JFK Files Reveal Shocking Revelations
By Clay Hamric
News November 8, 2017 Since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, conspiracies have followed everywhere. People have cited everything from the direction Kennedy’s head went to the view from the “Sniper’s Nest” to claim more was at hand than the government told us.
The CIA has been forced to release the files from the Kennedy investigation due to a 1992 law passed by Congress in order to “quiet the conspiracy theorists.” The documents released thus far have instead blown the lid off the conspiracy theories. One of the main theories has been that Lee Harvey Oswald was not the assassin. According to the files, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover told his staff in a private memo that it was important to “convince the public that Oswald is the real assassin.” On the other hand, interviews with the CIA director Richard Helms in 1975 seem to suggest Oswald was not only the killer, but played an even greater role. Helms was asked in the interview if any information showed that “Oswald was in some way a CIA agent.” The interview mysteriously cuts off after that question. The idea of Oswald working for the government of the president he shot is a shocking revelation. However, documents also show that even the Soviet Union privately believed the assassination was an inside job. According to them, Soviet spies had evidence linking the assassination to the vice president Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson took power after Kennedy’s death. Many cite Kennedy’s strong dislike for the CIA and his wish to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it into the winds.” This would support the evidence that Oswald was working for the CIA to stop Kennedy. Others cite Kennedy’s attempt to get rid of the Federal Reserve as a reason for the assassination. It has been theorized that bankers linked to the Federal Reserve paid off the government to perform the killing. Another file, unrelated to Kennedy, managed to slip through and cause attention. This file states that a CIA informant had evidence of Adolf Hitler and other top Nazi officers living in the city of Tunja, Colombia during the 1950s. There has always been strong evidence that Hitler did not commit suicide but rather fled with others to South America after World War II. The JFK files, meant to put out the fire of conspiracies for good, have managed to just pour more gasoline on the blaze. The truth behind the assassination of this American hero may never be known, though the evidence continues to stack through the years. |
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