26-09-2010, 09:03 AM
Lyndon Baines Johnson takes his place on the Great Mandala.
Yes, he didn't like John. And, yes, he signed NSAM 273 on the 26th.
April 23 he forecast Kennedy in Texas for a luncheon.
He didn't create Harvey and Lee beginning in 1951, nor lead the one from Minsk to the basement of the Dallas Police station, by way of leafleting in New Orleans and creating scenes in Mexico City.
He didn't engineer the regime change and executive action aspects of the national security shadow government, but he could take dictation.
And when Walter told him it was over, it was over.
He took his place between Hoover (1972, heart attack), and Nixon (1974, “effective noon tomorrow”), by stopping his heart (1973).
All in all he was just another brick in the wall.
A fascinating study in dark-side psychopathology to be sure, but in no way directing the continuing work of the powers that operate the presidents.
Blakey insisted the mob did it. Howard Hunt said it was Johnson.
Waldron and Hartmann say it was Cubans.
So we know it wasn't the mob, and it wasn't Johnson, and it wasn't Cubans.
Newman and Armstrong assert neither the mob, Johnson, Hoover, Cubans, nor oilmen could have created Oswald.
CIA tool Posner needs a gig and hey presto he is defending one of our great allies over there who is so-unfairly accused of being a drug-running tool of the CIA.
The wind is invisible. We see the tree move. It's magic.
Yes, he didn't like John. And, yes, he signed NSAM 273 on the 26th.
April 23 he forecast Kennedy in Texas for a luncheon.
He didn't create Harvey and Lee beginning in 1951, nor lead the one from Minsk to the basement of the Dallas Police station, by way of leafleting in New Orleans and creating scenes in Mexico City.
He didn't engineer the regime change and executive action aspects of the national security shadow government, but he could take dictation.
And when Walter told him it was over, it was over.
He took his place between Hoover (1972, heart attack), and Nixon (1974, “effective noon tomorrow”), by stopping his heart (1973).
All in all he was just another brick in the wall.
A fascinating study in dark-side psychopathology to be sure, but in no way directing the continuing work of the powers that operate the presidents.
Blakey insisted the mob did it. Howard Hunt said it was Johnson.
Waldron and Hartmann say it was Cubans.
So we know it wasn't the mob, and it wasn't Johnson, and it wasn't Cubans.
Newman and Armstrong assert neither the mob, Johnson, Hoover, Cubans, nor oilmen could have created Oswald.
CIA tool Posner needs a gig and hey presto he is defending one of our great allies over there who is so-unfairly accused of being a drug-running tool of the CIA.
The wind is invisible. We see the tree move. It's magic.