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My New Book, A Heritage of Nonsense: Jim Garrison's Tales of Mystery and Imagination


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I too appreciate vigorous argument

on this usually scholarly site and am not just interested

in hearing from people I agree with but also in

listening to serious researchers who

may make reports I hadn't known about

or disagree with. These reports ought

to be based in demonstrable fact. I take them more seriously when they are.

 

Vague charges about members being influenced

by Russian or Iranian propaganda (or

Scientology or any other religion

or ideology) smacks of McCarthyite tactics.

And a broad-brush charge of "anti-Americanism"

is pointless and offensive; this is (still) a

(relatively) free country, and anyone has a right

to criticize American history, policies, or values.

It would be better to stick to disputing arguments you don't

agree with and factually debunking what you see as

false claims than to making such charges.

 

Let's hear facts brought forth to support

criticisms of other members' posts, rather than

simply one-liners saying, "That's not true," which

I know you don't indulge in yourself, Pat, though

some other posters make a habit of it and so

are not worth taking seriously. You generally

argue your points by adducing research, Pat,

so your posts are always worth reading, even

if one disagrees with them.

Edited by Joseph McBride
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57 minutes ago, Joseph McBride said:

I too appreciate vigorous argument

on this usually scholarly site and am not just interested

in hearing from people I agree with but also in

listening to serious researchers who

may make reports I hadn't known about

or disagree with. These reports ought

to be based in demonstrable fact. I take them more seriously when they are.

 

Vague charges about members being influenced

by Russian or Iranian propaganda (or

Scientology or any other religion

or ideology) smacks of McCarthyite tactics.

And a broad-brush charge of "anti-Americanism"

is pointless and offensive; this is (still) a

(relatively) free country, and anyone has a right

to criticize American history, policies, or values.

It would be better to stick to disputing arguments you don't

agree with and factually debunking what you see as

false claims than to making such charges.

 

Let's hear facts brought forth to support

criticisms of other members' posts, rather than

simply one-liners saying, "That's not true," which

I know you don't indulge in yourself, Pat, though

some other posters make a habit of it and so

are not worth taking seriously. You generally

argue your points by adducing research, Pat,

so your posts are always worth reading, even

if one disagrees with them.

 

 

I'm curious, do you still believe J.D. Tippit was shooting at the President from behind the fence atop the knoll using his service revolver?

This may sound like I'm trolling you but I assure you that I am not.  I'm curious as to your answer.

 

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2 hours ago, Joseph McBride said:

I too appreciate vigorous argument

on this usually scholarly site and am not just interested

in hearing from people I agree with but also in

listening to serious researchers who

may make reports I hadn't known about

or disagree with. These reports ought

to be based in demonstrable fact. I take them more seriously when they are.

 

Vague charges about members being influenced

by Russian or Iranian propaganda (or

Scientology or any other religion

or ideology) smacks of McCarthyite tactics.

And a broad-brush charge of "anti-Americanism"

is pointless and offensive; this is (still) a

(relatively) free country, and anyone has a right

to criticize American history, policies, or values.

It would be better to stick to disputing arguments you don't

agree with and factually debunking what you see as

false claims than to making such charges.

 

Let's hear facts brought forth to support

criticisms of other members' posts, rather than

simply one-liners saying, "That's not true," which

I know you don't indulge in yourself, Pat, though

some other posters make a habit of it and so

are not worth taking seriously. You generally

argue your points by adducing research, Pat,

so your posts are always worth reading, even

if one disagrees with them.

Thanks, Joe. I was not charging anyone here of spreading Russian or Iranian or scientology propaganda. I mentioned Russia because I was approached by a Russian media company that assured me some publicity if I gave them some comments that reflected negatively on the CIA, or America, or some such thing. (I know others took them up on it.) And I mentioned Iran because a former member was featured at a conference in Iran, in which he denounced the American government. And I mentioned scientology because we had a prominent member who sought to re-invent the wheel and convince everyone the JFK assassination and Watergate were connected by a long-hidden conspiracy in which the U.S. government sought to suppress remote viewing techniques invented by L. Ron Hubbard (or something like that) whom I exposed as a scientologist using a fake name in an effort to sell some of his spy novels (or something like that). 

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On 10/7/2024 at 2:56 AM, Joe Bauer said:

I think most here accept that Fruge did indeed call up the hospital in Jackson and told them to "not" turn Rose Cheramie loose right after JFK was killed.

And that he did suspend his regular duties to drive there to see and talk to her one-on-one just days later.

To me, this proves something important.

That Fruge did hear something so remarkably intriguing ( ominously so? ) from Cheramie during his personal time with her on November 20th, that he felt compelled to seeing her in person again asap when JFK was gunned down on the 22nd.

And to "tell" the hospital not to release Rose is a pretty aggressive and out-of-the ordinary action on Fruge's part as well.

What motivated Fruge to take this extra duty action?

What other part of Rose Cheramie's story tidbits she shared with Fruge while they were together days before 11,22,1963 could be so important for Fruge to want to know more and right away?

It's definitely more reasonable than not, to consider Rose told Fruge something so shocking ( way more so than her mistreatment by her two "Italian" escorts ) to motivate him to do what he did regards his call to the hospital and rushing back to see her in person there.

Even Rose's revelation of a drug deal going down in Galveston in the following days wouldn't be that motivating to inspire Fruge's call to the hospital to hold her until he could talk to her personally imo.

If it was, wouldn't have Fruge reacted to Rose's drug deal story ( informing his superiors ) much sooner than 4 or 5 days later?

Fruge didn't call and go back to the hospital where Rose was being treated because of the Galveston drug deal. He had no plans to do so "until" JFK was shot and killed in Dallas.

And isn't it also a proven fact that Fruge and his superior officer did contact the Dallas PD about Cheramie and her pre- and post JFKA claims?

Does anyone here think Fruge would have bothered Fritz ( and Curry? ) with a Galveston drug deal plot ( alone ) knowing that Curry and Fritz were frantically immersed in the biggest American crime event of the century right in their own city?

The Dallas PD couldn't have given two hoots about a drug deal "possibly" going down in Galveston 300 miles away especially right at that chaotic time.

Fruge and his boss contacted Fritz because of what Rose Cheramie shared about the JFKA and probably Jack Ruby as well.

Can anyone here offer some other strong reasons besides JFK's murder on the 22nd, to explain Fruge's aggressive Rose Cheramie and Dallas PD contacting actions right after that event?

 

 

 

I know my Fruge/Cheramie story input here isn't deep research born and weighty, yet I still feel the questions and facts I pose here are valid enough to deserve some feedback from those here who totally discount the idea that Rose C. did indeed share with others that JFK was going to be hit in Dallas on the day he was...before he was.

IMO...Fruge's beyond regular duty actions of calling the hospital so soon after JFK was killed and telling them not to release Rose, then driving to see her in person again, then convincing his boss to contact the Dallas PD ( Will Fritz) to tell them what they knew about Cheramie's revelation story strongly proves that this was all motivated by something much more important than Cheramie sharing about her sad past and a heads up about a possible drug deal going down in Galveston the following week.

Which of course would have been met with irritated dismissal by a Dallas PD frantically immersed in the most important criminal case in their history let alone the entire US history.

Fruge and his boss would have known this. The only thing that makes sense here is that they felt what they had to share with Fritz and the Dallas PD was in some way connected to the JFKA ... and was important enough to share with them.

And the only thing that could have been that important was a pre-knowledge of the JFKA told to them and others by Cheramie.

The Dallas PD/Will Fritz contact effort by Fruge and his superior officer just days after 11,22,1963, if true, is a keystone event in validating the Cheramie story regards her sharing with others the JFKA before it happened.

 

 

 

Edited by Joe Bauer
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On 10/1/2024 at 4:45 PM, Fred Litwin said:

The CIA and the FBI did not infiltrate and sabotage Garrison's investigation. He did that himself.

You really should read some non-conspiracy books.

The plain fact of the matter is that Garrison came up with absolutely nothing. 

And Garrison wasn't sabotaged by false lead tips! He was the one who continually believed every wacky theory to come his way. From the sewer shot, the ridiculous notion of code linking Oswald with Shaw, the indictment of Edgar Eugene Bradley for conspiring to kill JFK, using sodium pentothal and hypnosis to implant false memories, believing the silly Slidin' Clyde Johnson, thinking that Kerry Thornley was the second Oswald.

I could go on an don. There is nothing that Garrison wouldn't believe.

fred

Fred, are you aware that three--not one or two, but three--HSCA staffers said they saw a CIA document that showed the CIA planted moles in Garrison's office? Lopez, Delsa, and Tanenbaum said they saw this document. Do they think they were all just lying?

I see no credible, believable innocent explanation for the fact that Wendell Roache confirmed Orest Pena’s account about seeing Oswald in the New Orleans INS office when Roache was interviewed by the Church Committee. Roache said that he had “frequently” seen Oswald in the INS office and that Oswald even had an office there. Roache stated in another Church Committee interview that during INS surveillance, Oswald was seen going into the offices of David Ferrie’s anti-Castro group in New Orleans, and that “Oswald was known to be one of the men in the group.”

Similarly, I see no credible, believable innocent explanation for the evidence that puts Oswald, Ferrie, and Shaw in Clinton, Louisiana, in 1963. Even the super-cautious HSCA found the six Clinton witnesses credible and significant. Those witnesses included a state representative, a deputy sheriff, and a county registrar. The HSCA “Summary Memorandum” said there was “clear indication” that Oswald was with Ferrie and Shaw in Clinton during that period. This is by far the most reasonable, logical conclusion.

If the HSCA was quite cautious, historian David Kaiser is uber cautious. Yet, even Kaiser says that “from all the available evidence it is clear that Oswald knew Ferrie, and Ferrie in turn was closely linked to both Marcello and the New Orleans anti-Castro Cuban community” (The Road to Dallas, p. 203). Kaiser also concludes that Oswald associated with Guy Banister (pp. 204-205). And, as you probably know, one of Banister’s former informants, Daniel Campbell, told Anthony Summers that he once saw Oswald using the phone in Banister’s office (Not in Your Lifetime, p. 275).

And then there's the fact that not one of the three Master-rated riflemen in the WC's rifle test managed to duplicate Oswald's alleged shooting feat. As I document in detail in A Comforting Lie, they did not even come close.

 

Edited by Michael Griffith
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