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Life had become so desperate for persons in South East Asia that on one June day a few had concluded all that was left to them were their bodies to express an indescribable despair. Thich Quang Duc, a Buddhist monk, dramatically consecrated suicide by setting himself ablaze while sitting on a busy street in Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City), protesting South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem’s religious repression. A few of the martyr’s fellow believers wept as his charred corpse tumbled to the pavement. Diem, who claimed a Christian faith, even after ordering the killings of assorted monks for the offense of displaying Buddhist flags, would meet a somewhat similar fate later that year, 1963. Instead of being escorted from the country, as JFK was told would occur, Diem and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu were slain in a US backed military coup. At that time there were approximately 16,000 US “advisors” in South Vietnam. Also that year Reverend King punctuated a day long protest by another aggrieved persons with a brief sermon in Washington DC, without delay placed among the great historic American orations. Additionally, a prohibition on trade with and travel to Cuba by US citizens was signed into law by John Kennedy. The “Hot Line” was established amidst Moscow and Washington, and a treaty banning sure nuclear tests was signed by representatives of the US, the USSR, and the UK. In England the “Profumo Affair” sex scandal threatened to destruct the careers of assorted high-ranking politicians and their officers over accusations of state mysteries perhaps divulged through pillow talk. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan resigned shortly after, for health reasons, it was said. In New England four more women were officially added to the list of The Boston Strangler’s victims. Also in Boston that year Julia Child, “The French Chef” (as in French cuisine), was introduced to the nation on NET (National Educational Television), the precursor to the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Boxing Champion Sonny Listen and contender Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) consorted to face eachother in a match for the heavyweight title in Miami the following year. There were reports that the young boxing phenom had occasionally been seen in the company of Malcolm X. James Baldwin’s “The Fire Next Time” was published, as was Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique,” widely cited as igniting the innovative Feminist Movement. Sylvia Plath’s “The Bell Jar,” was also printed, posthumously (under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas), as she had passed from physical life by her own hand in London earlier that year. On the same day of her farewell, Thomas Edison’s birthday, inventor of the phonograph, and same city, the Beatles recorded their maiden album. And with a little help from their friend George Harrison, the Rolling Stones signed their basi record contract that year. While in the “motor city” of Detroit, prodigy “Little” Stevie Wonder cut his premier single, accompanied by Marvin Gaye on drums. Tony Bennett’s “I Left My Heart In San Francisco” won the Grammy for Record of the Year. The introductory reputed discotheque opened in Los Angeles, “Whisky A Go-Go.” On television “The Beverly Hillbillies” and “Bonanza” were in a virtual tie for the #1 program in the US, with “The Dick Van Dyke Show” pulling in third. Several people brought up the vaguely similar look of actress Mary Tyler Moore to Jacqueline Kennedy. TV series starring “identical twin cousins,” a collie with an IQ higher than it is humane co-stars, and a talking horse were also, inexplicably, general that year. The illfamed Alcatraz prison was closed, and the United States Supreme Court banned the oath of prayer and Bible reading in public schools. Quasars were discovered, Valium was invented, nuclear reactors went mercantile for the introductory time, and nuclear submarine USS Thresher sank into the Atlantic. “Touch Tone” phones were introduced, along with zip codes, tape cassettes, lava lamps, Cap’n Crunch cereal, and pull tabs for canned drinks – which only bodybuilders, at times it felt, had the strength to wrench the darn things off. A coal mine explosion killed closely 500 humans in Japan, and injured closely 900 more. George Wallace became Governor of Alabama, where soon after Civil Rights protesters, including a heap of children, would be attacked with dogs, tear gas, sticks, rocks, police and mob beatings, and tax remunerated fire fighters using water hoses with pressure capable of tearing flesh from bodies and breaking bones. In this same place four adolescent girls were blown to bits while at Sunday church in that southern state, and a heap of others would sustain frightening lifelong injuries from a dynamite bomb. Zambia became a country, and Kenya became independent, with Jomo Kenyatta as it is introductory Prime Minister. William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B.) DuBois passed from physical life in Ghana. New Englander Robert Lee Frost, who was genuinely from California, passed away, only two years after being a special guest at JFK’s inauguration. Aldous Huxley, author of the iconic futuristic novel “Brave New World,” likewise went to the ages. Edith Piaf, C.S. Lewis, Dinah Washington, Patsy Cline, Ernie Davis, Pope John XXIII, and Estes Kefauver likewise passed from physical life this year. As would Medgar Evers, John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald. Toddler Barack Obama turned two, and sixteen year old William Clinton shook his idol’s hand at The White House. Miss America Vanessa Williams was born, along with baseballer Mark McGwire, basketballer Michael Jordan, and songstress Whitney Houston. In 1963 a little more than 3 billion people existed on planet Earth. And in the Southwest President John Kennedy made a political tour, three weeks after the murders of President Diem and his brother Nhu in South Vietnam. 1963 was an interesting year. Deep in the heart of Texas the intoxicating scent of turkey feasts drifted throughout the cityscape of Dallas in anticipation of that unambiguously American spiritual observance of Thanksgiving, one week away, with the festive holiday of Christmas right around the corner. Store windows were already serenading the masses with tinsel and twinkle lights, and ads promising Happy Nol memories at ten percent off. It had rained. And the skies were overcast. But it hadn’t discouraged thousands of residents from lining the streets in expectation of the President’s visit, in spite of that community’s deeply conservative sentiments. Many were eager to see the First Lady, Jacqueline Kennedy, whom they knew was accompanying JFK for the duration of his visit. She seldom attended such political events with her husband, making this presidential tour a specially particular treat. Early morning showers in the end portion for the welcomed warmth of the Sun. The welcome warmth of “Big D” has also been shown in abundance allround JFK’s visit, to the authenti appreciation of the Kennedys. Anxieties and warnings by numerous that Dallas could prove a difficult experience for the moderately progressive politician now seemed unnecessarily dire. Everyone without delay recognizes the glamorous First Couple as their navy blue Ford Continental luxuriousness limousine at last reaches Dealey Plaza, located in the city’s historic center, some forty minutes into the parade and behind schedule after starting on it is almost eleven miles traveling from Love Field to the Dallas Business and Trade Mart. A typical itinerary for visiting dignitaries. A lucky few residents have even received a personal greeting from the visiting pair at the airport and along the way. The rumble and hum of motorcycle engines precede the lead car carrying respective Dallas officials, including Kennedy’s military aide, who would normally be seated in the President’s automobile. The heavy limousine winds tardily onto Houston Street. Women are particularly envious of the lovely Jackie in her stylish pink and blue Chanel architect suit, with corresponding pillbox hat. The glittering political family are as striking in person as on TV, beaming all the while to their gradually thinning admirers. Few detect the initial family of Texas are also in attendance, Governor John Connelly and Mrs. Nellie Connelly, sitting directly in front of Jack and Jackie, as the line of cars mosey by. Numerous humans wave at, take photographs or home movies of, applaud approval to, or plainly watch, not in truth knowing just how one was expected to greet a president. Over local radio citizens travel along with the motorcade as the announcer paints the scene with words. “The President’s car is now turning onto Elm Street, and it will be only a matter of minutes before he arrives at the Trade Mart….” The parade of cars make a sharp left, as John Kennedy leans over to say something to his wife, then looks back to his right to wave when a deafening pop cracks the relative quiet, startling assorted bystanders. A few in the plaza think it’s poor taste for a good deal of moron to be lighting firecrackers. It just makes all of Dallas look bad. This is largely how those in Dealey Plaza experienced what would quickly become realized as one of the most significant events in American history. For years to come this date would be as unforgettable as July 4th, Independence Day. And Dallas would, for a time, be the most hated city in the world for a heap of Americans. The debate, such as it is, in regards to John F. Kennedy’s murder continues…. Should we care still when it comes to this almost ancient crime today? Hasn’t the motive for the assassination long ago receded into the horizon of history, and irrelevancy? Is there genuinely any constructive reason to carry on this seemingly quixotic quest to at long last recognise the truth behind this man’s callus murder? That is, if there’s genuinely any “truth” to know? Had Senator John F. Kennedy and not President John F. Kennedy passed from physical life in the same manner, on that same day, at this same place, by those same hands only his family and close friends would have genuinely cared in regards to his passing. Perhaps cold to say, but true nevertheless. For a few this has been not one thing but a morbid pastime of trivial pursuit: “Where were you when you introductory heard Kennedy was shot?” As if the answer has ever been worth hearing. And then there’s the herd who seem strangely fascinated by the purported paradoxes of John Kennedy’s and Abraham Lincoln’s deaths. Mesmerized by a good deal of imagined cosmic connection formulated through a collection of hodgepodge minutia. Is there not a point where one ought to say at long last let the man rest in peace, and for all others to merely get on with whatsoever life we have left to enjoy? For those who sincerely believe Lee Harvey Oswald is guilty of this crime, and guilty alone, then the answer rather surely is yes, it’s well past time to move on. To them the persons engaged in their endless list of suspects, and their unremitting enigmas of Camelot are pointless. And ghoulish. Others not gravely mesmerized in the matter have found tasteless, unfitting humor in this homicide. But what may you do? Elsewhere the tendency by a lot of novice sleuths has been to take a defensive posture in protecting their cherished “solutions” to this murder mystery, no matter how foolish a great deal of of their theories most surely are. As though the truth in this crime is less primary than saving face for the expounders of conspiracy. That “facts” were merely a matter of one’s own opinion. Many of these people’s claims of camarillas are so far out there that at times it’s difficult not to wonder if at least a heap of are not without doubt dishonest humans measuredly injecting blatant nonsensicality into the mix merely to then inclusively contaminate those whose earnest view is that the Oswald angle is crooked, in order to then indict all who disbelieve the official conclusion in one grand stroke, yet again, with the mainstream spokespersons’ vapid curse “conspiracy theorists.” Allowing then for the periodic no-names from nowhere an prospect to emerge in defense of the government’s conclusion on the matter, and receive the red carpet treatment from the Fourth Estate, to give their labyrinthine tomes mass exposure. Or these days to world premiere their extravagant computer animations, made without doubt or question on a budget and scale well beyond the known abilities and resources of these “authors,” and anoint their version as the “truth,” for those ignorant of the applicable details on this crime. Still, amidst the people who sincerely sense this case as unresolved, their response has sporadically been to remind us: A murderer permitted to go free will kill again. To them Kennedy was plainly the most noteworthy but still unfortunate casualty of what was then the latest threat in a seemingly evermore series of threats to the nation’s security: The Cold War. His death came at a amount of time when the country was in a state of unfathomed transition. Of genuinely positive and far reaching possibilities. Not to say those years were filled with languid moments of halcyon bliss. They weren’t, in spite of what old persons may tell you. The capacity for monstrous depravity or sublime decency existed as much then as now. Yet some then actively did more than merely complain in regards to the wrongs of the world by making what contributions they could to improve such conditions. Primarily because of a number of advancing voices inspiring them forward. Kennedy’s was amongst those voices. After a world war of unimaginable obscenity, almost followed by almost fifteen fear-mongering years of “duck and cover,” JFK’s presence intimated the threat of mass nuclear death international wasn’t inevitably the future. And altho his legislative position on civil rights was anemic, his rhetoric suggested he was with us in spirit. His upbeat attitude, his self-deprecating humor, his style, his youth, his vigor, made the bitter pill of uninterrupted diligence go down a little sweeter. Contrary to so a lot of past and succeeding presidents who seemed to give hope or courage to humanity’s basest instincts this President, John Kennedy, invigorated, as Lincoln might have said, “our better angels.” Though he was no FDR by any stretch of the imagination, the impression broadly held of him was of a politician with substantial promise, whose potential greatness lay just a little further beyond. Despite his privileged pedigree JFK appeared to candidly give a rodent’s rump when it comes to the little guy. Yet in reality the man was far from perfect. Whatever that is. He was, as a great deal of of his background so commonly are, arrogant and self-involved, and, let’s be honest, a bit of a sexist. Those who were close to him in unguarded moments might have admitted through a whisper that he was vain as well. And decades would pass before his unfathomed physical handicaps and life threatening ailments (endured since childhood), masked from the public with the support of a cocktail of medicines, quack concoctions and drugs, braces, and lifts, would be exposed. Considering the choice of profession pushed upon him by his ambitious father, numerous humans who met him would confess their surprise in discovering that the man was in truth rather shy. Finally, his coital appetite for women not his spouse, the level and amount primarily exaggerated by sleaze pushers, revealed an apparent lack of respect for Jackie. Or insensitivity to how this conduct might effect her. Biographers of JFK insist the man in the long run outgrew his carnal immaturity and adolescent view of women by his final years, heightened by the death of his last child months before his own, moving him from shoal impressions towards his “better half.” Appreciating Jacqueline and her distinguishable qualities. And in love at last with his wife. With his cover boy smile numerous fell underneath the magic of his personal charm. A gift he many times took for granted. Through the eyes of an outside observer looking in, Franklin Roosevelt, it appears, was his political model; and he carried himself in the manner of the movie persona of actor Cary Grant. However, John F. Kennedy was not the liberal champion his worshipers insist on lionizing him as, or his detractors inanely denounce him for. He was mainly a pragmatic moderate, with progressive leanings, who expended much of his time as President sustaining the status quo, with only a few minor tweaks here and there that would occasionally, and minimally, favor reformist ideals. While he was in the White House his administration supported repressive governments allround the world. The Pentagon and other American agencies aided, financed and actively participated in the undermining and overthrows of alien offices which were either socialist or mildly friendly with the Soviets for the duration of JFK’s presidency. Resulting in power vacuums to be filled over time by despots. His administration’s assistance to apartheid South Africa principally aided the white minority there to maintain their savage bigotry over the indigenous people, justified behind the wide Cold War umbrella of fighting communism. Nelson Mandela’s almost three decades long imprisonment, along with the murders and torturous confinements of tens of thousands of others, was due in big percentage to the help and assistance of John Kennedy’s government. Over time this tyro world statesman matured from one with a simplistic reading of the Oval Office as “the center of action,” to a respect for the unfathomed influence and divergence upon the world it is power offered to one who understood it is true significance. Kennedy’s introductory ideology reflected an adhesion to what then was sensed a plausible view of geopolitics, “The Domino Theory.” Heavily weighted in the unfounded faith that the world was at peril from the irresistible siren call of collective economics. A society which adopts this system of belief meant it is neighbors would inevitably follow suit, one by one. That is, fall like “dominoes.” In essence a doctrine espousing communism as a virus. Therefore this foe to capitalism had to be stopped at all costs, through each means available. By the last year of his presidency and life, however, there was a sea alter in the depth of his world view. The most apparent root of this shift was the Cuban Missile Crisis. After this sobering experience Kennedy begun to explore avenues towards a more peaceful coexistence with the nations then at odds with American interests, exceptionally that affiliated to the USSR, with proposals for joint ventures amidst these two adversarial societies. Kennedy had hoped at numerous time for the duration of his second term to efficaciously alter the direction of the United States from one of a state perpetually in siege, to one of equilibrium. On the domestic front, in his last few months, Kennedy would belatedly follow through on his crusade pledge of doing more for equivalent justice by pushing forward a bill he knew would be difficult to get through Congress. Though like his brother Robert was cited as saying in reference to himself on the issue of civil rights, he wasn’t losing any sleep over it. But after for the most part looking at the drama from the sidelines for more than two years, which included witnessing the racist violence inflicted upon civil rights campaigners, and in peculiar the ambuscade assassination of Medger Evers at his home in Mississippi, Kennedy had given a speech just hours earlier, thought then to have lifted the cause. This and the August 28 “March On Washington” would be answered with the damnable slaughter of children in Birmingham, Alabama. Nearly five years later Robert Kennedy would give a near verbatim recital of this same address for the duration of his own venture for President. JFK’s progressive tone had started out taking on a more liberal edge with each successive month, to the great disgust, and fear, of some conservative interests who had grown wealthy and influential by keeping things just as they were. Even even though tangible results of his grandiloquence was skimpy, and he was given far more credit than deserved by his supporters for the successes of the Civil Rights Movement, John Kennedy’s attempts were received by those on the bottom rung of the American paradigm as an try to do right for the poor. Something strange for men in his position. Many of these persons in particular, the voiceless and abused, took his death hard. They felt cheated. For them and a great deal of others his murder was personal. His cruel slaying shocked that generation back into the cold reality that even this good natured man wasn’t safe from the demons hell-bent on keeping us for a limitless time scared and, like children, dependent on those who viewed themselves as the nation’s surrogate parent, protecting us from the vaguely specified night monsters beneath our bed. Pulling us backwards and playing us for fools by advancing paranoia, ad infinitum. Their chesty posture proclaiming we’d all be living in caves and paying each and everyday homage to Chairman Mao, while subsisting on foraged scraps, if not for these necessary American saviors. John Kennedy’s speeches now evermore silenced reminded the humans that they themselves and no one else, were their own pros who need not look no further than where they were to modify the world. His slaying did not alter that understanding amidst the ones who heard him. Thus, this thing humans have been doing ever since, going over the same ground again, and again, in an crusade to understand what happened on that day, and why, has had in big share little to do with Kennedy the man. His savage killing and it is effect on this land was less, perhaps not at all, in regards to him. Those who have expended the better percentage of so numerous years of their lives and personal resources on this has reflected an engagement in a venture to rectify history and take back what was so viciously stolen on that autumn afternoon so a heap of years ago: The right to live one’s own life, in one’s own way. On our own terms. And to not be afraid. On the last day of John Kennedy’s life he had in place plans to pull almost one thousand American soldiers from Vietnam by the end of December 1963, a mere five weeks away. Authorized within that same document, National Security Action Memorandum (NSAM) 263, revealed JFK’s intention to withdraw all nonessential and combat personnel from South East Asia by New Year’s Day 1966, permanently. NSAM 271, his penultimate memorandum, outlined designs to work in cooperative relationship with the Russians in the area of space technology, rather of continuing with the budget busting Moon Race, to get started as soon as Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev accorded in essential on the terms, to not only build a diplomatic bridge amid them, but to also at last end the politically and financially lucrative, but morally corrupting Cold War. After Kennedy’s death this “war” would carry on for closely twenty-five more years, to be original clumsily substituted with a “war on drugs” – waged versus chosen American citizens the American media would demonize as “super predators,” and then brutishly substituted by a “war on terror.” In addition, for the duration of the last months of his life he and his brother Robert were engaged in, they thought, mystery talks through third parties for the possibleness of lifting the embargo versus Cuba and in time restoring diplomatic relations with that “imprisoned island,” after JFK’s reelection, to the rage, and concern, of Pentagon hawks. Particularly the Joint Chiefs. The day of November 22, 1963, found Kennedy’s Vice President, Lyndon Baines Johnson, embroiled in assorted growing financial and political scandals which promised to not only ascertain LBJ’s remotion as JFK’s running mate in the 1964 presidential campaign, but nearly guaranteed the end of his very spotty, and violent, political career. One of these imbroglios threatened to disclose Johnson’s possible connection to the murder of Henry Marshall, a federal agent in Texas, killed while investigating a shady financial deal affiliated to one of the Vice President’s moneymen. The agent’s death was officially ruled a suicide, of five gunshots, with a bolt action rifle. Also, there were rumors Johnson may have played a role in the death of his sister, Josefa Johnson, on Christmas day 1961, to keep mystery what she knew in regards to her corrupt, and troubled older brother. The smart cash gave LBJ no more than a few months more before it was all but over for him. The gossip in DC was that President Kennedy had taken a liking to Senator George A. Smathers of Florida, who looked to them to be JFK’s bestloved choice as running mate for the coming campaign. On this final day of John F. Kennedy’s life he was preparing for his reelection, and where he hoped to be for the next five years. He most surely intended to retire John Edgar Hoover from the FBI (whom in later years Robert Kennedy would refer to as “dangerous,” and “a psycho”), and risk the wrath of “The Director.” But only after securing a second term. There was talk among numerous insiders that after JFK’s eight years as President brother Bobby might make a go at the most eminent political office in the land in 1968; and perchance youngest brother Edward would follow in the American bicentennial year of 1976. Thus determining the direction of travelling of around the Republican and Dixiecrat led crusade of 1951 amending the Constitution to never have another four-term liberal, like Franklin Roosevelt, in the White House, by perchance having an unbroken string of twenty-four years of progressive Kennedy brothers as President instead. Essentially ascertaining that conservative interests would be weakened, perhaps irreparably. John Kennedy’s presumed contest for the 1964 presidential campaign, the dour war monger Republican Barry Goldwater of Arizona, was seen by most as having no real chance to move the standard JFK from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. These were but a heap of of the more salient dramas surrounding John Fitzgerald Kennedy on the last day of his life. The election of Kennedy achieved a number of firsts. John Kennedy was the youngest man, at 43, to be elected President. He was, up to that point, the wealthiest man ever inaugurated. Few do not forget that at the time the Kennedy name was almost as synonymous with cash as that of the Rockefellers. Nowadays “Kennedy” and “politics” are yoked. The second child of Rose and Joseph P. was the introductory Catholic head of state, as well as the primary 20th century born. And for you metaphysicists, JFK was the basi Gemini. And finally, he was at age 46 the youngest to die as President of the United States. As numerous of you are well conscious there are in a literal sense dozens of substitute views of the who, what, where, when and why of Kennedy’s murder, offered by perhaps hundreds of others over the almost half century since it took place. Anyone wanting to know the likely truth behind the assassination are beauteous much on their own. There’s actually no clear compass directing one to the best source for indisputably factual selective information affiliated to November 22, 1963. Sadly, it’s come to the point where the evident reality is that we may never know for sure the honorable history of this crime. Which to me is itself a tragedy. Observably there are persons who still have something to gain by misleading the public on the matter. And worse, the people responsible who played a percentage in this crime have manifestly gotten away with it, forever. As John Kennedy was known to say on occasion: “Life isn’t fair.” Neither is death. |
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