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  Kabbalah  ·  Kansas  ·  Kazakhstan  ·  Kelly, Grace, Princess of Monaco  ·  Kennedy Dynasty  ·  Kennedy, John F (I)  ·  Kennedy, John F (II)  ·  Kennedy, John F (III)  ·  Kennedy, Robert  ·  Kent  ·  Kentucky  ·  Kenya & Kenyans  ·  Ketamine  ·  Kidnap (I)  ·  Kidnap (II)  ·  Kidney  ·  Kill & Killer  ·  Kind & Kindness  ·  King  ·  King, Martin Luther  ·  Kingdom  ·  Kingdom of God  ·  Kiss  ·  Kissinger, Henry  ·  Knife & Knives  ·  Knights  ·  Knights Templar  ·  Knowledge  ·  Komodo Dragon  ·  Koran (I)  ·  Koran (II)  ·  Korea & Korean War  ·  Kosovo  ·  Kurds & Kurdistan  ·  Kuwait & Kuwaitis  ·  Kyrgyzstan  
<K>
Kennedy, John F (II)
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  Kabbalah  ·  Kansas  ·  Kazakhstan  ·  Kelly, Grace, Princess of Monaco  ·  Kennedy Dynasty  ·  Kennedy, John F (I)  ·  Kennedy, John F (II)  ·  Kennedy, John F (III)  ·  Kennedy, Robert  ·  Kent  ·  Kentucky  ·  Kenya & Kenyans  ·  Ketamine  ·  Kidnap (I)  ·  Kidnap (II)  ·  Kidney  ·  Kill & Killer  ·  Kind & Kindness  ·  King  ·  King, Martin Luther  ·  Kingdom  ·  Kingdom of God  ·  Kiss  ·  Kissinger, Henry  ·  Knife & Knives  ·  Knights  ·  Knights Templar  ·  Knowledge  ·  Komodo Dragon  ·  Koran (I)  ·  Koran (II)  ·  Korea & Korean War  ·  Kosovo  ·  Kurds & Kurdistan  ·  Kuwait & Kuwaitis  ·  Kyrgyzstan  

★ Kennedy, John F (II)

There had been a poll done a couple of weeks before the assassination, and almost two-thirds of the American people had no opinion of Lyndon Johnson.  Most Americans might not have known Lyndon Johnson if he was standing behind them in the grocery line.  K C Johnson  

 

 

Almost gleefully rushing in to take the reins of the presidency.  K C Johnson

 

 

Most Americans in poll that were taken immediately after Kennedy’s assassination reported a very emotional visceral response ... Some people felt some responsibility themselves.  Michael S Foley, author The Sixties

 

 

Why is the nightmare still so fresh? ... People who refuse to believe that a crime of this magnitude could have such a simple, pathetic conclusion.  BBC investigation 1966 

 

 

It’s conceivable that there was a conspiracy ... I’m sceptical about the conspiracy but I don’t know.  Arthur Schlesinger

 

 

President Kennedy had always been a servant of the elite but he was so shocked by the Northwoods document that he signed Executive Order 11110 shortly before his death announcing that he would abolish the Federal Reserve system.  He also began to pull us out of Vietnam, and signed an order to abolish the CIA.  It was at that point that he was assassinated.  You see, he had decided to be a leader of the people, to defend their interests, and the New World Order couldn’t allow that to happen.  Alex Jones, 9/11: The Road to Tyranny

 

 

He [Kennedy] had signed the executive order; he was pulling the troops out of Vietnam; he said he was going to abolish the CIA; he’d learnt they were going to stage terror attacks like 9/11.  Alex Jones, interview with Jim Marrs & Robert Groden

 

 

On balance I think you’ll find that John F Kennedy was trying to make changes that were in the best interests of the public ... in direct contradiction to what the globalists wanted.  Jim Marrs, interview Alex Jones

 

 

Well over 200 people ... The groupings of these deaths: in the late 60s prior to the Garrison investigation there was a clump of people who died in Dallas mostly connected to Jack Ruby and the Dallas underworld.  At the time of the Garrison investigation another group died and these were all close witnesses and people who could have come forward.  And then by 1977 when the House Select Committee on assassinations was convening and were calling senior FBI officials and Mafia chieftains and they all died before they could testify.  Jim Marrs, author Crossfire  

 

 

I see that the Kennedy assassination is showing us the template for what’s going to happen with 9/11 ... It’s not socially acceptable to speak out publicly about 9/11 in polite company, but they’ll wait twenty years and then all the information will come out, and in 40 years we’ll all know that 9/11 was an inside job perpetrated by people within the Bush administration.  It’ll be accepted, but it still won’t be officially acknowledged by leaders, nor will it be in the history books.  Jim Marrs, JFK: Killed by International Bankers, with Alex Jones & Robert Groden   

 

There was things he [Kennedy] could have done and was doing.  He had his Treasury Secretary – they were beginning to alter federal regulations and rules allowing power to be drawn back from the Federal Reserve system – and back into the private banking system ... He really thought he was president of the United States.  Leader of the free world.  And he thought that he could make decisions in the best interests of the public, namely, issue money that was interest free ... The only other US president to issue interest-free money was Abraham Lincoln ... Both of those men were shot in the head in broad daylight.  ibid.

 

 

The President was ending the Vietnam war, which was big business and a lot of money to very very powerful people including Lyndon Johnson.  Johnson was a major stockholder in, I believe, at least seven companies that had Vietnam war contracts.  He made billions off the war himself.  It’s not the only reason why the President was killed, but it was certainly one of the major reasons ... He and his brother Bobby, the Attorney General, were fighting the only effective war in this nation’s history against organised crime.  Robert Groden, interview with Alex Jones & Jim Marrs   

 

 

The Committee believes, on the basis of the evidence available to it, that President John F Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy.  The committee is unable to identify the other gunman or the extent of the conspiracy.  Final Report, House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) 1979

 

 

Justifiably feeling threatened, the established bloodlines of power in America removed the Kennedy threat.  Official police records show that the Kennedy assassination was closely proceeded by and followed by as many as one hundred assassinations all of which were closely connected to the Kennedy family’s rise to power.  Jordan Maxwell, Matrix of Power

 

 

‘There has been an attempt on the life of president Kennedy.’  The Sixties: The Assassination of President Kennedy, news, 2014,

 

‘We have a right to know who killed our president and why he died.’  ibid.  dude on TV

 

‘My father had been invited to have lunch with Kennedy at the Trade Centre.  There was a mood, a climate of excitement.’  ibid.  Lawrence Wright

 

‘Well I am presently in the basement of the Dallas Municipal Building and it is like an armed camp.  Police officials are frankly worried.   They don't want anything to happen to Oswald.’  ibid.  news reporter

 

‘He’s been shot.  He’s been shot.  Lee Oswald has been shot ... At point-blank range fired into his stomach.’   ibid.  

 

Monday November 25 1963: Washington DC: The whole world is poorer because of his loss.  ibid.  funeral speech

 

‘I don’t believe has said that [bullet from the front].  Quite contrary – it does indicate the bullet was coming from behind.  It was a minor explosion.’  ibid.  Charles Wyckoff, expert photo analyst

 

‘I believe that Jack Ruby was a paid killer to close the mouth of my son, Lee Harvey Oswald.’  ibid.  Marguerite Oswald, mother of Lee Harvey Oswald, TV interview

 

‘He [Ruby] was known for a quick temper.  And later as it turned out he was hooked on two kinds of speed ... Jack Ruby was a police and media groupie.’  ibid.  Bob Huffaker, When the News Went Live

 

‘There was a plot.  And there were a number of individuals involved ...  Our office is in its fifth year and has never lost a murder case.’  ibid.  Jim Garrison

 

‘The sheer incongruity of the affair: all that power and majesty wiped out in an instant by one skinny weak-chinned little character.’  ibid.  Eric Sevareid, CBS News

 

 

On 22nd November 1963 US president John F Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas Texas.  JFK’s Secret Killer: The Evidence, Channel 5 2014

 

‘I can’t except that he could get three away in that amount of time at all.’  ibid.  Colin McLaren cold case rozzer

 

You did not get one shot going straight through and one shot that explodes from the same gun and the same ammunition.  ibid.

 

Why were three shell cases found at his [Oswalds] sniper perch?  ibid.

 

It goes over the left rear seat of the secret service agent’s follow-up car ... Could the fatal shot have been fired by an agent?  ibid.

 

The testimonies from witnesses who smelt gunpowder at street level are strong evidence of a second shooter.  ibid.

 

The second shooter has been hidden in plain sight all along.  But who is the agent?  And why would he shoot the president?  ibid.

 

The Commission did not interview key eye witnesses.  ibid.

 

Eleven people are able to put the assault rifle in George Hickey’s hands.  ibid.

 

The result of a tragic accident.  George Hickey never takes the stand ... He dies in 2005.  ibid.

 

 

‘Without any doubt he [Oswald] is the killer.’  Mark Lane, Rush to Judgment, 1967, District Attorney’s early press conference  

 

The [paraffin] test, however, showed no gunpowder.  ibid.

 

Oswald was not the only missing employee … ‘The police never mentioned Oswald’s name in their broadcast descriptions before Oswald’s arrest.’  ibid.  citing Warren commission

 

‘Oswald was a very poor shot.’  ibid.  Sgt Delgado

 

Nine wounds: four to president Kennedy, five to governor [John] Connally … did two bullets do all the damage?  ibid.  

 

More grains of metal were found in one of the governor’s wounds than were missing from this bullet.  ibid.  

 

‘I know where that third shot came from: behind the picket fence.  There’s no doubt in my mind.’  ibid.  railtrack supervisor

 

‘There was a puff of smoke that came under the tress on the embankment.’  ibid.  James Simmonds, witness on overpass

 

‘There was a very visible mark on the kerb where the bullet had struck.’  ibid.  James Tague

 

1‘I thought it came from the fence.’  ibid.  Orville Nix

 

‘The book depository  I can hardly believe that.’  ibid.  J C Price

 

‘From behind the fence.’  ibid.  Sam Holland 

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