The
Deaths of JFK, RFK and the Silence of the Lambs
by Russ Baker
WhoWhatWhy.com
Recently
by Russ Baker: NY
Times’ Umbrella Man Exposed
As the 50th
anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy approaches,
there is a growing flurry of material about or even from
the Kennedy clan. This includes “insider” accounts and what
are described as exciting, must-read and must-watch revelations.
Yet, for some
reason, little of it is truly revelatory, or if it is, it seems,
almost by design, very, very small potatoes indeed.
Take for example
a new documentary by Bobby Kennedy’s daughter, for HBO. What’s the
big
revelation? That Bobby feared…are you ready… that someone
would throw acid in the face of his children. Who? The mafia. And
when was this a threat? In the 1950s. When RFK was a Senate
investigator, years before he and his brother ever got near the
White House. And years before his brother and then he himself were
killed under still-unresolved circumstances.
Got that? Nothing
about elements other than “professional criminals.” Threat to his
children, not him. And this was before RFK became Attorney General
and started really going after the mob, and everyone else.
Oh and
nothing about who…killed him.
That’s Hollywood!
I subscribe
to a newsfeed with articles related to JFK. It’s an endless stream
of banality: the death of democracy packaged as consumer goods for
collectors. For example, you could have bid in a recent auction
for the hearse that carried JFK’s body, and of course, there are
the requisite collector plates and supposedly valuable limited-edition
coins.
Lots of people
who “covered” the assassination are featured in interviews and panel
discussions, but for some reason none of them seem to have real
insight or have done original investigative reporting on what actually
took place that day. It’s all surface recollections of emotions
and empirical material gleaned from the official story.
Then there
are the odd little accidents. Like this that came through Google
Alerts:
Filmmaker
denies JFK conspiracy theories
Indiana Daily Student
Wednesday, Union Board presented Barbour’s 1992 documentary
“The JFK Assassination: The Garrison Tapes,”
followed by a question-and-answer session with Barbour. The film
features Barbour’s exclusive interviews with late New Orleans
District Attorney …
See
all stories on this topic »
Ok, so this
tells us the filmmaker John Barbour “denies” JFK conspiracy theories.
But the few who actually might click on this not-so-interesting
sounding link come to this headline:
Filmmaker
affirms JFK conspiracy theories with "The Garrison Tapes"
So let’s go
to the dictionary. Does “denies” equal “affirms”? No, it is the
opposite. Hmm….
Several major
Hollywood productions on supposedly on their way to screens. Jonathan
Demme has optioned
Stephen King’s not-very-good and certainly
irrelevant fantasy about Lee Harvey Oswald. Bold, sir!
Tom Hanks,
always looking to take huge risks (er not!), has optioned
Vincent Bugliosi’s endless (1,612-page) and loyal re-confirmation
of the widely-discredited Warren Report, again with HBO said to
be in the picture.
A third, a
book by Lamar Waldron and Thom Hartmann, optioned by Leonardo DiCaprio,
at least explores some of the enormous amount of evidence of an
organized hit beyond the lone kook. But it settles in nicely with
“the mafia did it” despite the other enormous mass of evidence
of a far-ranging cover-up involving high military, intelligence
and other officials none of whom were mafia, last time I
checked. Even this slightly bolder approach from DiCaprio comes
under attack from a conventional media hack/gossip columnist,
who lazily bandies about the term “crackpot conspiracy theories”
(honestly, does this woman ever do any background research
or read books?)
In any case,
none of the films that Hollywood seems willing to tackle touch on
what the great, great mass of careful investigation, research and
scholarship has shown over the years the extremely high likelihood
that JFK’s death was a covert operation engineered by exactly the
kinds of people whose profession was to displace leaders and carry
out military-precision operations under cover. (My own book, Family
of Secrets, has four chapters of new, abundantly
documented and heavily footnoted material on the Kennedy assassination,
including the answer to why George H.W. Bush cannot remember where
he was on Nov. 22, 1963 and there are many other fine books,
both recent vintage and released over the years, which carefully
lay out enough evidence to settle the matter to all but the most
closed-minded. Examples here,
here,
and here.)
Nearly half
a century after the death of a president who took bold steps against
abuses by the one percent of the one percent, we are still in denial
about how and why he died. Our leading institutions and individuals
are not only scared to talk about the truth, but glad to cynically
profit from tired lies and evasions.
So where are
we when it comes to our own boldness and advanced self-awareness?
This year, we may be headed toward a presidential general election
contest between a wealthy predator and a putative reformer who has
made his peace with the most powerful, wealthiest circles in America.
If not that wealthy predator, then perhaps a demagogic blowhard
of the extreme mercenary variety.
Wonder what
Jack and Bobby would have to say?
Reprinted
from WhoWhatWhy.com.
January
24, 2012
Russ
Baker is an award-winning investigative reporter. He has written
for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Nation,
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Village
Voice and Esquire and dozens of other major domestic and
foreign publications. He has also served as a contributing editor
to the Columbia Journalism Review. Baker received a 2005
Deadline Club award for his exclusive reporting on George W. Bush’s
military record. He is the author of Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in
the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America
(Bloomsbury Press, 2009); it was released in paperback as Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and
the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. For more information
on Russ’s work, see his sites, www.familyofsecrets.com
and www.russbaker.com.
Copyright
© 2012 WhoWhatWhy.com
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