Kennedy and the Mob

FBI's Metzler was undercover to the Mob

They Were Less than Truthful

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Is there any one fact that is today unassailable concerning the assassination of John F. Kennedy and the official report of how the terrible act occurred and who was responsible for his death?

I suggest that the answer is a resounding, Yes!

The government lied to us then and persists in the lie and cover-up even today concerning the most important unsolved murder case in American history.

Most of us know the official story-line put forth by the President’s Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, created by Executive Order of President Lyndon B. Johnson on November 29, 1963. On that fateful day in Dallas, November 22, 1963, according to Commission conclusions, President Kennedy was killed by three shots fired from a window of the Texas School Book Depository; three rounds fired from a mail-order Mannlicher-Carcano rifle with a telescopic site; the shooter being a left-wing misfit named Lee Harvey Oswald who was acting on his own warped initiative.

The Committee presented their deceitful conclusion to President Johnson on September 24, 1964. The conclusion was verbatim with the conclusion announced back on November 22, 1963 by city, state and federal authorities within approximately thirty minutes of the shooting. Gunshot residue still wafted on the air over Dealey Plaza when the name and a detailed description of the assailant were on the airwaves.

What do you think of the thesis on truthfulness?

Written by Tip Editor

November 4, 2013 at 5:44 pm

Women’s History Month: Rebecca Latimer Felton quite a character

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Rebecca Latimer Felton

 

It is fitting that during the month of March (Women’s History Month), we consider one of the most significant, yet least well-known women in GA: Woman’s History Month started in 1980 with the mission of “recognize and celebrate the diverse and historic accomplishments of women.”

Rebecca Latimer Felton. Who would have guessed that this woman, born in 1835, would have become the first woman senator of the United States in 1922 – at the age of 87? And even worse, who could have known then that this very old lady would also be Georgia’s last woman senator? Rebecca Latimer Felton, once a Southern Belle, became a politician forty-seven years before she could vote. And if one were trying to determine which Georgia woman led the most interesting and tumultuous life, Felton would certainly be in the running. Some claim that Felton’s life is in many ways the life of Georgia before, during and after the Civil War. Having researched her life for four years, I now know that Felton’s good friend Margaret Mitchell based her fictional character, Scarlett O’Hara, upon the real life of Rebecca Latimer Felton. For more information, read  Loosening Corsets: The Heroic Life of Georgia’s Feisty Mrs. Felton; First Woman Senator of the United States, by A. Louise Staman (available on Amazon, at Tiger Iron Press, and in most book stores).