JFK assassination: was any consensus ever reached as to who actually did it and why?

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http://www.sumeria.net/politics/kennedy.html

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Thursday, 7 October 2004 21:33 (nineteen years ago) link

HOLY SHIT

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Friday, 8 October 2004 20:41 (nineteen years ago) link

I am reading 'Body of Secrets' this week.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 8 October 2004 20:43 (nineteen years ago) link

hmm maybe the premse behind delillo's "libra" wasn't too far off...

latebloomer (latebloomer), Saturday, 9 October 2004 03:29 (nineteen years ago) link

Gareth the KILLER

Curt1s St3ph3ns, Saturday, 9 October 2004 15:04 (nineteen years ago) link

one year passes...
Historical side note, the last person alive who was in the limo just died.


Former Texas first lady Connally dies

By Kelley Shannon, Associated Press Writer
September 2, 2006

AUSTIN, Texas -- Nellie Connally, the former Texas first lady who was riding in President Kennedy's limousine when he was assassinated, has died, a family friend said Saturday. The 87-year-old was the last living person who had been part of that fateful Dallas drive.

Connally, the widow of former Gov. John Connally, died late Friday of natural causes at an Austin assisted living center, said Julian Read, who served as the governor's press secretary in the 1960s.

As the limousine carrying the Connallys and the Kennedys wound its way through the friendly crowd in downtown Dallas, Nellie Connally turned to President Kennedy, who was in a seat behind her, and said, "Mr. President, you can't say Dallas doesn't love you."

Almost immediately, she heard the first of what she later concluded were three gunshots in quick succession. A wounded John Connally slumped after the second shot, and, "I never looked back again. I was just trying to take care of him," she said.

She later said the most enduring image of that day was the bloodstained roses.

"It's the image of yellow roses and red roses and blood all over the car ... all over us," she said in a 2003 interview with The Associated Press. "I'll never forget it. ... It was so quick and so short, so potent."

Read said Connally had been sitting at her desk writing thank-you notes when she died.

"She has been extremely active and vital the past few days and weeks," he said. "It's a shock to all of us."

In 2003, she published a photo-filled book -- "From Love Field: Our Final Hours with President John F. Kennedy" -- based on 22 pages of handwritten notes she compiled about a week after the assassination and rediscovered in 1996.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry called Connally "the epitome of graciousness."

"Long before she was propelled into the national spotlight from the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, she was a Texas icon," Perry said in a statement.

Connally, formerly Nellie Brill, met her husband at the University of Texas in Austin, and they married on Dec. 21, 1940.

John Connally managed several political campaigns for fellow Texan Lyndon B. Johnson, including his 1964 presidential campaign. Connally was elected Texas governor as a Democrat in 1962 and won re-election twice, serving three two-year terms.

He was treasury secretary in the Nixon administration and ran for president as a Republican in 1980, when Ronald Reagan was elected. John Connally died in 1993.

Nellie Connally helped raise money for many charities. In 1989, Richard Nixon, Barbara Walters and Donald Trump turned out for a gala to honor her and raise money for diabetes research.

"I've never known a woman with Nellie's courage, compassion and character," Walters said. "For all her ups and downs, I've never heard a self-pitying word from her."

John and Nellie Connally suffered financial difficulties after he left office. Private business ventures after 1980 were less successful than John Connally's career as a politician and dealmaking Houston lawyer. An oil company in which he invested got into trouble, and $200 million worth of real estate projects went sour, and he ended up filing for bankruptcy.

Nellie Connally served on the Board of Visitors of The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center since 1984, and a fund in her name raised millions for research and patient programs. The Houston hospital's center for breast cancer also is named for Connally, a survivor of the disease for more than 15 years.

About a year ago, Connally moved back to Austin after decades in Houston.

Survivors include her daughter, Sharon Connally Ammann, two sons, John B. Connally III and Mark Connally, eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Funeral services are pending. She is to be buried near her late husband in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 20:33 (seventeen years ago) link

Gear did it.

cousin larry bundgee (bundgee), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 20:36 (seventeen years ago) link

it was the second gator

latebloomer (latebloomer), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 21:14 (seventeen years ago) link

There are other considerations, like the magic bullet, etc. But there's not much doubt, except from loonies, that Oswald delivered the famous kill shot.

There was a documentary, maybe a couple of years ago, that pretty convincingly dealt with every doubt/conspiracy theory including the 'magic bullet' one. IIRC it was to do with the fact that the seats at the back were higher than the seats at the front, and that the front of the car was more narrow at the front. Or something. Anyway, by the end of the documentary I was completely won over to the Oswald-acting-along side.

Teh littlest HoBBo (the pirate king), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 21:18 (seventeen years ago) link

along = alone

Teh littlest HoBBo (the pirate king), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 21:29 (seventeen years ago) link

ha freudian slip

latebloomer (latebloomer), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 21:59 (seventeen years ago) link

It seems like some recognize only two possibilities for this event:

1. Oswald did it and he was a lone gunman, without any assistance whatsoever.

2. Oswald was a patsy and INSERT CONSPIRACY HERE did it.

Why not

3. Oswald was solely responsible for physically shooting Kennedy, but he was aided/abetted/instructed in doing so by party or parties unknown.


Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 22:34 (seventeen years ago) link

Kennedy was clearly killed by the missing plane that never struck the Pentagon.

A-ron Hubbard (Hurting), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 22:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Oswald was solely responsible for physically shooting Kennedy, but he was aided/abetted/instructed in doing so by party or parties unknown.

I've always thought that this was the most likely explanation.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 22:54 (seventeen years ago) link

i figure it was the mob using oswald

disappointing goth fest line-up (orion), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 23:08 (seventeen years ago) link

i figure it was the mob using oswald

That's kinda what I believe too. With the CIA & FBI knowing all about it, but looking the other way.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 23:22 (seventeen years ago) link

3. Oswald was solely responsible for physically shooting Kennedy, but he was aided/abetted/instructed in doing so by party or parties unknown.

wasn't like 30 minutes of Stone's JFK spent on this?

oops (Oops), Wednesday, 13 September 2006 23:45 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, but since he thought the killing was ordered by rabid anti-communists...or giant alien space bats, or something equally likely...

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Thursday, 14 September 2006 02:29 (seventeen years ago) link

i figure it was the mob using oswald

This documentary (that I mentioned earlier) looked into that as well, and the gist of it was that there had been so many supergrasses over the past 40 years that it was unthinkable that if the mob had been involved the truth wouldn't have come out by now.

Teh littlest HoBBo (the pirate king), Thursday, 14 September 2006 08:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Kennedy had spiked the White House programme looking into amusing ways to kill Castro and on 22 November 1963 was in the middle of arranging secret talks with Cuba to assure a peaceful co-existence. He was more worried about the exiles in Florida than the communists in the Caribbean.

Hello Sunshine (Hello Sunshine), Thursday, 14 September 2006 08:40 (seventeen years ago) link

it was unthinkable that if the mob had been involved the truth wouldn't have come out by now.

I wouldn't necessarily agree with that. The conspiracy crowd likes to talk about the body count of mysterious deaths associated with the assassination, but what about the body count of just being a mid-level Mafia soldier in the 1960s? Most of those guys were probably dead or in jail by the mid-70s.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 14 September 2006 16:12 (seventeen years ago) link

the conspiracy crowd wishes it were in an espionage film. there's nothing to any of the theories.

gear (gear), Thursday, 14 September 2006 16:18 (seventeen years ago) link

"the conspiracy crowd wishes it were in an espionage film"

so did Oswald

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 14 September 2006 21:28 (seventeen years ago) link

there's nothing to any of the theories.

So then, why did Jack Ruby whack Oswald?

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 14 September 2006 21:37 (seventeen years ago) link

it was, most likely, the confluence of a twisted, batshit assassin meeting an increasingly nutty small-time hustler, wannabe mafia guy who saw a chance to be an impressive big shot (ih his also-twisted mind). people like to point to coincidences and irrational behavior as evidence of a greater conspiracy, but let's face it: crazy people do stupid shit all the time. sometimes they do it to each other, in public, on TV.

gear (gear), Thursday, 14 September 2006 21:45 (seventeen years ago) link

no mafia guy is gonna tell jack ruby, "hey you're unbalanced and nuts, let's give you the oswald gig. promise not to tell whodunit?"

gear (gear), Thursday, 14 September 2006 21:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Gear OTM. Gerald Posner's 'Case Closed' is a gd debunking of the conspiracy theories.

Ward Fowler (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 14 September 2006 21:50 (seventeen years ago) link

Gerald Posner's 'Case Closed' is a gd debunking of the conspiracy theories.

There's a fair amount of errors in Case Closed though, which make it about as useful as the pro-conspiracy books. Posner is a dick forever though for his famous post-9/11 "focus and clarity" editorial in the Wall Street Journal where he reversed his opinion on Bush II and came out in support of him.

Still, I would have liked to have seen of his debates with Vincent Bugliosi.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Peter Dale Scott's book on Kennedy is really interesting

xave (xave), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:32 (seventeen years ago) link

'i am wrong about bush'

and what (ooo), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:41 (seventeen years ago) link

Peter Dale Scott's book on Kennedy is really interesting

-- xave (sl...), September 14th, 2006.

Deep Politics and the Death of JFK?

i agree, it's an interesting read.

for me, the most plausible scenario is the one discussed in this book:

Live By the Sword by Gus Russo

it more or less argues for Oswald acting alone, but creates context for his motivations.

here's the forward from the book for good measure.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 14 September 2006 23:42 (seventeen years ago) link

"The fact that many of the conspiracy theorists have been able to produce convincing evidence of their suspicions does not seem to trouble many people. The plausability of a conspiracy is less important to them than the implauability of someone as inconcequential as Oswald having the werewithal to kill someone as concequential — as poweful and well-guarded — as Kennedy. To accept that a random act of violence by an obscure malcontent could bring down the president of the United States is to acknowledge a chaotic, disorderly world that frightens most Americans. Believing that Oswald killed Kennedy is to concede, as New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis said, "that in this life there is often tragedy without reason"

Kennedy — An Unfinished Life, by Robert Dallek

You could also say much the same about 9/11.

Hello Sunshine (Hello Sunshine), Friday, 15 September 2006 14:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Arse. That first line should say "have been UNABLE to produce evidence..."

Hello Sunshine (Hello Sunshine), Friday, 15 September 2006 14:37 (seventeen years ago) link

someone as inconcequential as Oswald

The dude defected to the Soviet Union! Do people forget this? Also, some dude he was in the service with thought he was a fake commie working for the CIA to find real ones.

Really cool, wickedly cool, cooly cool bon apetit! (ex machina), Friday, 15 September 2006 14:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, some dude he was in the service with thought he was a fake commie working for the CIA to find real ones.

Kerry Thornley!

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Friday, 15 September 2006 16:00 (seventeen years ago) link

Actually, one of the best commentaries on the assassination came from the KGB. There was a "JFK's KGB files" special around the time of the 40th anniversary of the assassination that got into Oswald's time in the Soviet Union. In short, the KGB thought he was a crazy plant from the CIA and fed him some useless stuff until they could kick him back out of the country.

Later, the KGB figured that Oswald acted with potential mob help, and that the CIA and FBI didn't care since Kennedy was out of their hair.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Friday, 15 September 2006 16:07 (seventeen years ago) link

don delillo's libra is absolutely essential on this topic. not as fact, certainly, but in the psychology of the thing.

Jams Murphy (ystrickler), Friday, 15 September 2006 16:11 (seventeen years ago) link

Kerry Thornley = DISCORDIAN... scary though

Also the dude who wrote a BOOK about Oswald pre assasination!

Really cool, wickedly cool, cooly cool bon apetit! (ex machina), Friday, 15 September 2006 16:13 (seventeen years ago) link

Gear OTM here and on the 9/11 thread.

Teh littlest HoBBo (the pirate king), Friday, 15 September 2006 16:15 (seventeen years ago) link

>"The fact that many of the conspiracy theorists have been able to >produce convincing evidence..."

Well, there's no convincing evidence for string theory, yet, and we're not giving up on that.

Berating conspiracy theorists for lacking evidence has always struck me as rather unscientific. You invent hypotheses and then gather evidence, right?, not the other way around. If you totally disregard hypotheses that lack evidence, no one would ever gather evidence and there'd be a moratorium on new ideas.

It's only been sixty years, and that's nuthin. Sometimes it takes centuries to solve a murder.

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Friday, 15 September 2006 17:06 (seventeen years ago) link

yes the truth is that kennedy died on that u-boat

gear (gear), Friday, 15 September 2006 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link

pt-103 whatever

gear (gear), Friday, 15 September 2006 17:10 (seventeen years ago) link

I like Ellroy's conclusion in "American Tabloid" - ie, *everybody* did it!

however, Squirrel Police OTFM about the scientific method

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 15 September 2006 17:12 (seventeen years ago) link

Shakey you did NOT just agree with me. Say it ain't so!

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Friday, 15 September 2006 17:27 (seventeen years ago) link

"Don't you GET IT?!? DAMN! I can't keep talkin' like this! You guys are gonna kill ME! I'm gonna fuckin' DIE!!"

http://www.btinternet.com/~meirionhughes/Pub/images/jfk-peski.gif

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Friday, 15 September 2006 19:02 (seventeen years ago) link

two years pass...

45 years ago today

Chris Barrus (Elvis Telecom), Saturday, 22 November 2008 20:26 (fifteen years ago) link

white album 40 yrs old vs JFK assassination 45 yrs old POLL

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 22 November 2008 20:34 (fifteen years ago) link

In re: thread title question. The Warren Commission Report was meant to lay the basis for a national consensus.

Obv it failed in its stated purpose. But it came close enough that it achieved its major unstated purpose, which was to quell the national grief and anger and prevent it from spilling into irrational mob action.

Aimless, Saturday, 22 November 2008 20:44 (fifteen years ago) link

JFK was an inside job - wake up, sheeple!

StanM, Saturday, 22 November 2008 20:55 (fifteen years ago) link

interesting Louisiana footnote in the wikipedia entry for Kerry Thornley:

Garrison charged Thornley with perjury after Thornley denied that he had been in contact with Oswald in any manner since 1959. The perjury charge was eventually dropped by Garrison's successor Harry Connick Sr.

Andy the Grasshopper, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 19:10 (eleven months ago) link

When are we ever getting our "his head just DID that" movie?

Where was Michael Ironside that day?

Hideous Lump, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 21:14 (eleven months ago) link

given how antsy the mob gets over even whacking one of their own

I don't know if they got antsy about whacking their own or not, but they got over it pretty quick especially around this time period

anvil, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 06:13 (eleven months ago) link

Is the prevailing theory now that the whole thing was a complete fuck-up on someone's part?

My personal theory is that They (CIA/Mafia/etc.) wanted to spook JFK with an attempt and their patsy accidentally pulled it off.

papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 06:31 (eleven months ago) link

jfk's head wanted to spook him by showing it could just do that on its own and accidentally etc

mark s, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 08:56 (eleven months ago) link

I read somewhere that Paul Krassner's comments about compromising positions between LBJ and JFK's corpse became pretty widely known and believed to greater degree than he'd expected
https://soundcloud.com/eptc/episode-8-side-a-paul-krassner

Stevo, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 12:57 (eleven months ago) link

that is read it somewhere over teh last several months and now found a soundfile supporting it

Stevo, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 12:57 (eleven months ago) link

best JFK assassination book i've read is still Not In Your Lifetime by Anthony Summers. he's not deluded enough to subscribe to specific theories, but he does line up all the unusual aspects of the shooting, the possible motives of those who might be suspected, and seems to conclude that there's something to it, but it's impossible to know the real truth. he seems to lean more mob involvement/oswald involvement/oswald as minor CIA asset who lost it, and while he completely dismisses Oliver Stone and his theories, what's interesting is just what from the film he nails down as factual (such as the time when Oswald met a Cuban exile for a brief moment and later a phone call come to her, telling her things about Oswald she didn't even ask about.)

omar little, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 20:16 (eleven months ago) link

The Summers book is the most plausible; I appreciated how he didn't address every what-about. I told the story about the Silvia Odio incident in the other thread, still the eeriest of the purported Oswald encounters.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 20:40 (eleven months ago) link

while he completely dismisses Oliver Stone and his theories, what's interesting is just what from the film he nails down as factual (such as the time when Oswald met a Cuban exile for a brief moment and later a phone call come to her, telling her things about Oswald she didn't even ask about.)

oh lol this is what I referred to -- I'm friends with her nephew!

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 20:41 (eleven months ago) link

i think it's kind of a shame that the jfk conspiracy has become the one conspiracy everybody in america apparently believes in some form or another. what interests me about conspiracy theories is less whether or not they're _true_ and more _why_ people believe them - and most of the time, the answer is "they're racist". in other words i feel like the legitimization of conspiracy theories the jfk conspiracy has enabled also enables racism and bigotry.

the thing i love about the jfk conspiracy theory is that the more you dig into it the less sense anything makes. it's like what happens if you repeat a word, any word, enough times. pharmacy, for instance. just say "pharmacy" enough times over and over and it becomes really strange and bizarre sounding. so that's what i like about it, it's a way to deconstruct the basic assumptions and associations we have about the nature of reality itself. i'm into that kinda shit.

Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 18 May 2023 14:46 (eleven months ago) link

we don't need no gates out there with that swamp! plenty of em gone in there. ain't none of em come out!

difficult listening hour, Friday, 19 May 2023 02:37 (eleven months ago) link

just say "pharmacy" enough times over and over and it becomes really strange and bizarre sounding.

specifically it loses meaning-- "semiotic satiation" iirc-- which might seem the opposite of the rabbit-hole disease (which is more like nabokov's "referential mania" in "signs and symbols")-- unless everything meaning the same thing and nothing meaning anything are on some mechanical level identical? (notes towards a horseshoe theory of conspiracy people / anti-conspiracy people.) anyway people in the mongoose/mob complex obviously had something to do w this lol

difficult listening hour, Friday, 19 May 2023 02:54 (eleven months ago) link

refs in the summers book to the stone movie are funny because he consistently condemns it in strong terms, laments its influence etc.; meanwhile i was scarcely turning a page without thinking "whoa i always assumed they made that up for the stone movie"

difficult listening hour, Friday, 19 May 2023 03:11 (eleven months ago) link

i feel like the legitimization of conspiracy theories the jfk conspiracy has enabled

I don't really know how to measure this but I think the effects of Iraq are far more consequential in terms of public trust or credulousness than the effects of JFK. 'Everything is fake' for me has its roots or at least its liftoff from Iraq. It existed before that, but far less prevalent. There are likely other factors like social media, like people knowing how to hone and weaponise this stuff, but Iraqs erosion of public trust meant the soil in which conspiratorial thinking could be watered reached almost all gardens

anvil, Friday, 19 May 2023 03:26 (eleven months ago) link

refs in the summers book to the stone movie are funny because he consistently condemns it in strong terms, laments its influence etc.; meanwhile i was scarcely turning a page without thinking "whoa i always assumed they made that up for the stone movie"

Haha yeah I mean based on having read that I believe fairly early in the book I thought it would be a takedown of conspiracy theory rather than an open-minded book musing about the possibilities. It does seem he draws the line with the specific named alleged conspirators in that film and the military industrial complex angle, but the other stuff that stone touches on he absolutely is willing to entertain as a likely possibility.

omar little, Friday, 19 May 2023 03:59 (eleven months ago) link

Specifically the mob, Cuban exiles, and Oswald floating like an unmoored buoy among all.

omar little, Friday, 19 May 2023 03:59 (eleven months ago) link

An inspired act of God shoo happen here and put a Texan in the White House!

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 19 May 2023 09:23 (eleven months ago) link

I don't really know how to measure this but I think the effects of Iraq are far more consequential in terms of public trust or credulousness than the effects of JFK. 'Everything is fake' for me has its roots or at least its liftoff from Iraq. It existed before that, but far less prevalent. There are likely other factors like social media, like people knowing how to hone and weaponise this stuff, but Iraqs erosion of public trust meant the soil in which conspiratorial thinking could be watered reached almost all gardens

― anvil

i think it's different from person to person... for a lot of people iraq brought about that sort of shift in perspective, but for me it wasn't really until trump was elected president that i had that shift.

the complicated thing is that from a liberal perspective, a rejection of that worldview is... differences between us are _immaterial_ to them, i think that's where horseshoe theory comes from. the paradox is that material facts matter just as little to them as they do to any conspiracy-minded person.

i am at the point where i don't just ask myself _why_ people believe in conspiracies, but... whatever the term for it is, there's something in me that asks, you know, what even _is_ a conspiracy?

like, the thread revive about the bilderbergs, i'm looking at the alleged conspiracy and as far as i can tell it's literally just capitalism. is capitalism a conspiracy? i mean, there's an argument to be made!

three days after my egg cracked a lady named cassie labelle made a medium post titled "Being Trans Is Like Believing A Conspiracy Theory About Yourself". and maybe it's my background, i did the subgenius thing in the '90s, but i do have a tendency to look at it in those terms. like there was a coverup, right? some people knew the truth but they were dismissed as being "crazy" and didn't get listened to, and it was incredibly far-reaching, incredibly effective, it affected millions of lives, and one of them was mine. i was both a victim of this and complicit in the perpetuation of this state of affairs.

in some sense maybe the truth-value of a conspiracy theory _is_ relevant. believing a conspiracy theory like... there's a conspiracy theory, mia mulder did a video about it. it's a minor one, but it claims that every celebrity is secretly trans. except for elliot page who the conspiracy theory claims was amab and his "transition" was actually a detransition. anyway you look into it and you can kind of pretty clearly see the anxieties and insecurities that lead the person perpetuating it to believe it. believing something like that, or believing there was a cia conspiracy to kill jfk, to me that's different from saying something like "capitalism is bad", i mean you can't prove that in an absolute sense but there's a lot of evidence for that hypothesis, you know?

in some sense, just like what rumsfeld said about "known unknowns" basically makes sense, the idea of "alternative facts", i think there's a legitimate basis for that. it's a radical rejection of hegemonic narratives, and i've done that just as much as the people who say, i don't know, covid vaccines will turn you trans have done. the only way to differentiate the two is to take the truth-value of our respective beliefs into consideration.

idk. clearly i'm just rambling. hopefully some of that makes sense?

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 19 May 2023 19:56 (eleven months ago) link

Back in 2002, during the build-up to the invasion of Iraq I heard Glenn Beck talking about how he'd been brought in to the Bush White House to look at evidence about Iraq's involvement in the Oklahoma City bombing. It was right then that I decided that all the talk about WMDs was bullshit, because if they had any actual evidence for that stuff then why would they be fucking around with conspiracy theories?

INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Friday, 19 May 2023 20:15 (eleven months ago) link

i think it's different from person to person... for a lot of people iraq brought about that sort of shift in perspective, but for me it wasn't really until trump was elected president that i had that shift

So far, I've lived through the bombing of Cambodia and the end of Vietnam, Iran-Contra, the CIA and cocaine trafficking, gaslighting of cancer victims downwind from nuclear tests, both Gulf Wars and dozens more I can't recall at the moment.. Go ahead, ask me about my perspective shift - worse every year and never once getting better.

like, the thread revive about the bilderbergs, i'm looking at the alleged conspiracy and as far as i can tell it's literally just capitalism. is capitalism a conspiracy? i mean, there's an argument to be made!

C. Wright Mills' The Power Elite to thread!

Elvis Telecom, Saturday, 20 May 2023 00:20 (eleven months ago) link


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