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JFK's secret trip to Naples in late '63.


Cory Santos

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Well, thanks.  I missed the one reference in the article to Florida and assumed the were talking about Italy.  As I'd never heard of Naples Florida, and I like geography.  Had to google it.

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Thanks Rob.

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Yes, and Goodwin had to make a settlement with the author of the Kathleen Kennedy biography, Lynne McTaggart. Goodwin's excuse

for the plagiarism was beyond feeble -- shameful. Read this piece by Philip Nobile on Goodwin also plagiarizing from

David McCullough's TRUMAN and on McCullough's own egregious falsehood about the A-bomb: http://mobylives.com/Nobile_Pulitzer_speech.html McCullough was also

caught rewriting a quote from Thomas Jefferson about John Adams to embellish Adams's reputation

for his biography of the second president. As you probably know, McCullough

is a Bonesman, and it's no accident he was the "historian" chosen by Dallas to give its keynote speech

in Dealey Plaza during the 2013 whitewashing ceremony held behind police lines.

Edited by Joseph McBride
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On 12/4/2019 at 11:27 PM, Ron Bulman said:

Well, thanks.  I missed the one reference in the article to Florida and assumed the were talking about Italy.  As I'd never heard of Naples Florida, and I like geography.  Had to google it.

I'm here in Naples now. Second week of December and we are hunkered down in 82 degrees and a little breeze. Best spot on the map if you ask me...

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What McCullough did with the atomic estimates on Hiroshima was just a disgrace.

Recall, JIm Douglass opens his book with a comparison of Truman with JFK.

And how this guy is then asked to speak at the JFK fiftieth in Dallas, I mean, go figure.

 

Jeff, Naples is extraordinary.  One of the best kept secrets in America.  The east coast answer to Santa Barbara.

Edited by James DiEugenio
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A great book is Gar Alperovitz's THE DECISION TO USE THE ATOMIC

BOMB (1995). It goes into fine detail, thoroughly researched, to debunk

the myth about the huge number of deaths expected in a US ground

invasion of Japan, a figure that was used to justify the dropping

of the bomb on Hiroshima (no one has ever come up with anything close

to a plausible explanation for dropping the bomb on Nagasaki beyond

crass bureaucratic/war crimes inertia). After the war, Secretary of War Henry Stimson and his young

amaneunsis McGeorge Bundy in Stimon's memoirs pushed the inflated expected death/casualty figures for a land invasion. The news

media followed suit, and some still do out

of ignorance or reliance on war propaganda long after the fact. The New

York Times long ago ran a scoop about a document that was unearthed

quoting General George C. Marshall with a far lower expected casualty

figure for a land invasion of Japan, but that story is still largely ignored. The lies about the bomb

are one of the key myths about postwar American life.

Edited by Joseph McBride
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