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President Johnson was deeply concerned with information regarding alarming and threatening remarks made by Fidel Castro against JFK; and the mounting evidence of Cuba’s Minint officers’ connection in the assassination. The profound dislike between Castro and the Kennedys was mutual. On September 8, 1963, ten weeks before Lee Harvey Oswald murdered President Kennedy in Dallas, Fidel Castro spoke at a reception in the Brazilian Embassy in Havana. He raised his voice and said: “The United States’ leaders must realize that if they assist in the terrorist plans to eliminate Cuban leaders, they themselves will be in danger.”  [Haynes Johnson, “The Bay of Pigs” New York: Norton Company, 1964] p. 354

There are various accounts of Castro threatening, on Sept. 8 1963, retaliation for the many times the Kennedys tried to have him assassinated.

This article goes into LBJ's snuff job on investigations into Havana leads.

https://cubastrategicstudies.com/the-jfk-assasination-full-story-2/

I will post article also.

Interesting topic.

 
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JFK Assassination & General Discussion & Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Andrew Mason on Yesterday at 05:33:22 AM »
The first shot was fired around Z157. Look at the photos below within a second both Connally and Jack Ready quickly turn their heads to the right.




And if that was the only place they turned their heads and a rifle shot was the only reason offered for turning their heads, and if it were not for the 25 or so witnesses who said that JFK visibly reacted to the first shot, and if there weren’t another 20 witnesses who put it much later, that might be worth considering.
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JFK Assassination & General Discussion & Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Jarrett Smith on Yesterday at 05:13:04 AM »
No, DPD Baker is just another witness in a large group of witnesses confirming that there never was an early missed shot. The eyewitnesses correlate where the first shot occurred by relating the limousines position to where they were standing. Motorcade 63 relates the first shot to Westbrook/ Calvery statements placing it between Z204 and Z212. The Chisms, Jean Newman, and Mary Woodward also place it in the same time frame.

The first shot was fired around Z157. Look at the photos below within a second both Connally and Jack Ready quickly turn their heads to the right.




64
Thanks, David. Castro says all the above in the videos I posted.
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JFK Assassination & General Discussion & Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Andrew Mason on Yesterday at 03:56:29 AM »
No, DPD Baker is just another witness in a large group of witnesses confirming that there never was an early missed shot. The eyewitnesses correlate where the first shot occurred by relating the limousines position to where they were standing. Motorcade 63 relates the first shot to Westbrook/ Calvery statements placing it between Z204 and Z212. The Chisms, Jean Newman, and Mary Woodward also place it in the same time frame.
Willis puts the first shot before z202.  You have to be careful in trying to use a witness to pinpoint a shot.  Calvery/Westbrook used the same language to describe the location - not of JFK but of the President’s car. They both said that the President’s car was almost directly in front of where they were standing.



(Westbrook: 22H679) Given the uncertainty of the word “almost” as well as the uncertainty of which part of the car would have to be directly in front of them for them to consider the car to be in front of them, it is not possible to use their testimony to pinpoint the position of JFK to within a range smaller than about a car length, which is 21 feet or 21 frames.

Willis did not pinpoint the shot but set a precise after-bracket for it that is made precise by his photo.
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JFK Assassination & General Discussion & Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Tom Graves on Yesterday at 03:41:16 AM »
No, DPD Baker is just another witness in a large group of witnesses confirming that there never was an early missed shot. The eyewitnesses correlate where the first shot occurred by relating the limousines position to where they were standing. Motorcade 63 relates the first shot to Westbrook/ Calvery statements placing it between Z204 and Z212. The Chisms, Jean Newman, and Mary Woodward also place it in the same time frame.

"Confirming" my you-know-what.
67
JFK Assassination & General Discussion & Debate / Re: The First Shot
« Last post by Jack Nessan on Yesterday at 03:22:01 AM »
Given the approximate nature of that kind of estimate and correlation to the zfilm it does not exclude the possibility of a shot fitting with Phil Willis’ evidence of a first shot just before z202.

No, DPD Baker is just another witness in a large group of witnesses confirming that there never was an early missed shot. The eyewitnesses correlate where the first shot occurred by relating the limousines position to where they were standing. Motorcade 63 relates the first shot to Westbrook/ Calvery statements placing it between Z204 and Z212. The Chisms, Jean Newman, and Mary Woodward also place it in the same time frame.
68
From Vince Bugliosi's book.....

"British tabloid journalist Comer Clark...in an October 1967 edition of the National Enquirer...wrote that on July 15, 1967, he had an exclusive interview with [Fidel] Castro late one night in a Havana pizzeria. He quotes Castro as saying, "Lee Oswald came to the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City twice. The first time, I was told, he wanted to work for us. He was asked to explain, but he wouldn't. He wouldn't go into details. The second time he said something like: 'Someone ought to shoot that President Kennedy.' Then Oswald said--and this was exactly how it was reported to me--'Maybe I'll try to do it.' This was less than two months before the U.S. President was assassinated...Yes, I heard of Lee Harvey Oswald's plan to kill President Kennedy. It's possible I could have saved him. I might have been able to, but I didn't. I never believed the plan would be put into effect."

The HSCA learned that Clark, who died in 1972, "wrote extensively for the sensationalist press in England. His articles include such items as 'British Girls as Nazi Sex Slaves' [and] 'I Was Hitler's Secret Love'."

When the HSCA asked Castro on April 3, 1978, about Clark's allegation, he responded in a blizzard of denunciatory words. Among them: "This is absurd. I didn't say that. It has been invented from the beginning until the end. It's a lie from head to toe. If this man [Oswald] would have done something like that, it would have been our moral duty to inform the United States."

Denying that he had ever met Clark or been interviewed by him, [Castro] said, "How could [this man] interview me in a pizzeria? I never go to public restaurants...I would never have given a journalist an interview in a pizzeria...What is the job of that journalist? What is he engaged in? ... You should...find [out] who he is and why he wrote it." "


-- Vincent Bugliosi; Page 1285 of "Reclaiming History"

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TS-

You are entitled to your views.

But I am trying to stay on topic: Morley.

Even if the US is a plutocracy, does that excuse Morley dog-whistling "Mossad perped the JFKA" on the Tucker Carlson show, and posting pro-IRGC propaganda on "X"?

Or, in your view (and possibly Morley's), the fact that the US is plutocracy means we must support left-wing and Islamist (or Moscow and IRGC) narratives on the JFKA?


70
Thank you so much, Steve! Castro said that the writer claimed he interviewed him in a pizzeria. It would have been reckless to reveal that around customers.
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