01-02-2011, 03:30 AM
Albert Doyle Wrote:The fact he had successfully stopped the Chicago plot gave him confidence that he was a genuine important secret service member. At this point Oswald was completely suckered. His importance in relation to the Chicago plot he now thinks he prevented is used to induce him to take orders without question. He then does what he's told at the Depository that day (Or wherever "Lee" was).
Make the fourth and fifth words of your first sentence "thought" and "he," and we're on the same page. And yes, I see that you use a similar construction later in the same paragraph.
Albert Doyle Wrote:This is crunching my circuits.
Then I'm doing my job.
Albert Doyle Wrote:Vallee was caught by coincidence because the landlady stumbled in and saw the rifles. But maybe the stupidly left-out on the bed rifles were meant to be found?
Thanks for your thoughtful response, Albert.
ValLEE indeed. The doppelganger aspects of the Chicago and Dallas productions are too varied and deep to be coincidental. These stories were designed to confuse and misdirect. But only one was intended to run to conclusion.
Why Dallas and not Chicago for the real hit?
Do we think it might have something to do with lending credence to the ultimate FALSE Sponsorship -- that of LBJ?
(And don't forget that Chicago presented its own FALSE Sponsor in the person of Sam Giancana. The parallels, they just keep comin'.)
As for the discovery of the rifles: If my hypothesis is accurate, the Chicago "plot" was designed to be discovered.
Charles Drago
Co-Founder, Deep Politics Forum
If an individual, through either his own volition or events over which he had no control, found himself taking up residence in a country undefined by flags or physical borders, he could be assured of one immediate and abiding consequence: He was on his own, and solitude and loneliness would probably be his companions unto the grave.
-- James Lee Burke, Rain Gods
You can't blame the innocent, they are always guiltless. All you can do is control them or eliminate them. Innocence is a kind of insanity.
-- Graham Greene
Co-Founder, Deep Politics Forum
If an individual, through either his own volition or events over which he had no control, found himself taking up residence in a country undefined by flags or physical borders, he could be assured of one immediate and abiding consequence: He was on his own, and solitude and loneliness would probably be his companions unto the grave.
-- James Lee Burke, Rain Gods
You can't blame the innocent, they are always guiltless. All you can do is control them or eliminate them. Innocence is a kind of insanity.
-- Graham Greene

