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here.
Jim DiEugenio's Upcoming appearances and radio Interviews:
Esowon Books
4327 Degnan Blvd.
Los Angeles CA 90008
Ph: 323-290-1048
July 30th at 7 PM
This appearance will be taped by the local
Radio Pacifica outlet KPFK.
October 16-19th Passing the
Torch Conference, at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh
November 21-24,
November in
Dallas, at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas
“BILLBOARD”
New Articles/Reviews
Review of
Destiny Betrayed, 2nd edition
by Albert Rossi
The Bonds of Secrecy, by Saint John Hunt
Reviewed by Seamus Coogan
Ron
Rosenbaum Fires the First Salvo
by Jim DiEugenio
Fifty
Reasons for Fifty Years
From our friends at Black Op Radio
The mystery of CE163
by Gokay Hasan Yusuf
Citizen Wilcke Dissents
Brigitte Wilcke
protests conspiracy program on the
public airwaves
JFK: The French Connection,
by Peter Kross
Review by Seamus Coogan
Notes on Lunch with Arlen Specter on January 4, 2012
By Vincent Salandria
Part 1: Review of Peter Janney’s "Mary’s Mosaic"
By Lisa Pease
Part 2: Entering Peter Janney’s World of Fantasy
By James DiEugenio
The Awful Grace of God, Religious Terrorism, White Supremacy
and the Unsolved Murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.
by Martin Hay
MRS. KENNEDY & ME: A Very Good Book With A Few Pages of
Trouble
by Vince Palamara
Jim DiEugenio analyzes and summarizes
Larry Hancock's interesting and unique new book
Nexus: The CIA and Political Assassination
Jim DiEugenio reviews the
work of Chris Matthews on the life and death of
President Kennedy, including his latest biography, "Jack
Kennedy: Elusive hero".
Reviews of John McAdams' book JFK
Assassination Logic by:
— Pat Speer
—
David Mantik
—
Frank Cassano
—
Gary Aguilar
BETRAYAL IN DALLAS: LBJ, the Pearl Street Mafia, and the
Murder of President Kennedy
Reviewed by William Davy
The Second Dallas,
a DVD Robert Kennedy documentary produced, written and
directed by Massimo Mazzucco. Reviewed by Jim DiEugenio
The Connally Bullet Powerful evidence that Connally
was hit by a bullet from a different assassin, by Robert
Harris
Journalists and JFK,
those who were in and around Dealey Plaza that day and those
who made a career of the case afterwards.
Intro By Gary King.
Joseph Green on the late
Manning Marable's new full scale biography of Malcolm X.
JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax
by Seamus Coogan
- and -
LBJ and the Conspiracy to Kill Kennedy: A Coalescence of
InterestsSeamus Coogan on Joseph Farrell's new book
Hear No Evil: Social Constructivism and the Forensic
Evidence in the Kennedy Assassination
by Donald Byron Thomas
A Comprehensive Review by David Mantik of
The Real
Wikipedia? by JP Mroz and Jim DiEugenio (3 part series)
Sirhan and the RFK
Assassination
Part I: The Grand Illusion
Part II: Rubik's Cube by Lisa Pease
Who is
Anton Batey?
CTKA takes a close look at a most curious radio host who is
a JFK denier, Chomskyite, and yet happens to be in league
with John McAdams and David Von Pein. Yep, its all true.
Part 1
Part 2
Inside the ARRB
Reviews of Douglas Horne's multi-volume study of the
declassified medical evidence in the JFK case. Reviewed by
Jim DiEugenio, David Mantik and Gary Aguilar.
Exclusive excerpts from Mitchell
Warriner's long awaited new book on
the Jim Garrison investigation
|
PART ONE
This makes john McAdams "DANGEROUS" ! ! !
John McAdams and the Siege of Chicago
By Jim DiEugenio with Brian Hunt
"McAdams did indeed make comments that were intended to imply that
Gary Aguilar was a drug addict. IMO, they were deliberate, malicious and
intended to smear the doctor."
Robert Harris on John McAdams
Several months ago I received a phone call from a couple of people
who lived in the Chicago area. They were associated with a play that was
going to be staged at a venue called the Glen Ellyn Village Theater.
Glen Ellyn is a suburb of nearly 30,000 people which lies about 25 miles
west of the Windy City. The play was called Oswald: The Actual
Interrogation.
Dennis Richard is the playwright. And he personally appeared and did
a little talk on opening night. This was the Midwest premiere of his
play, which had already been produced in Los Angles and New York. The
director was William Burghardt, who was one of the men who was in
contact with me. Bill was interested in the play since he was interested
in the topic. As he told the Glen Ellyn Daily Herald, the subject
of Kennedy's assassination had fascinated him since he was in seventh
grade. He therefore read scores of books on the subject. He came to the
conclusion that he "thought this couldn't have happened the way the
official inquiry decided." So Burghardt decided to contact Richard to
produce the play for the 50th anniversary of the Village Theater Guild.
Burghardt's production ran for three weeks late last summer. It was a
successful run. So successful that Burghardt says the play will be
produced this November in Forth Worth. Why did Burghardt and his friend,
assassination researcher Phil Singer, want me there? Because, during the
last week of the production, they decided to invite John McAdams to
discus the play with the audience after a performance. Burghardt ran a
notice about the play on McAdams' web site. McAdams replied that he
might come to see it. Burghardt invited him to come, and told him he
would even buy him dinner. Which he did. McAdams lives in Milwaukee,
about 90 minutes directly north of Glen Ellyn. To present a counterpoint
to McAdams, Burghardt wanted me to be there. Although I was interested,
I had to beg off because of the cost of the flight and the expense of
renting a room. Therefore, Burghardt had an associate of Bob Groden's,
Mr. Singer, appear opposite McAdams. Singer had seen an earlier
performance of the play and talked to Burghardt afterwards.
Phil and Bill taped the discussion with the audience on the night
McAdams was there. They then sent me a DVD of the discussion. As I
watched it, I regretted not being able to attend. Because McAdams was in
his rabid mode. And since neither Bill nor Phil understood his battery
of rhetorical and verbal techniques, they weren't really ready to
counter him. In fact, it was such a stereotypical performance by the
infamous Marquette professor that I decided to use it as a launch pad
for a review of McAdams' JFK career. But to establish who McAdams is,
let us describe some of the things he did and said during this roughly
forty-minute discussion with the audience.
First of all, whenever McAdams appears in public in any kind of give
and take about the facts of the Kennedy assassination, the backers
should set certain ground rules to protect the public. Because he
utilizes certain techniques almost immediately. Two simple rules would
be: 1.) McAdams should not be allowed to use the word "buff" in any
aspect 2.) McAdams should not be able to use the term "factoid" in any
instance. These would limit him to such an extent he would probably not
even show up. Let me explain why.
Like Ron Rosenbaum, McAdams uses the term "buff' to automatically
demean the work of any person who studies the JFK case from a critical
angle. By using that term, instead of the word "critic", he reduces the
works of scholars like the late Phil Melanson and Dr. John Newman to the
level of street corner chatter. When, in fact, their work is much more
valuable to the pursuit of facts and truth than the exposed hackery of
Warren Commission counsels like David Belin and/or Arlen Specter.
Concerning the use of the second propagandistic term, McAdams
borrowed the term "factoid" from a panel discussion in Washington D. C.
after the film JFK came out. The late Fletcher Prouty was on that panel.
When Prouty tried to bring in matters that did not directly tie into the
Commission's case against Oswald, the moderator said that these were
"factoids". Therefore, under this rubric, things like Kennedy's intent
to withdraw from Vietnam, his issuance of NSAM's 55, 56 and 57 to limit
the role of the CIA, and his editing of the McNamara-Taylor report in
the fall of 1963 would be "factoids", even though they are all facts.
Well, McAdams borrowed this deceptive term and he now applies it to
everything that counters the case of the Warren Commission. For
instance, in his debate with this author--a matter we will return to
later--he labeled many of the evidentiary problems with the SIngle
Bullet Theory as "factoids". This would include the finding of the Magic
Bullet on the wrong stretcher; the alleged exit wound for the Magic
Bullet being smaller than the entrance wound; the fact that Kennedy's
cervical vertebrae are not cracked or broken, yet they would have to be
if the Warren Commission trajectory for the Magic Bullet is correct; the
fact that the probes inserted into Kennedy's body that night at Bethesda
did not match the proper trajectory either: the back wound was much too
low to connect with the front wound, and almost every witness said the
malleable probe could not find an exit; and the fact that Secret Service
agent Elmer More was sent to Dallas to talk Malcolm Perry out of his
story about the throat wound being an entrance wound. These are termed
"factoids" by the professor, even thought they are all facts. He does
this for the simple reason that he doesn't like them because they are
facts. And they torpedo the Commission's case.
If I had been in Chicago, I would have laid those ground rules in
advance. Especially in light of the fact that, as we shall see, McAdams
does this himself on occasion. That is, he tries to place ground rules
about the uses of words and terms toward him. Again, this is a matter we
shall return to later.
A third request I would have made was there not be any use of the
term "conspiracy theorist." For the simple matter that the Warren
Commission is one giant theory to begin with. And it is a theory based
upon Swiss cheese. That is it relies upon witnesses and evidence that
simply do not merit any credence. For example, witnesses like Marina
Oswald, Helen Markham, and Howard Brennan are people that even the
Commission counsels did not want to use. Exhibits like CE 399, the paper
sack allegedly used by Oswald to carry something to work that morning,
and CE 543, the dented shell found on the Sixth Floor, these are all of
dubious provenance and would have been ripped to shreds by a competent
defense attorney.
But unfortunately, I was not there. And therefore these rules were
not laid out. Let us see what the uncontrollable professor from
Marquette did in my absence.
Since Richard's play is about the interrogation sessions of Oswald by
the Dallas Police, naturally a question came up about the lack of a
stenographic or forensic record by the police in this, the most
important case in their history. On cue, McAdams tried to say that the
lack of any such record is a myth made up by what he called the "buffs".
McAdams said there were notes and they were in the Warren Commission
volumes. With that statement, McAdams was in full propagandistic mode.
He was actually trying to conflate the memorandums penned by the
interrogators with a legal stenographic record made by a professional
recording secretary. They are not remotely the same. As was mentioned
during the discussion, the estimated time of all the sessions was about
10-12 hours. The longest report the Commission contains is by Captain
Will Fritz. His report is about 12 pages. (See Warren Report, p. 599ff)
Did Fritz let Oswald watch television most of the time? If he didn't
then this cannot possibly come close to constituting a complete report
of what was said. Further, two sets of handwritten notes were found by
the ARRB in the nineties. Something the professor failed to mention. Why
did it take 30 years for them to show up? This is how distorted McAdams'
analysis becomes in order to try and obfuscate significant points made
by the "buffs". There was simply no stenographic record made of Oswald's
interrogations. Period.
Many legal analysts have noted that Kennedy's murder took place
before either the Escobedo or Miranda decisions were handed down by the
Supreme Court. This meant that in 1963, the police did not have to
furnish Oswald with a lawyer during questioning; nor did they have to
advise him that he could remain silent, and if he chose not to have
counsel, everything he said could later be used against him in court.
Miranda also dictated that if a suspect wished to stop answering
questions, he could say so and the police had to stop questioning him.
As no less than Vincent Bugliosi admits, Oswald did say he wanted to
stop answering. But since there was no Miranda decision in place, the
police overrode his request and kept on questioning him anyway. (Bugliosi,
Reclaiming History, p. 161)
In light of all these factors that favored the police, why would
Fritz choose not to record these sessions with the most important
suspect he ever had? After all, Oswald was literally defenseless in
front of him. Well, according to the late Mary Ferrell, Fritz did
record the sessions. He recorded them with a hidden tape recorder.
But once Oswald was killed, Fritz stored the tapes in a safe deposit box
at a bank. (Author's 2008 interview with the late Jack White) As most
commentators know, Fritz then largely clammed up about this case for the
rest of his life. And no one knows what he did with the tapes.
Someone brought up the use of the paraffin tests to exonerate Oswald.
McAdams instantly tried to say that even at the time, that test was not
at all probative. The questioner denied that and said he could cite a
case showing McAdams was wrong. This would seem to corroborate an
interview I did with a forensic expert back in the nineties. He said
that paraffin test was used by every major police department in the
country in 1963, and was also allowed in court. (Destiny Betrayed,
First Edition, p. 362) Incredibly, McAdams tried to use, of all people,
Dr. Vincent DiMaio as an authority on this test. DiMaio is a pathologist
whose field of expertise is the nature and configuration of gunshot
wounds. In fact, his most famous book is titled just that, Gunshot
Wounds. And no less than Milicent Cranor has used that book to
advance evidence against the Warren Commission about the nature
of Kennedy's wounds.
But further, as no less than Robert Groden has discovered, DiMaio is
wildly biased when it gets to the JFK case. In the early nineties, the
Turner Network was going to do a documentary on the Kennedy case. This
author was one of the editorial consultants on the show before
production began. Groden was going to be the technical consultant in
Dealey Plaza where the producer-director was going to line up a laser
beam to see if the Single Bullet Theory could do what the Warren
Commission said it could. Groden was there with blown up frames from the
Zapruder film to make sure everything was in order as far as positioning
went. (Something that Gary Mack did not do for his abominable Inside
the Target Car.)
The experiment was about to be conducted. But a funny thing happened
just before the beam was switched on. Vincent DiMaio walked onto the
set. He began to question how the model in the car was seated and how it
lined up in relation to the others. He then began to rearrange the
models. Groden was shocked, since the good doctor's realignment did not
jibe with the picture frames he had in hand. In other words, DiMaio was
going to contravene the photographic record because he knew the laser
beam would indicate the Single Bullet Theory was hokum. This long and
heated argument in Dealey Plaza ended up capsizing the project. That is
how determined DiMaio was to ensure that the American public would not
see the Warren Commission as the hoax it was. This is the kind of
authority John McAdams would have us rely upon.
McAdams also tried to defend the fact that Oswald was deprived of his
day in court--this time with a lawyer-when he was murdered by Jack Ruby
in the basement of the Dallas Police Department. Some of the things he
said in defense of what the police did that day are so bizarre that they
need to be noted. For instance, he tried to actually blame officer Roy
Vaughn for letting Ruby into the basement. Vaughn was the policeman who
was at the entrance to the Main Street ramp. He was supposed to refuse
entry to unauthorized persons-which would have included Ruby. Vaughn
vehemently denied that Ruby ever came down the Main Street ramp he was
guarding. But further, he passed a polygraph on this issue with flying
colors. (Sylvia Meagher, Accessories After the Fact, p. 407) On top of
that, he had five corroborating witnesses to back him up in stating that
Ruby did not enter the basement that way. (ibid, p. 405)
It later turned out, as Sylvia Meagher suspected, Ruby did not enter
the basement through the Main Street ramp. There was a cover up about
this inside the Dallas Police Department. Unlike Vaughn, the man in
charge of security that day, Patrick Dean, failed his polygraph. Even
though he was allowed to write his own questions. (Anthony Summers,
Conspiracy, p. 464) He even lied about how Ruby could have gotten
into the basement. (ibid, p. 468) Dean then refused to testify before
the House Select Committee on Assassinations. (ibid) And beyond that,
the DPD kept a sixth, and best, back up witness to Vaughn away from the
Warren Commission. This was Sgt. Don Flusche. Flusche had parked his car
opposite Vaughn's position on Main Street that day. He had assumed a
position leaning up against his car in order to watch Oswald's transfer
to the county jail. To top it off, he also new Ruby. And there was no
doubt in Flusche's mind that Ruby "did not walk down Main Street
anywhere near the ramp." (ibid, p. 462)
In light of this, it is ludicrous for McAdams to say, as he did, that
the Dallas Police though they were in control of the basement, or that
Roy Vaughn was "distracted". The evidence indicates that, at the very
least, the police were negligent. Worst case scenario, the police aided
Ruby's entrance. But the audience in Chicago could not know that since,
no surprise, McAdams was not giving them accurate information on the
issue.
But the Marquette professor was not done misrepresenting the Ruby
case. When describing how Ruby ended up dying, he said that he was
granted a new trial but died of cancer in 1967, before it was held. When
Burghardt added that some people think he was injected with cancer
cells, McAdams laughed this off as somehow being farfetched. The
professor had also warned the audience to avoid "buff forensics". The
implication being that they are not be trusted.
Perhaps nothing in this discussion shows just how arrogant and, at
the same time, how utterly ignorant the "professor" was and is. For in
this very case he assumes to be an expert on, there is compelling
evidence that cancer cells can be injected. And indeed had been injected
on an experimental basis in the fifties.
In his famous Playboy interview in 1967, Jim Garrison talked
about David Ferrie's alleged treatise on the viral theory of cancer.
But, as with many pieces of evidence, no one besides Garrison had seen
this document until the creation of the Assassination Records Review
Board. The ARRB then declassified some of Garrison's files in the
nineties. When Dr. Mary Sherman's biographer, Ed Haslam, got hold of
this document he immediately deduced that Garrison was mistaken about
its origins. Ferrie could not have written such a learned, impeccably
scholarly article. After much study, Haslam concluded that the true
author was one of the foremost cancer researchers in the USA at the
time. He makes the case it was Dr. Sarah Stewart. Stewart was the first
to successfully demonstrate that viruses causing cancer could be spread
in animals. (E mail communication with Haslam, 4/5/2013) In other words,
the smug and self-satisfied alleged JFK expert had again whiffed. And he
did so by missing an important point right under his nose. As we shall
see, this is a recurring and a disturbing characteristic of the
professor. That is, he is so eager to discredit the "buffs" that he
shoots his gun while still holstered. Thereby hitting himself in the
foot. Yet, he doesn't notice his several missing toes.
II
"You buffs have been cooperating marvelously with my scheme to
make this group [alt.conspiracy.jfk] a shambles."
John McAdams
As the reader can see from a review of this brief 40-minute vignette,
John McAdams can't help himself. Given any kind of opportunity, he
simply must distort the facts of the JFK case. And at the same time he
does this, he actually tells his audience that it's the other side
that is guilty of doing so. This makes McAdams a self contained,
ambulatory, propaganda model. He does this so compulsively, so
automatically, that on the eve of the fiftieth anniversary of Kennedy's
murder, it's a good time to do a career retrospective on him. If we dig
deep enough, perhaps we can find the roots of his rather bizarre
behavior.
McAdams grew up in the Deep South. He graduated from high school as
the 75-year reign of Jim Crow and racial segregation began to crumble
under opposition from Kennedy and King. And the first oddity in this
chronicle begins with the name of McAdams' hometown. No kidding, its
called Kennedy, Alabama. (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 12/31/93)
And some of his family still abides there. (McAdams' blog, Marquette
Warrior, 6/14/2010) This is a very small hamlet in western Alabama,
right on the border of Mississippi. If you can believe it, with cosmic
irony, he graduated from Kennedy High School in 1964. (According to
researcher Brian Hunt, the school and town are not named after JFK.)
Therefore, the caucasian McAdams grew up in an overwhelmingly white town
in Alabama while images of President Kennedy sending in the National
Guard to remove Governor George Wallace from the gates of the university
were being seared into his head. (http://www.nbcnews.com/video/nightly-news/47362544#47362544)
I mention this because it may help explain the origins of the
associate professor's quite conservative political philosophy. And, as
we shall see, if anything, that characterization is an understatement.
It is hard to get further to the right than McAdams without falling into
the fringes of the neo-Nazi sects.
It is not easy to find any information about McAdams between 1964 and
1981. But it seems that he first taught Social Studies in high school
before getting a Ph. D. from Harvard in 1981. He then began a career as
a college instructor and ended up at Marquette in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
It is here that he began to display his interest in the assassination of
President Kennedy. This seems to have been a direct reaction to the
appearance of Oliver Stone's film JFK. For at around this point, two
things happened that raised his profile in the JFK community. First, he
began to have a strong presence on the Internet. Second, he began to
teach a class on the JFK case. Since young people are always attracted
to this subject, the first time he offered the class he had 47 students.
(ibid, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.)
Back in 1996, Probe Magazine did an article on some of the
peculiarities of people with interesting backgrounds who now had become
prominent on the Internet in the JFK field. We noted one Ed Dolan, a
retired Marine captain and former CIA employee who then posted on
Compuserv. (Probe, Vol. 3 No. 3, p. 12) Gerald McNally was
another personage of interest. He was a member of the Association of
Former Intelligence Officers, the group founded by David Phillips as a
reaction to the investigations of the Church Committee. (ibid)
It was in this then nascent milieu that McAdams' pugnacious style and
his rightwing politics first began to warrant attention. For instance, a
newcomer to the Internet once wrote about him: "McAdams is a spook isn't
he? I am concerned about McAdams and his ilk. The stuff he puts up on
the 'Net is pure disinformation ... He doesn't respond to the facts, he
just discredits witnesses and posters." (ibid, p. 13) As we shall see,
the last sentence was prescient. For McAdams at times will invent facts
in order to discredit the "buffs". But in addition, there was the
frequency of his posting. At times it was fifty posts per day. And
beyond that, he was posting on five different forums. (ibid) Who has the
time or energy to do such things if one has a full time job? Especially
to do some of the silly acts that McAdams performed. For instance,
according to Lisa Pease, McAdams tried to deny that Clay Shaw was ever
actually part of the very suspicious Italian agency called Permindex. So
someone finally got tired of McAdams' malarkey and scanned in Shaw's own
Who's Who in the Southwest listing, where he himself listed his
membership in Permindex. So what did McAdams do? He then went to another
of his member forums and repeated the same canard: that Shaw was not on
the Board of Permindex.
When McAdams' attempt to take over alt.conspiracy.jfk did not work
out, he started his own forum. The problem was that this was a moderated
forum. And McAdams does not like any vigorous and knowledgeable
viewpoint criticizing the Warren Commission. One of his strongest
antagonists online was Dr. Gary Aguilar. As noted, McAdams intimated he
was a drug user-which he is not. Aguilar was quite rightly outraged by
this and got in contact with Marquette officials. This resulted in a
story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The lead line was as follows:
"A Marquette University professor who hurled profane insults across the
Internet ... has been chastised by university officials ..." (MJS,
3/24/96) Gary Aguilar was quoted as saying, "He's extremely mean
spirited. What academic purpose can be served by calling people these
names?"
What the associate professor was doing of course was the familiar
counter-intelligence tactic of polarization. One way to do this is to
demonize the opponent. So not only was Aguilar a "buff", he was a drug
using buff. The message being: Is this the kind of person you would
trust for information on a controversial subject like the JFK case? Of
course, the fact that Aguilar was very knowledgeable about the medical
evidence, much more so than McAdams was or ever will be, this formed
part of the plan. The other part was censorship. Jeff Orr once wrote
that, "I didn't know that the JFK assassination newsgroup I was posting
on was affiliated to the McAdams website; until after my posts were
removed and I was blocked from making further posts." The reason Jeff
was censored was because McAdams said his information amounted to poorly
sourced-you got it-- "factoids". So Jeff then found more exact sources
and footnotes. He reposted the information, which was about why Ruby had
to kill Oswald. In a matter of minutes, that post was removed by
McAdams. Jeff concluded that "Whether he is a paid disinformation
specialist, or unpaid, he is definitely promoting information that is
knowingly false to him." (post of Orr, 2/08/00, at Dave's ESL Cafe)
III
"I had my marching orders."
Matt Labash to Gary Aguilar
In the time period of 1993-94, the backlash against Oliver Stone's
film was in high gear. The 30th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination
was the occasion for a particularly bad CBS special hosted by Dan
Rather. But also, Bob Loomis at Random House had enlisted Gerald Posner
to write a book reinforcing the Warren Commission. This turned into the
bestselling Case Closed. This book was attended by a publicity
build up that was probably unprecedented for the time. The book was
featured on the cover of US News and World Report, and Posner got
a featured spot on an ABC TV newsmagazine. (Posner has since been
exposed as a pathological plagiarist, and also part of a scheme to
defraud Harper Lee of her royalties. But as we shall see, McAdams still
admires his discredited book.)
In the summer of 1994, there was a meeting in Washington between CIA
officer Ted Shackley, former CIA Director, the late Bill Colby, CIA
affiliated journalist Joe Goulden, writer Gus Russo, and Dr. Robert
Artwohl. (Probe Vol. 6 No. 2, p. 30) One of the subjects under
discussion was the upcoming fall conference in Washington of the newly
formed Coalition on Political Assassinations, or COPA. At the time, the
Assassination Records Review Board was being formed and some interesting
things had already begun flowing out of the National Archives. When word
about this meeting got out, Russo tried to pass it off as a research
meeting for his book Live By the Sword. This did not remotely
explain what Goulden and Artwohl were doing there. When author John
Newman called Colby, he said the CIA was worried about what the research
community was going to say about David Phillips and Mexico City. Since
they thought Phillips had gotten a bum rap from the HSCA. (ibid) It was
later revealed that one of the topics of the meeting was if they should
use one of their friendly media assets to attack COPA. (ibid)
It looks like they did. But the conduit for the attack was not Gus
Russo. Russo was already unwelcome in the critical community because of
his work on the wildly skewed 1993 Frontline documentary about Oswald.
He had actually been attacked in public at a Dallas Conference the
previous year by Cyril Wecht and this author. So what apparently
happened is that the strategy was to use someone with a lower public
profile. And then to lower that even further by having him attend the
conference under a false name. We might have never learned about this
operation if the perpetrator had used the name of say 'Jack Smith'. But
he didn't. He used the name of 'Paul Nolan'. One day, the real Paul
Nolan was surfing the Internet when he found out what had happened. He
then posted the following message: "I was just doing some research over
the 'net. I wanted to see if anything came up that had my name in it.
Guess what? My REAL name is Paul Nolan! Apparently, some asshole wants
to use my name as an alias."
The "asshole" Nolan was referring to was John McAdams. McAdams
attended a COPA Conference in Washington under Nolan's name. He just
happened to meet up with a reporter named Matt Labash. Labash wrote a
rather long article for Washington's City Paper ridiculing the
conference. The only attendee given any long quotes in the piece was
McAdams, under the name of Nolan.
Was the fact that McAdams managed to get noticed under a phony name
and get interviewed by Labash a coincidence? Not likely. When Gary
Aguilar called Labash and asked him about the negative spin of the
article, the writer replied that he had his marching orders for the
piece. Milicent Cranor did some research on Labash and discovered he had
an interesting history. At the time, he was employed by Rupert Murdoch's
The Weekly Standard. But he had been formerly employed by the
Richard Mellon Scaife funded American Spectator. And one of his previous
assignments had been infiltrating the liberal Institute for Policy
Studies and doing a lengthy hit piece on them in the Unification Church
owned Washington Times. As we will see, the political orbits of
the two perpetrators-Labash and McAdams-- have much in common. Some
would say, too much. Whatever the auspices, the meeting appears to have
achieved the objective that Colby and Shackley had in mind. As did the
overall counter attack against Stone's film. The goal was the familiar
one of 1.) polarize and 2.) then marginalize.
IV
"That site is the greatest collection of lies and disinformation
that has ever appeared in this case."
Robert Harris, referring to McAdams' site
In fact, McAdams begins his web site with, if not a lie, a
half-truth. At the very top of the page, he uses a quote from Jackie
Kennedy. It reads, "He didn't even have the satisfaction of being killed
for civil rights ... It's-it had to be some silly little communist." The
associate professor does not footnote this quote. The shocked widow may
have said this as an immediate reaction to having her husband's brains
blown out in front of her. But this is not what she thought upon a few
days of reflection. As David Talbot notes, a few days later, the widow,
along with Bobby Kennedy, put together a mission for their mutual friend
William Walton. (See Talbot, Brothers, pgs. 29-34) Disguised as a
cultural exchange, Walton's real job was to inform Russian official
Georgi Bolshakov about what Jackie and Bobby really thought had happened
to President Kennedy. They felt he had been removed by a large,
rightwing, domestic conspiracy. And Walton told Bolshakov that, "Dallas
was the ideal location for such a crime." What this meant was that the
new president, would not be able to fulfill the designs JFK had for
pursuing detente with Khrushchev. Johnson was far too close to business
interests. Therefore, Robert Kennedy would soon resign as Attorney
General, He would then run for office, and use that position to run for
the White House. At that point, if he won, the quest for detente would
continue.
Now, this anecdote was not surfaced by "buffs". It appeared in the
book One Hell of a Gamble by the late Aleksadr Fursenko and Tim
Naftali. To my knowledge, neither man was ever considered a Kennedy
assassination theorist in any way. And neither was Walton. Walton was
just doing the bidding of his two close friends. Yet, if one searches
the index to McAdams' Kennedy Assassination web site, you will not find
any reference to this important piece of history.
So why does McAdams lead off his site with that particular quote?
Because it does two things for him. First, it presents the (false) idea
that the Kennedy family actually bought into the Warren Commission.
Second, it also brings forth the phantasm that, psychologically, people
need to believe in a conspiracy because they cannot accept President
Kennedy dying at the hands of a deranged communist. Today, of course,
everyone, including McAdams, knows that the former idea has been knocked
aside by both Talbot's book and the revelation by Robert Kennedy Jr. in
an interview with Charlie Rose that his father didn't buy the Warren
Commission. (http://www.ctka.net/2013/The_MSM_and_RFKJr.html)
The second idea, about needing a psychological crutch, was actually
started by CIA asset Priscilla Johnson, the favorite JFK author of both
Richard Helms and David Phillips. She penned a column playing on this
theme for the 25th anniversary of Kennedy's death. It's a neat trick. In
that it asks the public to avoid the evidence in the case because the
only people who criticize the Commission are those who cannot
emotionally accept Oswald as the killer. Incidentally, this is what
Johnson's book, Marina and Lee does. It avoids the evidence in
the case and instead draws a portrait of Oswald that is similar to what
the Warren Commission did: Oswald as the twisted commie sociopath.
Its odd that McAdams should criticize the critics as being "buffs"
who rely on their own books for mutual reinforcement. First, it simply
is not true. People like Jim Douglass used a variety of books and
sources outside of the Kennedy assassination literature. For another
example, click through to these two articles by Milicent Cranor and see
all the references she uses from core and established medical
literature. One of them being Di Maio in his real field of expertise. (http://www.history-matters.com/essays/jfkmed/TrajectoryOfaLie/TrajectoryOfaLie.htm)
(http://www.kenrahn.com/JFK/Critical_Summaries/Books/Galanor%27s_Cover-up/Cranor_to_Grant.html)
But alas, if one looks at the sources for John McAdams' site, one can
fairly say that this insularity and circularity-let us call it buffery--
is true of McAdams. A man he uses as both a source and an outlet
is rabid Warren Commission defender Max Holland. Another source he uses
is Dave Reitzes. Another author he employs is a man named Eric Paddon.
These contributors all have one thing in common: they all share McAdams'
agenda. In other words, they are his kind of "buffs". Paddon is
there since he is a history professor who is anti-Kennedy. And therefore
McAdams can use him to argue against the idea Oliver Stone used in his
film, namely, that Kennedy was going to withdraw from Vietnam in his
second term. In his very brief essay on the subject, he does something
common on the site. He uses several misrepresentations. For instance, he
writes that Kennedy increased the "troop number" in Vietnam. This is a
distortion of the record. Since there were no American troops in Vietnam
when Kennedy took office, and there were none when he was murdered.
Kennedy increased the number of advisors, and as Thurston Clarke shows
in his new book on President Kennedy, JFK's Last Hundred Days, he
was sure they remained only advisors.
The problem with McAdams and Paddon's ideas on this particular
concept, Kennedy's intent to withdraw from Vietnam, is that the newly
declassified record proves them thunderously wrong. The ARRB
declassified very compelling documents about Kennedy and Vietnam in
December of 1997. (Probe, Vol. 5 No. 3, p. 18) Among them were
the records of the May 1963 Sec/Def meeting in Hawaii. These prove that
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara was implementing Kennedy's orders
for a withdrawal. As he had an in-country team from Saigon there to
check on the withdrawal's progress. These documents were so forceful
that even the New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer had
to run stories about Kennedy's plan to withdraw from Vietnam. These
declassified records, which you will not find on McAdams' site, enabled
a series of authors to write fascinating books backing up Stone's
thesis, e.g. Gordon Goldstein's Lessons in Disaster and James Blight's
Virtual JFK. Quite naturally, Paddon's essay makes no reference to
either these documents or these two books. If you can believe it, and
you probably can, there is no specific reference in his essay to NSAM
263, Kennedy's direct orders to withdraw a thousand advisors by
Christmas 1963 and the rest by 1965. Incredibly, Paddon ends his essay
on this subject with a quote from Thomas Reeves' book A Question of
Character. That book is one of the worst hatchet jobs on President
Kennedy in recent times. To use someone like this shows that this site
is not about the factual record. It is about smearing the factual
record.
Let us take another example, Jack Ruby. There have been several good
authors who have written about Ruby. To name just three: Seth Kantor,
Henry Hurt, and Anthony Summers. So whom does McAdams go to in order to
enlist someone to write about Ruby? Some scholar in the field? No sir.
He uses the Warren Report; and he then goes to his little coterie of
buffs and recruits and finds Dave Reitzes for a bit more.
Recall, the Commission concluded that Jack Ruby had no significant
link to organized crime. But yet, as many authors have shown, Ruby
idolized Lewis McWillie and knew him well. And in fact, Ruby admitted
this himself. He even sent him guns while McWillie was in Cuba.
McWillie's girlfriend, Elaine Mynier, said the same thing about Ruby.
(Jim Marrs, Crossfire, p. 389, 393) This is important because
McWillie worked for and with Santo Trafficante while he was in Cuba.
(ibid, p. 389) And there is a report by Englishman John Wilson that Jack
Ruby visited Trafficante while he was imprisoned by Fidel Castro at a
camp on the outskirts of Havana. (Antony Summers, Conspiracy, p. 440) If
you can believe it, by now its pr for the course, in the Reitzes essay,
you will not see one reference to McWillie-or Trafficante! Now if you do
that, how can you possibly title your essay, "Was Lee Harvey Oswald's
killer part of a conspiracy?" You have eliminated one major link to a
possible conspiracy by censorship.
The Reitzes essay includes the following sentence: "Also, were it
Oswald's intention to talk, he'd already had nearly 48 hours in which to
do so." Again, if you leave out an important fact, you can write such
nonsense. In this case, Reitzes left out Oswald's attempted call to
former military intelligence officer John Hurt. That call occurred on
Saturday evening, November 23rd. It was aborted by the Secret Service
before the clerk could put the call through. The next morning, Oswald
was killed by Ruby. (James DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, Second
Edition, pgs. 165-66) A major cause of his death was due to Captain Will
Fritz. Fritz broke the protection pocket planned in advance by stepping
out in front of Oswald, separating himself by about 10-12 feet, and
leaving an opening for Ruby to kill the alleged assassin. Anyone can see
this by just watching the wide-angle film of the shooting. Apparently,
neither Retizes nor McAdams did so.
One of the fruitiest sections of this fruity site is when McAdams and
Reitzes try to say that Jim Garrison could not find anyone in New
Orleans who could tell them Clay Shaw used the alias of Clay Bertrand.
This is a lie achieved by censorship. They use a memo from Lou Ivon to
Garrison saying that he could not find anyone to inform them of this
fact. What they leave out is something Garrison related in his book.
Namely that once Garrison stopped going on these excursions with his
men, they started to get results. The reason they did not at first was
because many people in the French Quarter resented Garrison because of
his previous French Quarter crackdown on the B girl drinking rackets, (DiEugenio,
p. 210) This was attested to by two witnesses in the Quarter who told
writer Joan Mellen they knew Shaw was Bertrand but would not tell
Garrison's men that. When it was all over, Garrison had discovered about
a dozen witnesses who certified that Shaw was Bertrand. (ibid, pgs.
210-11, 387) But it wasn't just Garrison who knew this in 1967. The FBI
knew it at about the same time Garrison was about to discover it. In a
memo of February 24, 1967, the Bureau "received information from two
sources that Clay Shaw reportedly is identical with an individual by the
name of Clay Bertrand." (ibid, p. 388) In another FBI report of the same
time period, reporter Lawrence Schiller told the Bureau that he knew
three homosexual sources in New Orleans and two in San Francisco who
indicated that Shaw was known by other names, including that of Clay
Bertrand. (ibid)
I should add, this was an open secret in the spring of 1967. Even Ed
Guthman, an editor of the Los Angeles Times knew about it. And he
told former Warren Commission lawyer Wesley Liebeler that Shaw was
Bertrand. (DiEugenio, p. 269) You will find none of this declassified
information on the professor's site.
In McAdams's section on the motorcade route, he says there was no
route change and that anyone who says there was is upholding a-drum roll
please-factoid! He then selectively chooses from the record to try and
show there was only one misplaced newspaper announcement of the
motorcade going down Main Street. That is without the right onto Houston
and left onto Elm Street. Again, yawn, this misleading on his part. On
November 16th, reporter Carl Freund wrote on page one of the Dallas
Morning News, "The President and Mrs. Kennedy are expected to drive
west on Main Street next Friday." On November 20, the route was again
described as such. And on the day of Kennedy's arrival, the map that
appeared on the front page of the Dallas Morning News depicted a path
straight down Main Street, without turns onto Houston and Elm. (McAdams
excuse for the last is risible. He writes that the map was not large
enough to depict the turns.) Vince Palamara, perhaps the foremost
authority on the Secret Service, has also maintained the route was
changed. And he quotes agent Gerald Behn as actually saying so to him.
McAdams' discussion of Lee Harvey Oswald is equally misleading and
censored. Let us take just one aspect of that review: Oswald's staged
defection. McAdams understands how deadly this is to his hoary and
mildewed portrait of the Krazy Kid Oswald, an image he upholds from the
discredited Commission. Therefore, instead of detailing the suspicious
circumstances of the defection, he refers the reader to Peter Wronski's
site. Which is a valuable site but it deals with Oswald in Russia. Not
the steps leading to his defection. Let us reveal some of those steps
and the reader will see why McAdams ignores them.
While in the Marines, Oswald became so well versed in Russian that he
took a Russian test in February of 1959. Even though he was a radar
operator. After the test, he kept studying the language assiduously. He
then met with the relative of a friend of his named Rosaleen Quinn.
Quinn was also studying Russian. But she had been tutored in the
language for over a year in preparation for a State Department exam.
Quinn was surprised that Oswald spoke Russian at least as well as she
did. (DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, Second Edition, p. 131) So the
question becomes, was Oswald becoming proficient in Russian for some
future military assignment?
The indications are he was, but you will not find them on McAdams'
site. For instance, in mid-March of 1959, he applied for a school of
higher education called Albert Schweitzer College. (ibid, p. 133) To
this day, no one knows how he found out about this obscure college in
Switzerland. The place was so hidden, that even the FBI couldn't find
it. But on his passport application, Oswald listed this place as one of
his destinations.
That application was filled out right after he attained a hardship
discharge from the Marines. But he had applied for his passport seven
days before he was actually released. The alleged hardship was that his
mother had a candy box drop on her nose while working at a candy store.
When Marguerite went to see a doctor about this incident, he told her
that her son was going to defect to Russia. This was in January of 1959.
(Ibid, p. 136) Which was six months before Oswald he even begun the
process of the discharge.
It was common knowledge that hardship discharges were quite difficult
to attain. Since they entailed lengthy investigations to be sure they
were executed honestly. The usual completion time was anywhere from
three to six months. Incredibly, Oswald's was approved in ten days, on
August 27, 1959. (ibid, p. 136) Even though it was a patent fraud! For
Oswald did not help his mother when he was discharged. Oswald left his
mother in Fort Worth 72 hours after he arrived. He then went to New
Orleans, said he was in the import-export business-which he was not-and
booked transport on a freighter to England. In England he told the
authorities he was there to attend college in Switzerland. Which he was
not. But this is where Albert Schweitzer College came in handy. Because
he wasn't going to tell them he was defecting to Russia.
His arrival in Helsinki is important for two reasons. First, it was
the only European capital that granted visas to Russia within a week.
Oswald again got expedited service: 48 hours. (Ibid, p. 138) Oswald
apparently knew that. Though we don't know how he did. But second,
Nelson Delgado, Oswald's Marine colleague, expressed surprise that
Oswald could afford to travel across Europe. Delgado thought it would
take as much as a thousand dollars to do so. A sum that, by all
accounts, Oswald did not have. But making the expense even more
puzzling, when Oswald got to Helsinki, he stayed at the Hotel Torni.
(ibid, p. 137) Which was roughly the equivalent of the Ritz Carlton.
Someone probably alerted him to the odd juxtaposition of a poor Marine
staying at a Nelson Rockefeller type hotel. Because he checked out and
went to the Klaus Kurki. Which did not improve things much. Since it's
more like the Four Seasons. Where did Oswald get the money to stay at
these places?
All of the above raise the sharpest questions about who Oswald was
and how his defection was stage-managed. Try and find any of it noted it
noted on McAdams' Oswald page.
This is too long already, but there is one other thing that should be
pointed out about this horrid web site. Like Vincent Bugliosi and Arlen
Specter, McAdams knows there are certain things that simply cannot be
revealed about the fantastic pristine bullet CE 399. Because if you do,
you blow up the chain of possession issue about the exhibit. Therefore,
although he elsewhere notes Josiah Thompson's book, Six Seconds in
Dallas, he does not mention Thompson's interview with O.P. Wright.
Wright was the Parkland Hospital security officer who denied to Thompson
that CE 399 was the bullet he turned over to the Secret Service on the
day of the assassination. (Thompson, p. 175) And although McAdams notes
other work by John Hunt, he fails to reference his two essay at JFK
Lancer. These reveal that the FBI lied about agent Elmer Lee Todd's
initials being on the bullet. Todd was the agent who got the bullet at
the White House and then delivered it to FBI headquarters that night.
The Warren Commission states that his initials are on the bullet. John
Hunt checked at the National Archives. They are not on the bullet. (DiEugenio,
p. 345) But further, the receipt that Todd made out to the Secret
Service says he got CE 399 at 8:50 PM. This was the bullet that was
recovered from someone's stretcher. Yet, in the FBI records of Robert
Frazier, he wrote that he got the "stretcher bullet" at the FBI lab 7:
30 PM. (ibid) So the question then becomes: how could Todd get a bullet
to give to Frazier an hour and twenty minutes after Frazier
already had it?
The unfortunate reader who visits John McAdams' site cannot ask
himself that question. The professor can't put it there since it
incinerates his site. As with Oswald's defection, McAdams has
selectively culled the information he puts there. He then trumpets that
site loudly as undermining the "buffs". Except, like Vince Bugliosi, his
argument is gaseous, since he has rigged the site beforehand.
I could easily go to each major page on that site and show exactly
how he does this with each category. But the above makes my point. John
McAdams is the equivalent of a cheap magic act. He creates illusions for
those who do not know where to look to see the trickery. And he then has
the chutzpah to frame the argument as his critics being wrong. This is
not what college professors are supposed to be about. Its not
intellectual freedom. It is intellectual censorship and deception on a
grand scale.
(In Part 2
we will examine McAdams' relationship with Wikipedia, his ground rules
for debates, his rightwing politics and activism, his upcoming PBS
special, and his recruitment help for the CIA.)
|
The Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK, and Malcolm X
FLASH! This book is now available on KIndle for the lowest price ever,
of $10.99
New Edition, Updated!
Destiny Betrayed: JFK, Cuba, and the Garrison Case
by James DiEugenio
Order Now!
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The entire collection of
Probe magazine on Disk.
AVAILABLE NOW!
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This
iPhone and iPad app provides a wealth of info on the JFK case!
Enemy of the Truth: Myths,
Forensics and the Kennedy Assassination
by Sherry G. Fiester
Forensics can be a complicated
subject, yet Fiester provides the reader with easily understood,
accurate, information. Enemy of the Truth: Myths, Forensics and the
Kennedy Assassination is so comprehensive in its approach, this work
should be used in the instruction of all new crime scene investigators
nationwide. William LeBlanc, CFCSI
Buy it here
|
PART TWO
Articles
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considered for publication on this site, please send mail to us at
here.
Jim DiEugenio's Upcoming appearances and radio Interviews:
Esowon Books
4327 Degnan Blvd.
Los Angeles CA 90008
Ph: 323-290-1048
July 30th at 7 PM
This appearance will be taped by the local
Radio Pacifica outlet KPFK.
October 16-19th Passing the
Torch Conference, at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh
November 21-24,
November in
Dallas, at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas
“BILLBOARD”
New Articles/Reviews
Review of
Destiny Betrayed, 2nd edition
by Albert Rossi
The Bonds of Secrecy, by Saint John Hunt
Reviewed by Seamus Coogan
Ron
Rosenbaum Fires the First Salvo
by Jim DiEugenio
Fifty
Reasons for Fifty Years
From our friends at Black Op Radio
The mystery of CE163
by Gokay Hasan Yusuf
Citizen Wilcke Dissents
Brigitte Wilcke
protests conspiracy program on the
public airwaves
JFK: The French Connection,
by Peter Kross
Review by Seamus Coogan
Notes on Lunch with Arlen Specter on January 4, 2012
By Vincent Salandria
Part 1: Review of Peter Janney’s "Mary’s Mosaic"
By Lisa Pease
Part 2: Entering Peter Janney’s World of Fantasy
By James DiEugenio
The Awful Grace of God, Religious Terrorism, White Supremacy
and the Unsolved Murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.
by Martin Hay
MRS. KENNEDY & ME: A Very Good Book With A Few Pages of
Trouble
by Vince Palamara
Jim DiEugenio analyzes and summarizes
Larry Hancock's interesting and unique new book
Nexus: The CIA and Political Assassination
Jim DiEugenio reviews the
work of Chris Matthews on the life and death of
President Kennedy, including his latest biography, "Jack
Kennedy: Elusive hero".
Reviews of John McAdams' book JFK
Assassination Logic by:
— Pat Speer
—
David Mantik
—
Frank Cassano
—
Gary Aguilar
BETRAYAL IN DALLAS: LBJ, the Pearl Street Mafia, and the
Murder of President Kennedy
Reviewed by William Davy
The Second Dallas,
a DVD Robert Kennedy documentary produced, written and
directed by Massimo Mazzucco. Reviewed by Jim DiEugenio
The Connally Bullet Powerful evidence that Connally
was hit by a bullet from a different assassin, by Robert
Harris
Journalists and JFK,
those who were in and around Dealey Plaza that day and those
who made a career of the case afterwards.
Intro By Gary King.
Joseph Green on the late
Manning Marable's new full scale biography of Malcolm X.
JFK and the Majestic Papers: The History of a Hoax
by Seamus Coogan
- and -
LBJ and the Conspiracy to Kill Kennedy: A Coalescence of
InterestsSeamus Coogan on Joseph Farrell's new book
Hear No Evil: Social Constructivism and the Forensic
Evidence in the Kennedy Assassination
by Donald Byron Thomas
A Comprehensive Review by David Mantik of
The Real
Wikipedia? by JP Mroz and Jim DiEugenio (3 part series)
Sirhan and the RFK
Assassination
Part I: The Grand Illusion
Part II: Rubik's Cube by Lisa Pease
Who is
Anton Batey?
CTKA takes a close look at a most curious radio host who is
a JFK denier, Chomskyite, and yet happens to be in league
with John McAdams and David Von Pein. Yep, its all true.
Part 1
Part 2
Inside the ARRB
Reviews of Douglas Horne's multi-volume study of the
declassified medical evidence in the JFK case. Reviewed by
Jim DiEugenio, David Mantik and Gary Aguilar.
Exclusive excerpts from Mitchell
Warriner's long awaited new book on
the Jim Garrison investigation
|
John McAdams and the Siege of Chicago Part 2
By James DiEugenio with Brian Hunt
Upon the 48th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination, John McAdams
brought out a book on the case. That book, entitled JFK Assassination
Logic: How to Think About Claims of Conspiracy, was oddly titled.
For the simple reason that most people who have encountered McAdams come
away thinking that his thought process concerning the JFK case is
anything but logical. In fact, as we have seen, it is actually kind of
warped.
That book has been reviewed on this site more than once. (Click
here for one.) Therefore, here I would like to discuss an interview
the author gave about the book to the Hartford Books Examiner.
First, I think it is interesting that McAdams got an endorsement from
the former House Select Committee on Assassinations Chief Counsel Robert
Blakey. Blakey, of course, is credited with being the last person in an
official position who actually could have done something about the JFK
case. And he didn't. Most objective observers would say, he did all he
could to cover up the case. For instance, he accepted the evidence at
the so-called sniper's nest window. Well Blakey is quoted as saying
about JFK Assassination Logic, "McAdams gives you a crucial road
map-not to decide what you should think, but how to make up your mind in
the face of conflicting information." Let us examine some of that
conflicting information.
I
"The evidence linking him [Oswald] to the weapon is overwhelming."
John McAdams, JFK Assassination Logic
In that interview the professor was asked to summarize the evidence
in the Warren Commission that validates its conclusion about Oswald.
McAdams responded thusly: "A solid paper trail connects Oswald to the
rifle. Hard forensic evidence (bullet fragments, shell casings) connect
the rifle to the shooting. Oswald almost certainly brought the rifle in
to work on the morning of the assassination."
This might impress someone who knows nothing about the JFK case. To
someone who does know something about the case, it is simply dishonest.
And knowingly so. The paper trail that connects the rifle to Oswald is
not at all solid. Researchers like Gil Jesus and John Armstrong have
raised serious doubt about whether Oswald ordered the rifle in question,
or picked it up. (Click
here for Gil's work.) The incredible part of their work is that they
have brought every single step of that rifle transaction into question,
and on both sides of the equation i.e. the mailing of the money order,
and the picking up of the rifle through the post office. It is true that
the first generation of critics accepted this part of the Commission's
case i.e. Josiah Thompson, Harold Weisberg, Sylvia Meagher, Mark Lane
etc. But since the film JFK came out, there has been a whole new
rank of writers and researchers who have rethought the case anew. And
this includes its very foundations e.g. the provenance of the Mannlicher
Carcano rifle. That is not a given anymore. As far back as 1998, the
late Raymond Gallagher brought up a rather logical question that
McAdams-or Robert Blakey for that matter--did not confront. The official
story says that Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago got the money order on
March 13, 1963 and deposited it that day. But the mailing envelope is
stamped as leaving Dallas on March 12, 1963. (Probe Magazine, Vol. 5 No.
6, p. 10) How could an envelope travel over 700 miles, be resorted at
the main Chicago post office, be rerouted to a delivery route carrier,
be dropped off, be resorted at Klein's, and then be run over and
deposited in their bank--all within 24 hours and all before the advent
of computers. This is logical thinking?
But further, the way McAdams treats this subject in his book is even
worse than in the interview. With hyperbole worthy of a lawyer, namely
Vincent Bugliosi, McAdams writes that the evidence linking Oswald to
this weapon is "overwhelming". (McAdams, p. 158) But yet on the next
page, he is quite unconvincing on how the rifle could be delivered to
Oswald's post office box in Dallas. For if he had ordered it in the name
of Alek Hidell-which the Commission says he did--there were postal rules
that prevented the package from being deposited in Oswald's box. Because
the box itself was not rented in that name-it was in Oswald's name. And
according to postal rules, that rifle shipment should have been marked
"returned to sender." In other words, the rifle should have never gotten
to the box. (Armstrong, p. 453; Post Office letter to Stewart Galanor,
May 3, 1966)
It is humorous to note the illogical way McAdams weasels out of this
evidentiary corner that the facts paint him into. The problem is that
the post office, most likely FBI informant Harry Holmes, discarded the
third part of the box application, which allows others to pick up
merchandise from that box. McAdams first says that just because
regulations dictate that applications must be preserved for two years,
why, that does not mean that all parts of the application had to be
preserved. Think of the logic here: This is a crucial part of the
application, since it allows other people to pick up merchandise sent to
the actual box holder. In other words, it protects the post office.
So why would they discard it? And in fact, this is simply another dodge
by the professor. For in 1966, the post office sent a letter to
researcher Stewart Galanor that explicitly stated that all parts of the
application should be preserved, including part 3. (Letter to Galanor
dated May 3, 1966)
Whiffing there, he then says that since Oswald listed the name Hidell
on his New Orleans box, it's quite plausible that he did so on the
Dallas box. He does a nice Fred Astaire tap dance around the fact that
the New Orleans post office kept the entire application. Therefore if
the Dallas application said the same, why would it be discarded? The
answer is they would not have done so. And in fact, in a report to J.
Edgar Hoover, the FBI stated that their investigation "revealed that
Oswald did not indicate on his application that others, including A.
Hidell would receive mail through the box in question ..." (CE 2585, p.
4) Since Holmes was a long time FBI informant, I would like to ask the
professor what the logical inference of this finding would be?
We could go on and on in this regard. But the bottom line is that
McAdams does not want to. For example, he just dismisses the fact that
the rifle in evidence today is not the same rifle that was ordered
through Klein's. (McAdams, p. 160) Which, of course, when piled on top
of all the other evidence-the vast majority of which he leaves
out-strongly indicates Oswald never ordered that rifle. And in fact,
there is a piece of sensational illogic that, quite naturally, McAdams
leaves out here.
The official story has Oswald turning over evidence of an Alek Hidell
card to FBI agent John Quigley after his August 1963 arrest in New
Orleans. Now, if we believe McAdams, knowing he had already ordered the
rifle in that name, and knowing the FBI had that card in their files,
Oswald still used that rifle to kill JFK-- knowing the FBI could
track it down!
So much for the solid paper trail connecting Oswald to the rifle. Let
us go to what McAdams quoted next, the projectiles and shells. Wisely,
he did not specifically name CE 399. For as we noted at the end of Part
One, there is no evidence that the Magic Bullet was even fired in Dealey
Plaza that day. The paper trail actually indicates that CE 399 was
substituted. (See James DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, Second
Edition, pgs 344-45) Then, when one adds in the work of Robert Harris
demonstrating that another, separate bullet hit John Connally, the whole
myth of the Magic Bullet is completely undermined. (Click
here.)
There is also the fact of CE 543. This is the dented shell found on
the sixth floor that defies any kind of logic. As marksman Howard
Donahue said of this shell, he had never seen a shell dented that way,
and he doubted very much if a rifle could make that kind of dent. But
further, he noted that the Mannlicher Carcano could not fire a
projectile deformed like that properly. (Bonar Menninger, Mortal
Error, p. 114) Josiah Thompson tried to see if a shell could be
deformed like that discharged from the rifle. It could not. (Thompson,
Six Seconds in Dallas, p. 144) British researcher Chris Mills
experimented with this issue for hours on end. He concluded that this
defect could only be reached using an empty shell that had previously
been fired. And even then, he could only do it very infrequently. (See
Michael Griffith's web site, article entitled, "The Dented Bullet
Shell", dated 4/26/01)
But further, there is strong witness testimony that all the shells
were, at the very least, rearranged. The first civilian to enter the
crime scene was photographer Tom Alyea. He said that when he first saw
the shells, they were not dispersed as they are today in photographs. He
said they were all within the distance of a hand towel. As Alyea and
researcher Allen Eaglesham indicate, the shells were picked up and then
dropped again by either Captain Fritz or police photographer R. L.
Studebaker. (See Eaglesham's web site, "The Sniper's Nest: Incarnations
and Implications".) For as subsequent FBI experiments showed, the
dispersal pattern after ejection would not have been anywhere near that
neat. Something that, evidently, the police understood. (See Destiny
Betrayed, Second Edition, pgs. 343-44)
Considering the fact that the so-called test Blakey used to enforce
the Single Bullet Fantasy, termed Comparative Bullet Lead Analysis, has
been thoroughly discredited, what is now left from McAdams's list are
the fragments from the head shot that killed Kennedy. These were
allegedly found in the front seat of the limousine. I could not find
anything about these fragments in the McAdams book. We will now explain
why he ignored them.
These are supposed to be the head and tail of the bullet that went
through Kennedy's skull. The reader might naturally ask: Where is the
middle of the bullet? Well, if you can believe it, according to the
x-rays, it is in the back of JFK's skull. The question is: How
did it get there? That question must be asked because none of the
autopsy doctors, nor the radiologist, nor his first assistant testified
to seeing it on the night of the autopsy. When author William Law asked
FBI agents Jim Sibert and Frank O'Neill, they said they did not see it
either. (Law, In the Eye of History, pgs. 166, 257, 267) And they
were responsible for securing evidence, since Oswald was still alive
that night. Therefore, using the professor's logic, if it was there,
would not one of these men have noted it in some fashion? Well unless we
are living in Orwell's 1984 and are afraid of being arrested for
'thoughtcrime', we have to answer, yes they would have.
If they did not see it, then who did? Well, now we get to understand
why McAdams does not want to discuss this issue. That 6.5 mm fragment at
the rear of Kennedy's skull first appeared on the x-rays in 1968, five
years after the autopsy. This was when Ramsey Clark's review of the
medical evidence first mentioned it. Why did Clark order a review of the
medical evidence? Because, as Pat Speer discovered, he was very
disturbed by the material in Thompson's book. According to Clark Panel
chief Russell Fisher, the Attorney General was very upset with
Thompson's book and the panel was created "partly to refute some of the
junk" in that book. (Maryland State Medical Journal, March of
1977) As Speer writes, the origin of the newly found 6.5 mm fragment is
very likely in the Thompson book, on page 111. (Click
here for a reproduction.)
As the reader can see, Warren Commission exhibit 388 lies about the
position of Kennedy's head at Zapruder frame 312, the instant before
Kennedy was fatally struck. If the bullet entered at the base of the
skull, it is very hard to imagine it would emerge at a higher point on
the right side. Therefore, Fisher did two things to vitiate Thompson. He
moved the wound higher, and he now "discovered" the middle of the bullet
at the top rear of the skull. To say this created all kinds of new
problems is an understatement of titanic proportions. (These issues are
thoroughly aired in Chapter 7 of Jim DiEugenio's upcoming book
Reclaiming Parkland.) But that is how determined Clark and Fisher
were to answer the critics and counter Jim Garrison. Because the results
of this panel were kept on ice for about seven months. They were
released during jury selection for Clay Shaw's trial.
This is the sum total of McAdams' so-called called "hard evidence"
against Oswald. The use of the buzzwords "hard evidence" is another
trick by the professor. Because with what we know about it today, it can
be shown to be so lacking in credibility and integrity that each piece
of it, is now soft as mush. It can be deftly and powerfully questioned
in every aspect. It simply will not withstand any kind of logical
scrutiny. Which is why McAdams avoids that exercise in his book. Which
is more aptly titled: How to Avoid Logic in the JFK Case.
II
"Ok, but none of that Paul Nolan or disinformationist stuff"
John McAdams to Len Osanic
In the summer of 2009, Frank Cassano suggested to Jim DiEugenio that
he debate one of the bigger names from the Krazy Kid Oswald camp. So, on
Len Osanic's show, the host conveyed invitations to Gary Mack, Dave
Reitzes, David Von Pein, and John McAdams. None of them replied to Len.
This went on for a few weeks with the same negative results. Finally,
Len went ahead and e-mailed the first three individuals. They all
declined. Assuming that McAdams had already heard of the offer, Osanic
only extended a formal invite to him last. To his credit, and our
surprise, he replied in the affirmative. It took awhile for the format
of the debate to be finalized. But just about a week before it was,
McAdams relayed the above demands to Osanic. We agreed to them since Len
had already announced the debate date and time.
Today, knowing what we do about the professor, we probably would not
have given in to that particular request. For from the first formal
question, McAdams started making preemptive strikes and smears against
his opponent. When Osanic asked him about the viability of the Single
Bullet Theory, the professor said that "And I'm guessing Jim is going to
go into an ad hominem attack against Lattimer or Failure Analysis
Associates, and into an ad hominem attack against everybody who creates
any evidence he doesn't like." In the reply, DiEugenio did no such
thing. But in his rebuttal to that reply, this was the first thing from
McAdams: "Sure. What we have is the usual collection there on this or
that factoid this or that gripe or this or that complaint." As anyone
can see from the debate transcript at the Black Op Radio site, there was
nothing like that in DiEugenio's first answer. But McAdams was so eager
to inject the word "factoid" into the ebb and flow, that he couldn't
help himself.
This was repeated upon DiEugenio's answers to Osanic's next question
about who Oswald really was. Right after Jim's answer, McAdams replied
with, "What a massive collection of factoids." McAdams then said that
Oswald was in David Ferrie's Civil Air Patrol unit when he was 15, way,
way before either of them was in New Orleans. What a stunning statement
for even McAdams to make. Because DiEugenio made no mention of any
specific time the two were in the CAP together. Plain and simple: Oswald
was in Ferrie's CAP unit when both of them were in New Orleans. Period.
And Ferrie was in New Orleans for a long time before Oswald joined his
CAP unit. But these are the lengths the professor will go to in order to
avoid the factual record. He then said in reply, "Jim's doing what
conspiracists typically do..." McAdams also said Jim was using Jack
White "crackpot photo analysis", when, in fact, DiEugenio never used
White's work at all during the debate. In talking about Mexico City,
McAdams said DiEugenio was using a "LaFontaine Factoid". This is
ridiculous on two counts. First, DiEugenio did not use any information
from the LaFontaine book Oswald Talked during the entire debate.
Second, that book does not deal with Mexico City anyway. For instance,
the name Valery Kostikov, the secret KGB agent at the Soviet consulate,
is not in the book's index.
In other words, it was OK for McAdams to unjustly smear his opponent
by saying he was using "ad hominem attacks", that he was using
"factoids", he was a natural born "conspiracist", and he was using
"crackpot" photo analysis. But, DiEugenio could not use any kind of
demeaning or derogatory smears about McAdams. Those are nice rules of
debate if you can get them.
But where the professor really went off the boards was when he was
called on his mangling of facts about Jim Garrison and New Orleans. Let
us be clear. Like every alleged Warren Commission supporter, McAdams has
a special place in his pantheon for Garrison. Because Garrison was the
first man to put the Kennedy case where it belonged, in a legal venue.
Therefore, the DA was clobbered by the intelligence assets in the MSM,
infiltrated by the CIA, and electronically bugged by the FBI. This is
all proven today with declassified documents and latter day interviews
and research. (See especially Chapters 11 and 12 of Destiny Betrayed,
Second Edition.) On his (unintentionally) humorous web site, McAdams
denies that any and all of this happened. And what makes it even more of
a joke is that he actually uses CIA memoranda to deny it! Inside the
CIA, the monitoring of the Garrison inquiry was being run by Ray Rocca,
James Angleton's number one assistant. That in and of itself makes these
denials ridiculous. Because as John Newman demonstrates in his milestone
book Oswald and the CIA, it was Angleton who was very likely Oswald's
ultimate control agent. If you can believe it, McAdams even says that
Gordon Novel and Bill Boxley were not CIA infiltrators in Garrison's
office. When, in fact, Novel was hired by Allen Dulles to wire
Garrison's office. Which he did. (DiEugenio, pgs. 232-35) Boxley gave
Garrison a false address that he never lived at, and a phone number that
was not at the false address. He then tried to ensnare him in bear trap
after bear trap. When he was finally discovered by Vincent Salandria, he
refused to show up for questioning. And he signed off with this: "Tell
Big Jim, we're coming after him-with it all!" He then laughed and hung
up. (ibid, p. 284) When Boxley said "we're coming after him", did
McAdams think he was coming at the DA with his wife. kids and dog? (Click
here for an expose of another McAdams page.)
McAdams keeps this up in his book. In his treatment of Perry Russo,
he actually tries to take us back to the days of James Kirkwood's
hatchet job of a book, American Grotesque. A book that was
actually commissioned by Clay Shaw. But again, he also uses James
Phelan. Even though today, Phelan has been exposed as a habitual liar on
many subjects dealing with Garrison. But important to this issue, he has
been so exposed on the subject of Perry Russo. (DiEugenio, pgs. 243-49)
More so, Phelan has been revealed as a longtime government asset by the
ARRB declassified files. And that is information you will not find on
the McAdams web site, or in his book. In his book, in his discussion of
Russo, the professor essentially gives us the banal and stilted
Phelan-Kirkwood version of his testimony. Except to jazz things up, he
tries to relate this to modern day "recovered memory syndrome".
(McAdams, pgs. 44-53) There is no reference to any author interviews
with Russo, Garrison, or Andrew Sciambra. And there is no mention of
Matt Herron, even though Herron is in Kirkwood's book. Where Kirkwood
draws him as a key witness who props up Phelan's version of the story.
Except this was another Phelan lie. Herron did not back up Phelan's
story. He blew it up. He told Jim DiEugenio on two occasions that Russo
said he mentioned both the gathering at Ferrie's apartment and the
presence of a man named Bertrand to Sciambra when he first met him in
Baton Rouge. (Ibid, p. 246) Phelan told Kirkwood the opposite. In other
words, he lied. And Kirkwood printed that canard without calling Herron.
And McAdams does the same thing. Which makes him, what? A buff? It sure
does make him look like a propagandist.
But then McAdams does something that is possibly even worse. He says
that the first time Corrie Collins saw a photo of Clay Shaw he was not
sure about the identification. (McAdams, p. 53) But he later positively
identified Shaw as the driver of the black Cadillac containing Oswald
and Ferrie during the voter registration drive in Clinton Louisiana.
What does the good professor leave out of this? The rather important
fact that Collins was black. And that Feliciana Parish, where the
incident took place, had a strong racist element in it. And that this
was an era of cross burnings and beatings and lynchings. So if Collins
was at first hesitant to go on record, that is quite understandable. The
man had a family to worry about. Because, in fact, Guy Banister had
several friends in the area. And they would naturally not look kindly to
a black man testifying against their friend. And in her book, Joan
Mellen notes that there were attempts in Clinton at bribery and
intimidation. For example, Kirkwood actually visited Collins' father. (A
Farewell to Justice, p. 236) Hugh Aynesworth tried to bribe Sheriff
John Manchester. (Ibid, p. 235) And some of the Clinton/Jackson
witnesses met with early and untimely deaths during the Garrison
investigation e.g. the incredibly important Gloria Wilson, and Andrew
Dunn. (ibid, pgs. 237-38) So yes, Corrie Collins had extenuating
circumstances to ponder before going on record. He had a family to
protect. But he told the truth, which was corroborated by several other
witnesses, and a photograph. How any alleged scholar, especially one who
grew up in George Wallace's Alabama, could leave all of this information
out of his book is simply inexcusable. But it shows a remarkable lack of
empathy and sensitivity.
McAdams exhibited even more of his uncontrollable irresponsibility
during the debate. He said so many erroneous things in that it would
take too long to recount and correct all of them here. But let us
mention what he said about Dan Campbell. Campbell was a former Marine
who worked for Banister infiltrating student organizations. According to
McAdams, Tony Summers wrote that a Marine was arrested on the day that
Oswald was arrested. And this word came down to Banister's office. The
professor then said that it was Summers who made the connection that
this was Oswald. But since Oswald was in jail, then Campbell and Summers
were wrong about his identification.
This rendition of Dan Campbell's testimony is not what Summers wrote.
For there is nothing in his book that says Campbell saw Oswald on the
day Oswald was arrested. All it says is that he heard about it from
someone soon afterwards. (Summers, p. 293, emphasis added) Which
could mean a day or two afterwards. And there is nothing in the book
that says Campbell heard a Marine was arrested. And it was not Summers
who made the connection, it was Campbell. He said he saw a young man
with a Marine haircut come into Banister's to use the phone one day. The
next time he saw him, his face was on TV being accused of killing
President Kennedy.
What McAdams said about Michael Kurtz during the debate was more of
the same rigmarole. The professor said that Kurtz said on television in
1993 that he was there with Banister and Ferrie. (Its hard to discern
here if McAdams means by "he", Oswald or Kurtz) But McAdams added, this
information was not entered in the first edition of Kurtz's book,
Crime of the Century.
Again, this is not correct. DiEugenio corrected him on the air (which
the professor got very angry about afterwards). As far back as 1980. in
Louisiana History, Kurtz did write that these men associated
together, and he himself saw Oswald with Banister. And Kurtz referenced
that article, and used some material from it, in the 1982 edition of
Crime of the Century. McAdams, through his ally David Von Pein, later
tried to save himself by saying that he really meant the second edition
of the Kurtz book. Well, the problem for both McAdams and Von Pein is
that much the same information is in that second edition. (See pages
202-04) And in that second edition, Kurtz also references his more
detailed 1980 article. (See page 271) Clearly, McAdams and Von Pein were
desperately grasping at straws. And they didn't check the straws before
they tried to use them.
III
"I note the wiki Fletcher Prouty page under the control of
Gamaliel. He has BLACKLISTED the official website of Col. Fletcher
Prouty."
Len Osanic to a Wikipedia Volunteer
To understand how the above happened, that is the lockout of Len
Osanic's valuable Prouty page--which is a font of primary sources on the
man--one has to understand who 'Gamaliel' is. But beyond that, the
reader must also understand the close relationship between Gamaliel and
John McAdams.
Three years ago, CTKA reader and supporter J. P. Mroz penned an
extraordinarily important article about Wikipedia and its co-founder
Jimmy Wales. This article, perhaps one of the most important pieces CTKA
ever published, provided rare insight into the history and, even more
importantly, the structure of Wikipedia. Mroz explained that, far from
being a "people's encyclopedia", it is heavily regulated by different
levels of administrators. Beyond that, it has its own rules as to what
can be used--not just as sources, but also as what is termed, External
Links. (Click here for the
article.) Mroz found out firsthand just how regulated the "people's
encyclopedia" was. But specifically, just how quick the Wales
bureaucracy was in detecting any attempt by its users to break open the
mythology of the Warren Report in the pages of Wikipedia. For when he
tried to link an article criticizing the acceptance of the backyard
photographs to Wiki's Lee Harvey Oswald page, he got what is called a
Wiki-ticket. That is a warning as to what was acceptable, and what was
not, in reference to the JFK case.
In his fine article, Mroz traced his Wiki-ticket to the notorious
Gamaliel. Most of the huge bureaucracy that runs Wikipedia use false
names. But indefatigable Wiki critic Daniel Brandt found out who
Gamaliel really was. In fact, Brandt exposed many of the real people
behind these false names. (Click
here for a directory.) Gamaliel's real name is Rob Fernandez, and he
lives in Tampa, Florida. And therein lies a tale that reveals much about
the influence of McAdams' site on an unsuspecting public.
For Fernandez is the perfect gatekeeper for the professor. Consider
some of the firsthand comments by Fernandez quoted by J. P. Mroz:
What I'm proudest of and spent more time working on than anything
else are my contributions to Lee Harvey Oswald. The Oswald entry is
even mentioned in a newspaper article on Wikipedia. If you want to
witness insanity firsthand, try monitoring these articles for
conspiracy nonsense.
Don't worry, we have years of experience dealing with the
conspiracy folks. If you are really bored, check out the talk page
archives-its like a never ending series of car crashes.
As I said in my edit summary, conspiracy theorists take issue
with every detail of the Kennedy assassination. To include each of
their challenges would overwhelm the text.
In other words, Fernandez and McAdams are soul brothers on the
matters of 1.) Oswald's guilt in the JFK case, and 2.) Critics of the
Warren Commission being just street corner "buffs". Therefore--like
McAdams' moderation on his forum-Fernandez swoops down on anyone who
dares defy the Commission and its efficacy. In fact, in his obeisance to
the Warren Report, Fernandez is roughly the equivalent of Orwell's
Thought Police. And that comparison is not made by me. It is made by
him. For, as more than one observer has noted, Fernandez once had a Nazi
Swastika on his web site. And there is a famous picture of him wearing a
white T -shirt with a giant scissors imprinted on it.
Now, how close are McAdams and Fernandez? According to Wikipedia
expert Tom Scully, McAdams' biography at Wiki was first started by
Fernandez. One will see not one negative sentence in that entry about
McAdams. In fact, one will see his JFK web site both singled out and
praised. At the bottom, one will see an External Link to the McAdams JFK
page. With this kind of built-in bias, it is no wonder that John McAdams
is one of the most active editors of JFK material on the "people's
encylopedia". That Fernandez allows this is really kind of shocking. But
it shows how Wikipedia, like much of the "online revolution", has grown
into a huge disappointment. Because Fernandez is about as objective on
the JFK assassination as say Anthony Lewis or Tom Wicker from the New
York Times were. Therefore, the Times championed books by writers
like David Belin and Gerald Posner. Today, Fernandez paves the way for
someone as agenda driven and factually challenged as McAdams. As many
commentators have stated, this illicit union between Fernandez and
McAdams does much to drive the unsuspecting public to the professor's
boondoggle of a web site. The damage inflicted on what may be thousands,
or tens of thousands, of unwary neophytes is staggering to imagine. For
when one Googles the name "Lee Harvey Oswald", the number one reference
that comes up is Wikipedia's. If one looks at the External Links list at
the bottom, one will see not one, but two references to McAdams' site.
Therefore, Fernandez is able to propagate McAdams' disinformation at
the same time that he is able to deprive the reader of sources of
contrary information. And Len Osanic and Fletcher Prouty are the newest
victims of this horrendous double standard. For Fernandez is very eager
to use what can be called 'branding irons' on sources of information.
For example, the reader will look forever on Wikipedia to see an article
or essay referenced to Probe Magazine. Even though that journal
was universally praised as perhaps the finest ever in the field. And
almost each article was academically footnoted to credible sources in
the literature. Here is the question: Why does something like McAdams'
fatally flawed web site qualify as an External Link, but neither
Probe Magazine, nor CTKA, makes the cut? As per scholarly approach
and quality information, there is simply no comparison. Therefore, as
the reader can see, Fernandez is not after those qualities. His journey
starts in reverse. If the source states Oswald is guilty it can make the
cut. The way you get there doesn't really matter.
Now, the biggest shock to the system since 1967 in regards to the
Kennedy case was Oliver Stone's film JFK. The late Col. Fletcher
Prouty was influential in the making of the film, and he was actually a
character in the picture. Portrayed by actor Donald Sutherland, he was
code named Mr. X. It was through him that much of the material relating
to Kennedy's intent to withdraw from Vietnam was conveyed. This is
anathema to McAdams. (As it was to Gary Mack's friend and fellow
propagandist Dave Perry.) Therefore, on his web site, he tries to
discredit Prouty. For instance, he actually uses an essay by Chip
Berlet, who could be called as anti-conspiracy as McAdams. He then uses
a long essay originally posted on CompuServe to critique Prouty's work
on the Vietnam War. Throughout this page, he makes several inaccurate
statements about what Prouty has actually said in interviews and in
books. Or, he tries to makes things he did say sound as if they are
completely wild and unfounded. For instance, Prouty disputed the idea of
petroleum as a "fossil fuel". McAdams tries to say that this makes
Fletcher a crackpot. But yet the idea of abiotic oil is not uncommon at
all. In fact, today, many people agree with it; and some would say that
the new Russian deep well drilling proves it. (Click
here for an interesting essay on the topic.) What this really shows
is McAdams' restricted mode of thought, combined with his overreaching
goal of smearing the critics. Which, with the aid of Fernandez, he has
been successful at doing on Wikipedia.
That Jimmy Wales allows this kind of conflict of interest by McAdams
to run amok under the protection of Fernandez is a disgrace. Anyone
interested in the true facts of the JFK case should never give a dime to
any of Wales' recurrent pleas for donations. For as we can see, Wales'
constant refrain about this democratic and free "peoples' encyclopedia"
is false. It is neither free nor democratic. On the JFK case, Fernandez
has guaranteed it is under the control of a blinkered street cop.
IV
"People who are mentally disturbed have the right to sleep in
parks."
John McAdams
As we have seen in abundance, McAdams is a pure propagandist on the
JFK case. That is, even when he knows better he chooses to spout
disinformation. As a further example of this, let us return to the case
of Jack Ruby being injected with cancer cells. Greg Parker has informed
me that McAdams was aware that Ruby himself thought this was happening.
Because he informed the professor about it via the professor's
newsgroup. He also informed him that human experimentation with cancer
injections had been going on since at least 1956, and was continuing in
1964. Parker sourced his post to magazines like Time and Newsweek, and
newspapers like the New York Times. In other words, even though
the professor knew it had actually happened, he still misinformed his
audience in Chicago.
( i.e.the holoucast museum in jeruselum confirms cancer by injection
since the war years (1940's).
But one of the worst errors that those in the JFK community can make
about McAdams is to limit him to being a provocateur in the Kennedy
assassination field. For make no mistake, that is not all he is
concerned about. One way to illuminate that fact is to go back to the
McAdams/DiEugenio debate. At one point I said that Kennedy was the most
liberal president since Franklin Roosevelt. McAdams replied that both
Truman and Johnson were more liberal than Kennedy. In a nutshell, this
tells us much about where the man is coming from. And that he is not
just about the technicalities of Kennedy's assassination. To make a
statement like that is a telltale sign of a large and hidden agenda.
As most historians understand today, Harry Truman pretty much
reversed Roosevelt's plans for the postwar world. Roosevelt always had a
much more liberal view of the USSR than Winston Churchill did. In fact,
with Operation Unthinkable, Churchill had planned on World War III
breaking out in 1945 in Europe. The two men had different views on this
point. But if FDR had lived, there is little doubt he would have
prevailed on the issue since Churchill was unceremoniously voted out of
office at the end of the war. When Truman took office the White House
hawks, whom Roosevelt had deftly kept at bay, now circled around the
foreign policy ingenue and Missouri machine politician. And within a
matter of months, Roosevelt's vision of cooperation was now turned into
a Churchillian apocalyptic Cold War. The best book on this key point in
history in Roosevelt's Lost Alliances by Frank Costigliola. In
his introduction, he quotes no less than Churchill's foreign secretary
Anthony Eden as saying that the death of FDR was fatal to the
continuance of the Grand Alliance. And Eden directly blamed Truman and
Churchill for breaking with Roosevelt's plans and policies and causing
the Cold War. (Costigliola, pgs. 1-2)
As many authors have pointed out--Richard Mahoney, John Newman,
Gordon Goldstein, James Blight, David Kaiser--Kennedy was not a Cold
Warrior. He was actually trying to achieve detente with both Cuba and
Russia at the time of his death. He was also trying to support
independence or neutralization in the Third World e.g. Congo, Laos,
Indonesia. All of these forays by JFK were torn asunder by President
Johnson in a remarkably short time after Kennedy's murder. (James
DiEugenio, Destiny Betrayed, Second Edition, pgs. 367-77) So by
what kind of logic or historical facts can any so-called Political
Science professor conclude that Truman, who broke with FDR and helped
start the Cold War, and Johnson-who broke with Kennedy and reasserted
the Cold War-were both more liberal than JFK? The answer is: there is no
logic or historical facts to support that false conclusion. The
professor doesn't need one. Why? Because John McAdams is not only a JFK
assassination informational provocateur. He is a rightwing political
operative who would be comfortable spending a night in a New Orleans
bistro sharing his world-view with the likes of Guy Banister.
For example, back in 1995, the infamous Chase Manhattan memo
surfaced. This was a paper written by Riordan Roett of the Emerging
Markets division of the Rockefeller controlled bank. Mexican president
Ernest Zedillo was being faced with a guerilla uprising by a group
called the Zapatistas led by Subcomandante Marcos. Zedillo was trying to
negotiate out of the crisis in Chiapas province. Roett's paper urged
Zedillo to go in and militarily end the problem for his investors. Roett
said that this may provoke some negative reactions internationally, but
there were "always political costs in bold action." (Counterpunch,
February 1, 1995) The revelation of this internal memo created a
firestorm of controversy and picketing of the bank. Therefore the bank
backed off the memo once it got too controversial. Wisely, Zedillo
ignored Roett. Agreements were reached and lives were spared. That
disappointed our political science professor. He wanted Zedillo to obey
the memo and go in and wipe out the rebels. (Probe Magazine,
Volume 3 No. 3, p. 13)
But it's not just in foreign policy where McAdams has fascist
tendencies. He was also all for Ronald Reagan's trickle-down economics.
In a dialogue with Greg Parker, the professor of Poly Sci wrote, "A lot
of people care about how well Americans, rich and poor, are doing. They
were all doing better during the Reagan years, and indeed have been
doing better since." This, of course, is the common rightwing mantra
about Milton Friedman, and Reagan's implementation of the Austrian
School of Economics. Which reversed the primacy of Keynesian economics.
That reversal has done much to devastate the middle class; and has done
even more damage to the poor in this country. One of the best books
about how far the American economy has fallen since the Kennedy-Johnson
years is Winner Take All Politics by Jacob Hacker and Paul
Pierson. (For the author's review,
click here.)
Contrary to what the professor spouts, there are clear economic
indices which show that the American standard of living has seriously
declined since the sixties. And that it does not compare well with other
Western industrialized countries. That book illustrates in detail-with
reliable data-- how the Friedman model performed a reverse Robin Hood in
macroeconomics: It took from the middle class and gave to the rich. As
Parker noted to McAdams, trickle down--or as Reagan called it, supply
side--should have really been called trickle up. Just how extreme is
McAdams on this issue? Later on in his dialogue with Parker he actually
wrote the following in regard to the plight of the homeless: "It really
has more to do with American notions of 'liberty' that hold that people
who are mentally disturbed have a right to sleep in parks." This of
course clearly echoes the famous adage by author Anatole France: "The
law in its majestic equality forbids the rich as well as the poor to
sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets and to steal bread." The
difference is that Anatole France was being satirical. The scary part is
that McAdams means it. It really does not matter to him that tens of
thousands of Americans who cannot take care of themselves now sleep in
parks, on the stairs of public buildings, and in parking lots. After
all, with them on the streets, people like Henry Kravis and Joseph
Cassano and Angelo Mozilo were free to pay less taxes on their illicit
gains that helped cause the greatest economic disaster since 1929. A
catastrophe that the American taxpayer, in large part, ended up paying
for.
One should add, McAdams does not just talk like this in chat groups.
He is an active agent for the power elite. An elite that doesn't give a
damn as America more and more resembles a Third World country. For
instance, the New York Times broke a story about Wal Mart having
a list of bloggers it used to get out its party line about its
(lamentable) company practices. Well, McAdams was one of those bloggers.
He got his marching orders from a man named Marshall Manson of the
communications company called Edelman. (New York Times, May 7,
2006) Manson structured his communications like blog entries, with a
pungent sentence atop what appears to be a news story, but is really
more like an editorial. For example, one entry Manson sent out was
against Maryland state legislation requiring companies to devote part of
their payroll to pay for employee health insurance. Something, of
course, which Wal Mart opposes. McAdams was a recipient of some of these
Manson written "blog posts". And he printed some of them on his
Marquette Warrior blog. Without telling the reader they were from Wal
Mart's public relations department. (ibid)
McAdams may have gotten on the Wal Mart list through his association
with another rightwing group called The Heartland Institute. All one
needs to know is that The Heartland Institute holds as its poster boy
none other than Friedrich A. Hayek, the father of the Austrian School
and the idol of Friedman. I can do no better than link the reader to
this fine expose of The Heartland Institute by Joseph Cannon. As
Cannon and the New York Times have noted, Heartland has been the
most assiduous institute to push the denial of climate change. (New
York Times, May 1, 2012) Just how extreme is this group? They once
paid for a Chicago digital billboard featuring Ted Kaczynski-the
Unabomber-with the caption, "I still believe in global warming, do you?"
The plan was then to switch the faces to Charles Manson, and Fidel
Castro. (Washington Post, May 5, 2012) These are the kinds of
people McAdams links arms with and calls his political comrades.
But perhaps the most bizarre thing McAdams ever wrote on his blog was
when he called Father Bryan Massingale a "politically correct race
hustler". In fact that was the title of the blog entry about the man.
Massingale is a fellow professor at Marquette who believes in using the
teachings of Christ to further progressive causes, like workers' rights.
(Click
here for an example.)
After calling a black Catholic priest a race hustler, McAdams did not
note the irony that he grew up in Alabama when George Wallace was
president, and that his father served on local school boards for
decades. Yet, here he was smearing Massingale's belief that elements of
our society contain a doctrine of "white privilege" as being those of a
"race hustler". When, in fact, only someone who came from that kind of
background could ignore that fact so completely. (See Tuscaloosa
News, September 11, 1997 for the information about McAdams' father.
It was surfaced by ace internet researcher Tom Scully.) This shows not
just a lack of sensitivity, but also a disturbing lack of
self-knowledge.
But it's not a complete lack of self-knowledge. McAdams is quite
aware that his neo-fascist politics present a liability to his pose as a
researcher on the JFK case. After all, as anyone can see, his entire
belief system about the USA is about 180 degrees away from where Kennedy
was trying to go. As we have seen, he is so aware of this that he tries
to deny who Kennedy was. But there is also a compliment to his
reactionary politics. He doesn't want the public at large, especially at
Wikipedia, to know just how rightwing he really is. Therefore, as Tom
Scully has discovered, he erases references that others try and place in
his Gamaliel penned entry there. And presumably, with Fernandez' help,
they stay erased. The professor's excuse for cutting it? According to
him it was "a bunch of irrelevant stuff". As the reader can see, the
incredible extremes and volume of this material is anything but
irrelevant. And anyone who understands who Kennedy was, will know that.
For as I showed in my essay, The Posthumous Assassination of John F.
Kennedy, the smearing of Kennedy's legacy, as well as the deliberate
confusion about his death, these are two conscious aims of the hard
right. (See The Assassinations, edited by DiEugenio and Lisa
Pease, pgs 325-373, for that essay.)
But conversely, as Scully also points out, McAdams thought it was
important to add to the Jim Douglass bio at Wiki. He added the sentence
that Douglass was a member and co-founder of a religious group that
questions the official story about 9-11. So with McAdams its important
that Wiki readers know that about Douglass; but it's not important that
they know-among many other things-that McAdams wanted to wipe out the
Zapatistas.
That's a nice double standard if you can get it. And with Fernandez
as his ally, he can.
V
"Sorry conspiracy theorists, modern forensic science show that
John F. Kennedy was likely killed by one guy with a grudge and a gun."
John McAdams
Everyone knows that PBS had been under attack for a long time by the
rightwing. In fact, as far back as 1995, Newt Gingrich tried to
eliminate federal funding for public broadcasting. In 2005, Patricia S.
Harrison, a former co-chair of the Republican National Committee, became
president of the CPB, the parent company of PBS. Harrison was appointed
by former CPB Chair Kenneth Tomlinson. Tomlinson was once
editor-in-chief at Reader's Digest, and was formerly the Director
of Voice of America. At that position he became close friends with Karl
Rove. While at the CPB he consciously encouraged PBS to hire more
conservative voices.
As the years have gone by, this effort has picked up bipartisan
steam. In 2008 President Obama even appointed a famous Republican
entertainment lawyer, Bruce Ramer, to the board of the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting. And Ramer became board chairman from 2010 to 2012.
(Obama appointed Ramer again for the board in 2013.) In 2011, the House
actually passed a bill that cut all financing for the CPB for 2013.
The people who work at PBS are quite aware of this threat. (New
York Times, February 27, 2011) They therefore know just how far they
can go in their programming. And they won't go any further. In 1993,
Frontline presented a pro Warren Commission special on the 30th
anniversary of Kennedy's assassination. Who was Lee Harvey Oswald?
was produced by the late Mike Sullivan and worked on by the likes of Gus
Russo and Dale Myers. It was not until after Sullivan died that Myers
finally revealed that the script was more or less rigged from the start.
On his blog, "Secrets of a Homicide" Myers revealed that Sullivan
suggested that Russo and Myers "start with finding out who pulled the
trigger in Dallas first and then worked backward from there to find out
if anyone else was involved." Question: With Russo and Myers as his
consultants, whom did Sullivan think they were going to say pulled the
trigger in Dallas?
PBS and its Nova series is about to do it again. Except this
time, its not with Russo and Myers. If you can believe it, it's with
McAdams. Question for producer/director Rush DeNooyer: Have you ever
heard of the phrase, gigo? This is computerese for "Garbage in, garbage
out". In other words, the state of the art technology one uses is
worthless unless it is guided by the best information available on the
JFK case.
What good is it to test the rifle and ammunition if you say that "it
was used by Lee Harvey Oswald". As I showed at the beginning of this
article, that is certainly not a given. And there is no evidence that
Oswald ever purchased that ammunition.
What is the point in showing us high-speed photography of the Western
Cartridge Company bullets in flight if there is no evidence that CE 399
was fired that day, or that the Magic Bullet ever traversed Kennedy's
body?
And what in heaven's name is a "Virtual Autopsy"? Frank O'Neill, one
of the FBI agents at the autopsy later said about Arlen Specter, anytime
one does an autopsy without the body, that is not medicine. It is magic.
Which is how the autopsy by the Clark Panel in 1968 moved the head wound
up four inches in Kennedy's skull. And why the HSCA in 1979 stuck with
that higher wound but lowered the back wound. Will this show explain how
and why these events happened? And will the show explain that this is
very, very unusual, that is bullet wounds moving around in corpses.
Will the "virtual autopsy" explain why, if Kennedy was killed by two
bullets, neither of the bullet tracks was dissected? Will the "virtual
autopsy" explain to the viewers why Kennedy's brain was not weighed the
night of the autopsy? Will the "virtual autopsy" explain why none of the
malleable probes used that night even remotely matched up with the
needed trajectory of the magic bullet? If one cannot even pose these
questions, then what is the program about?
Well, we know what it is about, because McAdams is associated with
it. Its about PBS preserving its funding by covering up the death of
President Kennedy. And with the use of McAdams, DeNooyer is not even
making an effort to cover up his tracks. He wants to keep his job. He
wants Nova to stick around. And if he has to (literally) walk over the
dead body of President Kennedy, hey that's fine. People have to make a
living. Therefore, DeNooyer is still going to recycle the whole Warren
Commission spiel about the Magic Bullet, and the 6.5 Carcano and can
this rifle do this and can this bullet do that and could Oswald do what
no other marksman had ever done.
Oh, my aching back. Please give us all a break from this stale,
hoary, antique and sickening charade. PBS was created as an alternative
to the MSM. Here, they have become so susceptible to political pressure
they are now imitating the MSM. Why not get Dan Rather to host the show?
VI
"Liberals are like ducks in water in academia."
John McAdams
Which leaves us with a question about McAdams: who is he actually? As
I have tried to show here, to think of him purely in relation to the JFK
case is a grave error. His domain is wider than that. Which is why he
does such lousy research on the Kennedy murder. But we should recall,
many rightwing operatives do the JFK hit piece first to prove their bona
fides to their benefactors e.g. David Horowitz.
In recent years, the CIA has had an officer in residence program.
That is a CIA officer takes a sabbatical or is retired and takes up
teaching duties at a university. (Independent Online, "CIA's Man
on Campus", by Jon Elliston, November 29, 2000) Various big universities
were cooperating with the program. One of them was Marquette. The CIA
proudly said the program was overt. So the invaluable Daniel Brandt
decided to test the CIA's word on this issue. He wrote a letter to the
CIA in February of 2001. He asked them for a list of all CIA personnel
who participated in the this program since it began in 1985. Daniel
wanted the years of participation, the campus, and the name of the
participant. After one year, he got no reply.
So in March of 2002, he filed a Freedom of Information Act request on
this same subject. Three months later, he got a reply. The reply said
that "the information you seek must be denied since it is classified
under the provisions of Executive Order 12958." Brandt concluded that
the CIA's overt academic program was a PR front. And the campus was just
another tool used for the CIA's secret operations.
Consider one last interesting twist to our story of John McAdams. In
early 2009, researcher Pat Speer happened to google the name of the
professor. He came upon an acappella internet radio station that the
professor ran as a sidelight. Or was it just a sidelight? Because Speer
noted that the ads on the web site were all paid for by the CIA. They
had the CIA emblem on them. One read things next to the emblem like,
"The Work of a Nation, the Center of Intelligence". Another recruitment
ad read, "You can make a world of difference: National Clandestine
Service Careers." When Pat asked the professor about his sponsor,
McAdams said he was innocent, it was all just a coincidence.
Oh really? I suppose the CIA meeting about discrediting COPA
occurring before Paul Nolan met Matt Labash was also just a coincidence.
We should all now be a little wiser about the associate professor and
his transparently phony products.
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