04-12-2011, 04:55 PM
Adele,
That's because she was paraphrasing in some of those explanations. The "Irish Mafia" was a term used by
Lyndon and his cronies to talk about JFK and his associates. Who he was talking about in using the phrase,
"those S.O.B.s" was the same. And I take it was he actually said was "those goddamned Kennedy boys".
They are syntactically different but they are semantic equivalents and refer to the same group of persons.
You are grasping after straws. There is nothing here that discredits Madeleine in any way, shape, or form.
Jim
That's because she was paraphrasing in some of those explanations. The "Irish Mafia" was a term used by
Lyndon and his cronies to talk about JFK and his associates. Who he was talking about in using the phrase,
"those S.O.B.s" was the same. And I take it was he actually said was "those goddamned Kennedy boys".
They are syntactically different but they are semantic equivalents and refer to the same group of persons.
You are grasping after straws. There is nothing here that discredits Madeleine in any way, shape, or form.
Jim
Adele Edisen Wrote:For everyone:
Lengthy interview of Madeleine Duncan Brown by Robert Gaylon Ross, Sr., released by Prison Planet, Inc.
It is one hour, 21 minutes, and 25 seconds long. An 80-minute version was played on the JFKresearch Forum several years ago, and in that video the
interviewer asks for a verbatim account of the words used by LBJ. I took notes for myself
Pay close attention to her versions of what Lyndon was supposed to have said when the interviewer asks for an account, and as in the 80-minute video,
then in another instance, for "his exact words". How many versions would LBJ have given to her of "After tomorrow,________ will never embarrass me again.
That's not a threat, that's a promise." In the 80-minute video I counted three different versions to fill in the blank space:
1. that Irish Mafia
2. those S.O.B.s
3. the Kennedys
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POmdd6HQsus
Adele Edisen
