22-11-2012, 11:15 AM
I enjoyed the two-hour discussion of the book and the evidence. George Noory was attentive and informed--had read the book, facilitating the pace.
What a realization, that Garrison sacrificed a stellar political future to pursue his obsession. Helms was determined to make an example and an example he made.
I look forward to such figures as Sergio Arcacha Smith--whom Lt. Francis Fruge of the Louisiana State Police told HSCA's Bob Buras had sewer maps of Dealey in his apartment searched by police (Smith was one of two men who threw Rose Cheramie from the car en route from Miami to Dallas.
John Hunt's work revealed Robert Frazier received the stretcher bullet at 7:30 Eastern from Agent Elmer Lee Todd who arrived forty-five minutes later, having the artifact originally "discovered" on the stretcher not Connally's (per Josiah Thompson Six Seconds in Dallas and Robert Harris The Connally Bullet).
I missed the previous guest who positied Diem as the prime mover of the assassination (take a number: LBJ, Israel, the Mob, Cubans, KGB, oil men, et cetera have been speculated before you).
Jim set the table quickly, Kennedy cabled to reform Diem or if he would not clean up his act, prompt his exit, not his execution.
Pointing to Unspeakable, Lodge is the man who would be king, playing his own hand, treating Kennedy with contempt.
The discussion of the new 21-minute AF1 tape with LeMay's aide de camp attempting to communicate with him inbound to DC ties into Finck admitting a general called the shots at the autopsy.
Jim's allusion to Dulles' Cromwell & Sullivan clients ties in very nicely with placing Garrison's focus at high-midrange with Phillips and Hunt over Ferrie, Smith, et al.
Not a simple matter, but clear speaking made quite an impact I would think.
Simply saying that Kennedy signed his death warrant by seeking peace is a revolutionary act.
Real revolution; not t-shirt revolution.
What a realization, that Garrison sacrificed a stellar political future to pursue his obsession. Helms was determined to make an example and an example he made.
I look forward to such figures as Sergio Arcacha Smith--whom Lt. Francis Fruge of the Louisiana State Police told HSCA's Bob Buras had sewer maps of Dealey in his apartment searched by police (Smith was one of two men who threw Rose Cheramie from the car en route from Miami to Dallas.
John Hunt's work revealed Robert Frazier received the stretcher bullet at 7:30 Eastern from Agent Elmer Lee Todd who arrived forty-five minutes later, having the artifact originally "discovered" on the stretcher not Connally's (per Josiah Thompson Six Seconds in Dallas and Robert Harris The Connally Bullet).
I missed the previous guest who positied Diem as the prime mover of the assassination (take a number: LBJ, Israel, the Mob, Cubans, KGB, oil men, et cetera have been speculated before you).
Jim set the table quickly, Kennedy cabled to reform Diem or if he would not clean up his act, prompt his exit, not his execution.
Pointing to Unspeakable, Lodge is the man who would be king, playing his own hand, treating Kennedy with contempt.
The discussion of the new 21-minute AF1 tape with LeMay's aide de camp attempting to communicate with him inbound to DC ties into Finck admitting a general called the shots at the autopsy.
Jim's allusion to Dulles' Cromwell & Sullivan clients ties in very nicely with placing Garrison's focus at high-midrange with Phillips and Hunt over Ferrie, Smith, et al.
Not a simple matter, but clear speaking made quite an impact I would think.
Simply saying that Kennedy signed his death warrant by seeking peace is a revolutionary act.
Real revolution; not t-shirt revolution.