you want to be an elite runner, choose your parents carefully." At the elite level of all sports, genetics is the one factor that can't be overcome. My father and half-brother were both professional golfers (not tour players) and I worked at PING, but I was never better than "sometimes I break 80" due largely to vision and back problems. There are sooooo many players who are "really good" or even "really, really good" but just do not have what it takes to play at the elite level - something that's difficult to admit to yourself. I used to stand in front of a mirror and try to contort myself into Ben Hogan's positions in his Power Golf-era swing before the bus accident. Not swinging, just standing there. I couldn't come close. When Tiger Woods was tested at the Stanford athletic department, he was off the scale in comparison to other athletes, not just golfers. Most modern instruction is for 20-year-olds and irrelevant (or harmful) for the rest of us.

Butch Harmon once said "Give me 100 six-year-olds who have never seen a golf club. I will tell you at the end of a week which of them, if any, has the potential to play tour-level golf." I also had a funny experience when I was 14. I visited my grandmother, who was a member of Kansas City Country Club. I played the course twice, thought it was harder than hell, and probably shot 97 or higher; I remember I ran out of balls the first round. Looking at the handicap sheet in the locker room, one guy had posted consistently 67-67-67-64-65 and was a +3 handicap. I asked "What's a +3 handicap?" (having no idea there even was such a thing as + handicap). The pro, Stan Thirsk, said "Oh, that means he averages several strokes under par - and the funny thing is, he's exactly the same age as you." Tom Watson. Genetics.

I always had a dream that technology would create some sort of plastic shell I could step into that would duplicate Tiger Woods' swing so I could experience what it felt like for five balls. Even those of us who worked at PING and saw pros every day agreed that it all seemed almost magical when a long-hitting pro took a swing that looked not much different from ours but the results looked jaw-droppingly different (and this was in the persimmon driver, balata ball era).

I briefly got down to a 3 handicap and kept a 4 for a couple years but as I aged, I gradually went up to double digits. I came close to shooting my age a couple years ago. I missed a 25 footer for birdie to miss by a stroke. Another time I birdied 2 of the last 3 holes to miss by a shot. The final hole I chipped in from about 15 years right of the green so I never threatened to hit the magic number. I've always thought golf was one sport where you could become very good through acquired skill rather than innate athletic ability but as you observed, there is a ceiling that most people could never break through. I read a long time ago that if you can't consistently shoot 65 on your home course, don't even bother going to the Q-school. I used to be part of a pot game on weekends of guys 40+ years old. One of them had a son who won a high school state championship, played college golf for a few years then tried it on the mini-tours. He would occasionally come out and play with us and had no trouble breaking 70. I saw him come out one day with a bad hangover. Our first hole is a 500 yard par-5 and he cold topped his first two shots. He than took out a 3 wood and knocked his third shot on the green from about 270 and made birdie. He shot 67 that day. He played on what is now the Korn Ferry Tour. I think it started out as the Hogan Tour. He never won enough to break even. He never came close to getting his card on the big tour. He did become pals with Nolan Henke on the Hogan Tour and caddied for him for a while but that was the only way he got on the big tour.
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