Benjamin Cole Posted July 12 Share Posted July 12 I guess I have heard this one before, that JFK was not dead after Nov. 22, but confined in a home, or that the event was staged. Below is GOP North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, the man in the right in the photo, who is "seriously skeptical" the JFKA ever happened. It says something about the decline in candidate quality in the US, that Mark Robinson is what a major party is putting up. And North Carolina is no backwoods state---there are nearly 11 million people living there. This is the news environment in which the JFK research community operates. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
George Govus Posted July 12 Share Posted July 12 Saddest thing, Benjamin, polls say the governor’s race here is really tight. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
W. Niederhut Posted July 12 Share Posted July 12 (edited) 18 hours ago, George Govus said: Saddest thing, Benjamin, polls say the governor’s race here is really tight. Mark Robinson is a special kind of MAGA nut, but it's also troubling to see Ben's blurb by "BlueDogsWin" lumping the 9/11 science data in the same "kooky conspiracy theory" basket with Moon Landing denial, or the notion that JFK wasn't assassinated. It wasn't that long ago in our history when U.S. government Warren Commission Report salesmen were routinely lumping JFKA conspiracy theorists in the same "kooky" basket with Moon Landing deniers, QAnon, and all "conspiracy theorists." People were even routinely publishing pseudo-scientific articles about the characteristics of "conspiracy theorists"-- as if all conspiracy theories were equally "kooky" (i.e., paranoid and irrational.) They aren't, as we all know. Some conspiracy theories are evidence-based explanations of institutional black ops, and others are simply kooky. Unfortunately, some kooky people, like Mark Robinson, occasionally believe accurate conspiracy theories about black ops. But theories are not invalidated by the fact that some "kooky" people believe them. Their validity is a function of the facts and the logical analysis of those facts. Edited July 13 by W. Niederhut Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Benjamin Cole Posted July 13 Author Share Posted July 13 7 hours ago, George Govus said: Saddest thing, Benjamin, polls say the governor’s race here is really tight. GC- Thanks for your collegial comment. I hope better things for you, and all North Carolinians. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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