21 November 2010

Remembering JFK

22 November 1963 - President John F Kennedy was assassinated 47 years ago today.

Sourced from
YouTube




Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) Final Courtroom Speech, JFK (1991), sourced from YouTube



Closing argument in the trial of Clay Shaw. Kevin Costner gives the speech of a generation, laying bare not only a compelling case against Shaw, but an indictment of the machinery of our government.

"Hitler always said: "The bigger the lie, the more people will believe it."

Lee Harvey Oswald, a crazed, lonely man who wanted attention and got it by killing a President was only the first in a long line of patsies.

In later years, Bobby Kennedy, Martin Luther King, men whose commitment to change and peace would make them dangerous to men committed to war would follow, also killed by such lonely crazed men.

Men who remove our guilt by making murder a meaningless act of a loner. We've all become Hamlets in our country, children of a slain father-leader whose killers still possess the throne.

The ghost of John F. Kennedy confronts us with the secret murder at the heart of the American Dream. He forces on us the appalling questions: Of what is our Constitution made? What is our citizenship, and more, our lives worth?

What is the future of a democracy where a President can be assassinated under conspicuously suspicious circumstances while the machinery of legal action scarcely trembles?

How many more political murders disguised as heart attacks, suicides, cancers, drug overdoses? How many airplane and car crashes will occur before they are exposed for what they are?

"Treason doth never prosper," wrote an English poet, "What's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason."

The American public have yet to see the Zapruder film. Why?

The American public have yet to see the real X-rays and photographs of the autopsy. Why?

There are hundreds of documents that could help prove this conspiracy. Why have they been withheld or burned by the government?

Each time my office or you the people have asked those questions, demanded crucial evidence, the answer from on high has always been "national security."

What kind of "national security" do we have when we have been robbed of our leaders?

What "national security" permits the removal of fundamental power from the hands of the American people and validates the ascendancy of invisible government in the United States?

That kind of "national security," gentlemen of the jury, is when it smells like it, feels like it, and looks like it, call it what it is - fascism.

I submit to you that what took place on November 22, 1963 was a coup d'etat. Its most direct and tragic result was a reversal of President Kennedy's commitment to withdraw from Vietnam.

War is the biggest business in America worth $80 billion a year.

President Kennedy was murdered by a conspiracy that was planned in advance at the highest levels of our government and carried out by fanatical and disciplined Cold Warriors in the Pentagon and CIA's covert operations apparatus - among them Clay Shaw here before you.

It was a public execution and it was covered up by like-minded individuals in the Dallas Police Department, the Secret Service, the FBI, and the White House - all the way up to and including J. Edgar Hoover and Lyndon Johnson, whom I consider accomplices after the fact.

The assassination reduced the President to a transient official. His job, his assignment is to speak as often as possible of this nations desire for peace, while he acts as a business agent in congress for the military and their hardware manufacturers.

Now some people say I’m crazy, a southern caricature seeking higher office. Well, there is a simple way to determine if I am paranoid.

Let's ask the two men who have profited the most from the assassination - your former President Lyndon Baines Johnson and your new President, Richard Nixon - to release 51 CIA documents pertaining to Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby, or the secret CIA memo on Oswald's activities in Russia that was "destroyed" while being photocopied.

All these documents are yours - the people's property - you pay for it, but because the government considers you children who might be too disturbed or distressed to face this reality, or because you might possibly lynch those involved, you cannot see these documents for another 75 years.

I'm in my early 40's, so I'll have shuffled off this mortal coil by then, but I'm already telling my 8 year-old son to keep himself physically fit so that one glorious September morning in the year 2038 he can walk into the National Archives and find out what the CIA and the FBI knew. They may even push it back then. Hell it may become a generational affair, with questions passed down from father to son, mother to daughter. But someday somewhere, someone may find out the damned truth.

We better. We better or we might just as well build ourselves another Government like the Declaration of Independence says to when the old one ain't working – just – just a little farther out West. An American naturalist wrote, "a patriot must always be ready to defend his country against its government."

I'd hate to be in your shoes today. You have a lot to think about. You’ve seen much hidden evidence the American public has never seen.

You know, going back to when we were children, I think most of us in this courtroom thought that justice came into being automatically, that virtue was its own reward, that good would triumph over evil. But as we get older we know that this just isn't true.

Individual human beings have to create justice and this is not easy because truth often poses a threat to power and one often has to fight power at great risk to themselves. People like S.M. Holland, Lee Bowers, Jean Hill, and Willie O'Keefe. They’ve all taken that risk. They have all come forward.

I have here some $8000 in these letters sent to my office from all over the country - quarters, dimes, dollar bills from housewives, plumbers, car salesmen, teachers, invalids - these are the people who cannot afford to send money but do, these are the ones who drive the cabs, who nurse in the hospitals, who see their kids go to Vietnam. Why?

Because they care, because they want to know the truth - because they want their country back, because it still belongs to us, as long as the people have the guts to fight for what they believe in.

The truth is the most important value we have because if the truth does not endure, if the government murders truth, if we cannot respect the hearts of these people, then this is not the country in which I was born and this is certainly not the country I want to die in.

Tennyson wrote “Authority forgets a dying king.”

And this was never more true than for John F. Kennedy whose murder was probably one the most terrible moments in the history of our country.

You the people, the jury system, sitting in judgment on Clay Shaw, represent the hope of humanity against government power.

In discharging your duty, in bringing the first conviction in this house of cards against Clay Shaw, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country."

Do not forget your dying king.

Show this world that this is still a government of the people, for the people, and by the people. Nothing as long as you live will ever be more important.

It's up to you.'

2 comments:

  1. Why does every generation have to prove who killed JFK? French intelligence first figured it out in 1965. And New Orleans DA Jim Garrison proceeded to interview hundreds of witnesses - including one of the sharpshooters - for the grand jury investigation. It's all there in the Parish of New Orleans records. Then the House Committee on Assassinations had to prove it all over again in 1978. As did Oliver Stone with his 1992 movie JFK. The conspiracy went to the highest levels of government - namely the joint chiefs of staff with the close collaboration of Hoover and Johnson. And yes, they used CIA contractors and Mafia mules to move money, but the conspiracy was hatched by the joint chiefs of staff - and paid for by a bunch of NASA and Defense contractors and oil company executives. What really makes me sick is that this is all publicly available information - available in any library. I happened to make the acquaintance of a JFK assassination witness in 1984, and my life has never been the same. I write about this in my recent memoir THE MOST REVOLUTIONARY ACT: MEMOIR OF AN AMERICAN REFUGEE (www.stuartbramhall.com). I currently live in exile in New Zealand.

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  2. Hello Dr Bramhall, thanks for your comments. As you pointed out, this information is out there - if you go looking for it. I read a lot of books after seeing Stone's film and started reading up about this on the internet. The fact that there is so much documented makes it all the more disturbing that these events happened and there has still been no justice or accountability! My post was not so much about reinventing the wheel with investigations already undertaken, but remembering and bearing witness to this event, keeping people talking about it, and ensuring that younger generations are aware that the forces in play then are no doubt forces in play in the present day.

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