29-06-2010, 07:26 AM
The Lone Assassin Question?
If Lee Harvey Oswald alone is responsible for what happened at Dealey Plaza and was the lone shooter, then when did he decide to kill the President?
While Oswald was still alive, a Dallas law enforcement spokesman told reporters, “I think that it’s a man that planned this murder weeks or months ago and has laid his plans carefully and has carried them out and had planned at that time what he was going to tell the police who are questioning him at the moment.”
Yet, others who believe Oswald did it alone, who actually knew him, like Ruth Paine, consider the idea that he didn’t decide to kill the President until after his wife Marina rejected an offer of reconciliation the night before the assassination.
Just as Conspiracy Theorists are divided over whether President Kennedy was murdered by a group outside the government or was a victim of a coup by those who took over the government, Lone Nutters who believe Oswald did it alone are also divided over the question of exactly when Oswald decided to kill the president.
So when was it? And what was it? Was it all planned out in advance, or was it a sudden decision to take advantage of the opportunity because he didn’t get laid the night before?
Studiously avoided by the Warren Commission, this question is one that should be answered as a matter of national security, because certainly such a determination can only help thwart other such assassinations, especially if the Secret Service itself claims Oswald acted alone.
But their failure to answer the question only increases its significance. The only real reason for not even trying to answer the question implies that there’s really no reason to look for a time of decision, or a motive, because none exists. Why bother if you already know the answer?
When did Oswald decide to kill the President?
Thanks to all who seriously consider this question,
Bill Kelly
If Lee Harvey Oswald alone is responsible for what happened at Dealey Plaza and was the lone shooter, then when did he decide to kill the President?
While Oswald was still alive, a Dallas law enforcement spokesman told reporters, “I think that it’s a man that planned this murder weeks or months ago and has laid his plans carefully and has carried them out and had planned at that time what he was going to tell the police who are questioning him at the moment.”
Yet, others who believe Oswald did it alone, who actually knew him, like Ruth Paine, consider the idea that he didn’t decide to kill the President until after his wife Marina rejected an offer of reconciliation the night before the assassination.
Just as Conspiracy Theorists are divided over whether President Kennedy was murdered by a group outside the government or was a victim of a coup by those who took over the government, Lone Nutters who believe Oswald did it alone are also divided over the question of exactly when Oswald decided to kill the president.
So when was it? And what was it? Was it all planned out in advance, or was it a sudden decision to take advantage of the opportunity because he didn’t get laid the night before?
Studiously avoided by the Warren Commission, this question is one that should be answered as a matter of national security, because certainly such a determination can only help thwart other such assassinations, especially if the Secret Service itself claims Oswald acted alone.
But their failure to answer the question only increases its significance. The only real reason for not even trying to answer the question implies that there’s really no reason to look for a time of decision, or a motive, because none exists. Why bother if you already know the answer?
When did Oswald decide to kill the President?
Thanks to all who seriously consider this question,
Bill Kelly