I am concerned that, at the end of it all, there will only be more Americans killed; more of our treasure spilled out; and because of the bitterness and hatred on every side of this war, more hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese slaughtered; so that they may say, as Tacitus said of Rome: “They made a desert and called it peace.”
~ Robert F. Kennedy, from a speech during his Presidential campaign, Kansas State University, March 18, 1968
JFK: Destiny Betrayed
Available for purchase at: amazon.com (US)
Available for purchase at: iTunes (Canada)
A Special Request
- A Special Request from Editor and Publisher Jim DiEugenioWritten by James DiEugenio
Jim DiEugenio makes a special appeal to our readers for assistance in exposing the truth in the JFK, RFK, MLK, and Malcolm X assassinations.
JFK Revisited: For the Record Interview Series
- Dave Emory's 27-part series on JFK Revisited, with Jim DiEugenioWritten by Kennedys&King
Dave Emory's Record Breaking 27-part Salute to Oliver Stone's JFK Revisited and JFK: Destiny Betrayed. Featuring Jim DiEugenio, David Talbot, John Newman, Gary Aguilar, Lisa Pease, and Paul Bleau.
JFK at Sixty: Sixty Reasons
JFK at Sixty: Sixty Reasons
Scottish researcher Johnny Cairns outlines 60 reasons disproving the official Warren Commission conclusions.
- Part 1 of 6: No Motive, plus the Silenced Witnesses
- Part 2 of 6: Jack Ruby, the Dallas Police and Oswald's Rights
- Part 3 of 6: The Contamination of Evidence, the Inadmissible Lineups and the Autopsy
- Part 4 of 6: Medical Witnesses and a Questionable Rifle
- Part 5 of 6: The Rifle and the Ammunition
- Part 6 of 6: Sixth Floor Evidence
Featured Articles & Reviews
- The JFK Assassination CHOKEHOLDSWritten by Kennedys&King
In an interview with his knowledgeable daughter, Paul Bleau previews the new book he helped write, The JFK Assassination Chokeholds. The book is a deep look at the evidentiary and legal basis through which Oswald would have been exonerated of killing President Kennedy. In fact, with this evidence in the record, the case might have not gone to trial.
- The Dallas Police Convicted Oswald without a Trial - Part 1/2Written by Johnny Cairns
Johnny Cairns exposes the wildly unethical and irresponsible behavior of the Dallas law authorities, behavior which deprived Lee Oswald of any possibility of a fair trial, — and ultimately took his life away.
- The Dallas Police Convicted Oswald without a Trial - Part 2/2Written by Johnny Cairns
In part two, Johnny Cairns shows how all quarters objected to the Dallas Police and DA convicting Oswald in the press when he had no attorney to reply. These critics included the ACLU, Percy Foreman, the American Bar Association, the New York TImes, and even J. Edgar Hoover and the Warren Commission.
- The Tippit Tapes: A Re-examinationWritten by John Washburn
In a new examination of the Dallas Police tapes, John Washburn demonstrates how it is almost a certainty that the tapes have been altered, and altered in a way that indicates a deliberate cover up for malignant reasons.
- Four Died Trying, Chapter OneWritten by Jerry Fresia
Former history professor Jerry Fresia comments on the first installment of the distinguished series by Libby Handros and John Kirby on the four major assassinations of the sixties, the circumstances surrounding them, and their impact on history.
- Under Cover of Night, by Sean Fetter, Part 1Written by James DiEugenio
This review of Sean Fetter's Under Cover of Night explains how it descends from the book Murder From Within, contains weakly supported assertions, and is packed with personal attacks.
- Under Cover of Night, by Sean Fetter, Part 2Written by James DiEugenio
In this volume, Fetter makes his case for a conspiracy, one featuring Lyndon Johnson and, of all people, the deceased House Speaker Sam Rayburn. To say that it does not work is being much too kind to the author.
- Deanne Stillman’s 'American Confidential' ExposedWritten by Johnny Cairns
Our own Johnny Cairns exposes MSM author and playwright Deanne Stillman’s attempt to caricature Lee Oswald and his mother in a non-referenced and ill-informed book that is anything but confidential.
- New book on the HSCA by Tim SmithWritten by James DiEugenio
In his new book titled Hidden in Plain Sight, Tim Smith describes and analyzes the evidence in the public testimony of the House Select Committee public hearings, the last investigation. Did it prove what the Committee said it did?
- Brad Pitt, Joyce Carol Oates and the Road to Blonde: Part 1/2Written by James DiEugenio
Jim DiEugenio analyzes the persons—Jeanne Carmen and Fred Otash—and books—by Tony Summers and Robert Slatzer—involved in the descending landmarks that resulted in Joyce Carol Oates’ pulp novel about Marilyn Monroe, Blonde.
- Brad Pitt, Joyce Carol Oates and the Road to Blonde: Part 2/2Written by James DiEugenio
In part 2, DiEugenio specifically addresses both films of the Oates’ novel, the CBS version and especially Brad Pitt’s 2022 production. Both are worthless, especially Pitt’s, but in examining them the author reveals something sick about a culture that forces complex and sympathetic people into exploitative piles of junk.
From The Archives
Political Assassinations of the 1960s
The sixties saw four significant political assassinations that have bled into history. These include the deaths of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X., Martin Luther King Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy.
The tragedies shook Americans to the core – the political leaders they had seen a glimmer of hope ended up facing the same fate.
JFK’s death, perhaps, shook people the most.
To this day, Americans talk about their lost heroes in a golden light.
Here’s a short summary of political assassinations of the 1960s:
- On November 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy was shot by Lee Harvey Oswald while riding a motorcycle in Dallas, Texas.
- On February 21, 1965, Malcolm X was gunned down by three men.
- On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was hit by a sniper’s bullet while he was standing on the balcony in front of his room in Lorraine Motel, Memphis, Tennessee.
- On June 5, 1968, Robert F. Kennedy was shot shortly after midnight at the Ambassador Hotel, LA.
Looking for facts behind political murders in the sixties? Go through our insightful resources!