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In reply to the discussion: CNN Tonight: The Assassination of JFK [View all]BootinUp
(51,578 posts)18. Lets look at a review of that.
http://www.amazon.com/Blood-Money-Power-How-Killed/dp/161608197X
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
McClellan's overwrought conspiracy theory claims that Lyndon Johnson-motivated by power lust, fear of being dropped from the Kennedy ticket, and the need to cover up various scandals-masterminded Kennedy's assassination with the help of his evil "superlawyer" Ed Clark. But his evidence is meager and murky, even by the standards of Kennedy conspiracy scholarship. The main exhibit is a smudged partial fingerprint from Oswald's sniper's nest that may or may not belong to a Johnson associate, depending on which fingerprint expert you ask. Otherwise McClellan relies on what he heard during his years at Clark's law firm-e.g., a partner told him that Clark arranged the assassination-and the description of scenes in which a "a fixed stare," vague, unspoken understandings, and "code words" proved that Johnson and Clark were conspiring. Sample accusations include: "I knew Clark was admitting to the payoff for the assassination even though he never said he received a payoff for assassinating Kennedy...." The book offers many detailed accounts of conspiratorial meetings that turn out to be not fact but "faction" or "journalistic novelization"-that is, conjecture designed to distract readers from the lack of evidence. McClellan styles the assassination as the defeat of Camelot by Texas's sleazy nexus of dirty politicians, slick lawyers and oil money; the unmasking of Johnson, the personification of such back-room power politics, therefore promises a public "emotional purging" leading to the renewal of democracy. His confusingly structured, evasively argued, often nonsensical theories attest to the crime's continuing potency as a symbol of America's mythic heart of darkness. Photos.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
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My comment: I find it somewhat distressing that you really think Johnson had something to do with his assassination. Why would you accuse President Johnson of that? Just curious.
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
McClellan's overwrought conspiracy theory claims that Lyndon Johnson-motivated by power lust, fear of being dropped from the Kennedy ticket, and the need to cover up various scandals-masterminded Kennedy's assassination with the help of his evil "superlawyer" Ed Clark. But his evidence is meager and murky, even by the standards of Kennedy conspiracy scholarship. The main exhibit is a smudged partial fingerprint from Oswald's sniper's nest that may or may not belong to a Johnson associate, depending on which fingerprint expert you ask. Otherwise McClellan relies on what he heard during his years at Clark's law firm-e.g., a partner told him that Clark arranged the assassination-and the description of scenes in which a "a fixed stare," vague, unspoken understandings, and "code words" proved that Johnson and Clark were conspiring. Sample accusations include: "I knew Clark was admitting to the payoff for the assassination even though he never said he received a payoff for assassinating Kennedy...." The book offers many detailed accounts of conspiratorial meetings that turn out to be not fact but "faction" or "journalistic novelization"-that is, conjecture designed to distract readers from the lack of evidence. McClellan styles the assassination as the defeat of Camelot by Texas's sleazy nexus of dirty politicians, slick lawyers and oil money; the unmasking of Johnson, the personification of such back-room power politics, therefore promises a public "emotional purging" leading to the renewal of democracy. His confusingly structured, evasively argued, often nonsensical theories attest to the crime's continuing potency as a symbol of America's mythic heart of darkness. Photos.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
---------------------
My comment: I find it somewhat distressing that you really think Johnson had something to do with his assassination. Why would you accuse President Johnson of that? Just curious.
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Nothing weird at all. Ellsberg gained classified status. The others in the digital era did, too.
ancianita
Nov 2013
#94
Not a single person with classified status could uncover missing physical evidence or interview
ancianita
Nov 2013
#97
Not the CT's of that time. There's no "obsession" going on. There's the abiding knowledge that truth
ancianita
Nov 2013
#96
When I said it was bullshit, I was referring to the CT "magic" aspect. Not the single bullet theory.
Gravitycollapse
Nov 2013
#44
Yeah. So then why was someone impersonating him on the phone to the Soviets and Cubans?
Warren DeMontague
Nov 2013
#122
Please don't confuse habitual rejection of reality with questioning authority
Gravitycollapse
Nov 2013
#42
Is it OK to totally ignore evidence and embrace fantasy just because you feel like it?
stopbush
Nov 2013
#52
Mopping up the scene of the crime doesn't take competence. Steering a commission to make
ancianita
Nov 2013
#100
I wasn't there and I didn't see it. I would like to delve into it. 50 years ago, all I could gather
ancianita
Nov 2013
#108
It might help to stop acting as though it's impossible to prove you're right.
nyquil_man
Nov 2013
#121
There is. Opening the National Archives. Re-opening this cold case and allowing digital sleuths to
ancianita
Nov 2013
#123
Setting up classified parameters above their pay grade. It's not as if the commission had
ancianita
Nov 2013
#127
Well, when you get to restate other people's arguments in such a facile way,
Bolo Boffin
Nov 2013
#27
The problem CT's have is with the evidence processing and lack of transparency and archiving
ancianita
Nov 2013
#99
You realize that the Warren Commission didn't just produce a single volume report, yes?
nyquil_man
Nov 2013
#130
Much later I learned that, yes, while involved in single parent and job struggles.
ancianita
Nov 2013
#131
Then I forgot. I was in high school that year, but got a single summary volume when at FSU
ancianita
Nov 2013
#134
Darby's Affidavit pertaining to the print match is an exhibit in the book Blood, Money & Power
Samantha
Nov 2013
#63
Oh, sorry. Yes, I thought it was good that it was brought up and just added my 2¢.
stopbush
Nov 2013
#90
JFK escalated our involvement in Nam from 400 military advisers to over 16,000.
stopbush
Nov 2013
#54
This is a discussion about JFK's assassination, not the Vietnam war, but to address your point
Samantha
Nov 2013
#55
I am 59 years old and was subject to the draft, even though the war was winding down.
stopbush
Nov 2013
#56
For a person who has no qualms about accusing LBJ of planning to have JFK killed,
stopbush
Nov 2013
#75
There is a HUGE difference between stating an opinion and making a public accusation of guilt
Samantha
Nov 2013
#85
I have just reread the entire Wikipedia page on the HSCA. Nowhere does it say the HSCA retracted
stopbush
Nov 2013
#86
Speaking of quotes, here's one from JFK's Ft Worth speech the day he was killed:
stopbush
Nov 2013
#145
Perhaps you think this reflection on past policy negates what I have posted. I don't see how. n/t
mattclearing
Nov 2013
#146
The fact LBJ put together a blue ribbon commission to investigate is all I need to know...
Drunken Irishman
Nov 2013
#76
It was, as expected, an MSM promotion of the 'Official Story' which is the real CT.
sabrina 1
Nov 2013
#62
The same Corporate MSM who are pushing the Warren Report also pushed the official
sabrina 1
Nov 2013
#82
Guess it's true if the world's largest media conglomerate and their talking heads say it is, then.
ancianita
Nov 2013
#92
Yes. The evidence. Living through an event like that and knowing that not all the evidence was made
ancianita
Nov 2013
#112
Heh heh. Sure. Profit allows for a lot of play. They don't have to make up their minds
ancianita
Nov 2013
#128
When you have the time Google "where was George H. W. Bush when JFK was murdered.
Booster
Nov 2013
#101
Really? A letter from Arlen Specter? Your right, I am not going to read more about Arlen Specter.
GoneFishin
Nov 2013
#132
Your logic is circular. Arlen Specter was involved in developing the magic bullet theory.
GoneFishin
Nov 2013
#140