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Everything posted by Douglas Caddy
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John M. Newman - KGB v CIA SPY WARS Part IV
Douglas Caddy posted a topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Dr. John M. Newman - KGB v CIA SPY WARS Part IV Postscript and Questions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYysA6L4jLU&feature=player_embedded -
https://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2014/dec/18/ticker-copley-cuba/
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David Talbot on Robert F. Kennedy's war on crime
Douglas Caddy replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
The film was posted on Facebook today by Tom Graves. -
David Talbot on Robert F. Kennedy's war on crime
Douglas Caddy replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Active Measures -
Annual JFK Luncheon: Continuing the Discussion
Douglas Caddy replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Chris Gallop writes: Madeline Duncan Browns son, Jimmy Brown will be speaking at my luncheon. He has never spoken in public about his mom, and is likely not to do so again. Get your tickets today. 65.00 for the entire program, no extra charges, no add on’s. Please use cjgallop@yahoo.com to purchase tickets through Pay Pal. You DONOT want to miss this opportunity. -
David Talbot on Robert F. Kennedy's war on crime
Douglas Caddy replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Mark: Don Fulsom wrote several books critical of Nixon: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Delectronics&field-keywords=Don+Fulsom -
Surprised there is no discussion on this
Douglas Caddy replied to James DiEugenio's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Rubio calls Jones a "clown." https://observer.com/2018/09/marco-rubio-calls-alex-jones-a-clown-dont-touch-me-again/ -
NOV 19, 2018 Annual JFK Luncheon: Continuing the Discussion Public · Hosted by Dirty Job Brewing Chris Gallop invites you Monday, November 19 at 11 AM – 5 PM Dirty Job Brewing 117 N Main Street, Mansfield, Texas 76063 Tickets are 65.00 each, includes a catered lunch, speaker program, and 1 ticket for the raffle drawing. Please purchase tickets via Pay Pal using Friends and Family at cjgallop@yahoo.com
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Surprised there is no discussion on this
Douglas Caddy replied to James DiEugenio's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/alex-jones-sandy-hook-parents-defamation-case_us_5b61c14fe4b0de86f49ceb02 -
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Shoulder-History-James-Curtis-Jenkins/dp/1634242114/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1534799047&sr=1-1-fkmr1&keywords=Standing+at+the+cold+shoulder+of+History At the Cold Shoulder of History gives an in-depth look at what happened in the aftermath of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. One of the only living participants in President Kennedy's autopsy now comes forward after almost 54 years of silence and speaks about what truly took place inside of the morgue at Bethesda Naval Hospital on the night of November 22, 1963. Jenkins gives a detailed account about the procedures performed on the President's remains. What he learned that night led him to believe there was a conspiracy in the murder of the 35th President of the United States and caused him to undertake his own personal journey into the labyrinth of the assassination.
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H. L. Hunt – Motive & Opportunity -Book Review
Douglas Caddy replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
From page 13 of my autobiography, Being There: Eyewitness to History, published in May 2018: In my senior year at Georgetown I worked with Forrest Davis on a book opposing the admission of Communist China into the United Nations. Davis was a prominent author and longtime writer for The Saturday Evening Post. The Texas oil magnate H.L. Hunt at one time visited Davis and Davis asked if I wanted to be interviewed by Hunt for a position in his Facts Forum organization. However, in doing so Davis described H. L. Hunt to me as “having the mind of a brute” and a result I turned down Hunt’s offer of employment after we had the interview. In retrospect I am glad I did so for many reasons. Upon graduating from Georgetown in 1960, I went to work for Marvin Liebman Associates in New York City in charge of the McGraw-Edison Company account. Marvin had arranged funding for the book on which Forrest Davis and I worked. One of Marvin’s key clients was former New Jersey Democratic Governor Charles Edison, the chairman of McGraw-Edison Company, who lived in the Towers of the Waldorf Astoria. His neighbors in the Towers were Herbert Hoover and General Douglas MacArthur with whom he occasionally played bridge. Governor Edison, who had served in the Roosevelt Administration as Secretary of the Navy, was the son of Thomas Edison and looked exactly like his father. His political philosophy was that the American eagle should have two strong wings, a right wing and a left wing, if it is to fly and soar. He believed the country’s right wing at the time was too weak and needed strengthening.