Magda Hassan Wrote:I think Charles is referring to the entirety of the event and on its many levels of comparmentalised effects. Forensic, psychological, political etc. How can any one really 'know' what happened? Even those participating in it don't really 'know' any thing except their own particulat role in it. Like the blind Indian men describing an elephant from the one part of the elepants body they can touch and describe. Charles will correct me if I am wrong.
You're not "wrong," Maggie. I, on the other hand, may have been less than artful in composing my previous post.
In point of fact my questions were prompted by my long-standing frustration with the severely limited language and, by logical extension, cognitive skills of many who would tout themselves as leaders of the JFK assassination research community based in large measure upon their scholarly and literary contributions to our common cause.
I most certainly do NOT subscribe to any sort of post-modern "we can't know anything" worldview. We know that JFK was killed by conspirators. We know a great deal about the structure of the conspiracy and the motives driving its creation. We know all too well many of its dire consequences. We know, for the most part, its historical, cultural, and spiritual antecedents and contexts.
(All of which is dwarfed by what we don't know.)
Let me cite a recent example -- without naming names -- of the sort of fatally flawed reasoning that masquerades as deep analysis by self-proclaimed deep thinkers in deep politics research:
Celebrated author X negatively criticized Tom Wilson's controversial, cutting-edge method of photographic analysis by noting that in all his/her years of study of film and photography (no specifics offered), he/she had never encountered said methodology. The implication: it must be fraudulent. After all, he/she continued, the history of film is well over a century old, and photography is even older.
Which is the equivalent of stating that never in all his/her great-great-grandfathers' years of riding horses did they ever come across anything like a Ferrari. And horses have been ridden for thousands of years. Therefore, Ferrari's cannot exist.
When one compares the depth of such thinking with that contributed by the likes of Salandria, Meagher, Weisberg, Evica, Scott, and Douglass (among others), one is left all but bereft of hope for the success of our common cause.
All of which, by the way, does not begin to address the wholly undocumented -- and, if I may be permitted the editorial license -- arrogant claim of comprehensive knowledge implicit in the statement, "When you know the Kennedy assassination you know how the world works".
And so the question is prompted and appropriately addressed:
How does the world work?