We discovered some fascinating evidence that George Bush was
directly involved in the murder of President John F Kennedy, the latest of
which evidence comes from the late Roger Craig.
The evidence seems overwhelming that George Herbert Walker
Bush was in Dealey Plaza at the time of the president’s murder, supervising the
Cubans involved in the assassination squad. Evidence for Bush’s involvement is
legion.
Bush denies remembering where he was on November 22d,
largely because he can’t remember which lie he should tell about it. It saves
him the embarrassing contradictions in which Nixon found himself when
explaining his whereabouts on that day.
But not remembering one’s location on that historic and
traumatic day doesn’t pass the laugh test although Bush did manage to laugh about
it at Gerald Ford’s funeral – precisely when he mentioned the murder. The laugh
speaks volumes of Bush’s contempt for Kennedy.
We have written previously about the memo which Hoover wrote
about a meeting he had with “Mr George Bush of the CIA” – a memo which
irrefutably links Bush with the CIA operating under cover as an “independent
oil man from Houston.” We reported in a recent blog posting identifying Hunt as
Bush’s case officer in the CIA. These two independent witnesses help cement
Bush’s involvement with the agency as well as his presence in the City of Hate
on the day he helped murder the president.
Bush was on business for the CIA which is why he had official communication with the FBI and most likely Hoover himself in Washington, DC the following day. His official post was Dallas.
Bush’s cover story is that he spoke at an oil convention –
the Dallas based American Association of Oil Well Drilling Contractors, but this
is at best plausible deniability. The important point is that this story demonstrates that he was in Dallas,
a fact which the Dallas Morning News reported occurring on the evening of
November 21, 1963. Indeed, he stayed at the Sheraton Hotel which was also
headquarters of Secret Service communications and other elements coordinating
the assassination.
Many have covered the James Parrot story in which Bush called
the FBI to warm it about suspicious activity of Parrot. But Parrot worked for
Bush, and Bush used this lame story to provide an alibi for his non-presence in
Dallas. Unfortunately, the lady doth protest too much.
The Tyler, TX story – the one where Bush supposedly called
the FBI from Tyler is a giant hoax. It didn’t happen. Someone
impersonating Bush made the call because Bush was too busy supervising the assassination
at that time. As we will show momentarily, Bush was nowhere near Tyler.
The aforementioned memo’s citation of the “mis-guided”
anti-Castro Cubans clearly associates Bush with Alpha 66, Operation 40, and groups
the CIA was training for assassination duty. The pretext is that it was
against Castro, but the plan was always against Kennedy. But how do we know
that?
A CIA pilot told the story of George Bush being the pay
master for Castro. We have posted elsewhere in this Chronicle that Cuba was an
invention – a hoax – to justify covert and bellicose operations – to justify
the permanent war and police state. Castro was on the CIA payroll and has
always been a pawn of the New York banksters.
Now here is the kicker, as John Hankey quotes Dallas Deputy
Sheriff Roger Craig speaking with Jim Garrison, the New Orleans district
attorney who prosecuted Clay Shaw for his involvement with the murder:
“Jim also asked me about the arrests made in Dealey Plaza that day. I
told him I knew of twelve arrests, one in particular made by R. E. Vaughn of
the Dallas Police Department. The man Vaughn arrested was coming from the
Dal-Tex Building across from the Texas School Book Depository. The only thing
which Vaughn knew about him was that he was an independent oil operator from
Houston, Texas. The prisoner was taken from Vaughn by Dallas Police detectives
and that was the last that he saw or heard of the suspect.”
(emphasis added)
Here is extraordinary evidence that George Bush was arrested
in Dallas at the time of the assassination. But why was he arrested? We diverge
from Hankey’s explanation that he was caught where he wasn’t supposed to be.
Citizens knew that bullets were fired from Dal-Tex and were jeering the people
coming out. The police were providing Bush an escort of safety from one of the
crime scenes, as the Dallas Police were heavily involved in the murder.
Thus an enormous amount of evidence places George Bush in
the City of Hate and Dealey Plaza on 11/21-22. The evidence consists of newspaper
accounts, FBI memoranda, photographs, and first person witness accounts. George
Herbert Walker Bush murdered John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
http://bookoflife.org/history/usa/1963/military_complex_a.htm
ReplyDeletemerry Christmas
http://bookoflife.org/history/usa/1963/military_complex_a.htm
ReplyDeleteBush gave himself away with his stupid grin & outburst of laughter when questioned by the Dallas Police about the JFK shooting. He has pseudo-bulbar syndrome. Which runs in his family. A normal person doesn't burst out laughing at the death of a president. Unless he is a psychopath or has a medical condition like peudo-bulbar syndrome.
ReplyDeleteWell I guess that's what he has then. He wasn't even in Dallas on the 22nd. He was in Tyler Texas
DeleteThis article is the biggest crock of crap (almost) I've ever read about the assassination. Why would the head of an agency like the CIA have to put someone like Bush's position at the scene of a murder for all to see. When the mob puts a hit on someone do they have the mob leader at the scene of the crime? Of course not. George Bush did not have anything to do with the assassination other than taking part in training the Cuban exiles. The infamous picture that you see that people claim to be George Bush is not George Bush. How do you supervise an assassination?"okay shooter #1 You fire when I scratch my chin. Shooter 2 You fire when I grab my crotch. How do you supervise an assassination when you're you're surrounded with hundreds of people? This story is a crock of 💩
DeleteWhat a crock of shit
ReplyDelete