Martin Luther King’s Son Says: James Earl Ray didn’t kill MLK! by Lisa Pease.
Saturday, 27 March 2021 17:51

Tom Bethell: A Study in Duplicity

Jim DiEugenio takes the occasion of Tom Bethell’s recent passing to review his literary career and especially his intriguing early connections to the JFK assassination research community and work on the Jim Garrison investigation.
With the looming October deadline for President Biden’s decision on the release of the remaining files from the JFK Records Act, Benjamin Cole reviews President Trump’s recent history with the National Security State and revisits President Nixon’s interactions with CIA director Richard Helms with implications toward the JFK assassination.
Published in General
Aaron Good shares Part 1 of his review of Adam Curtis’ Can’t Get You Out of My Head, which examines the problems with Curtis’ view of postwar US hegemony and his obscurantist tendencies regarding US monetary policy and international finance.
Published in General
Saturday, 17 April 2021 17:50

Fred Litwin on the Facts of the JFK Case

Matt Douthit reviews Fred Litwin’s book, I Was a Teenage JFK Conspiracy Freak, chapter-by-chapter with respect to the facts of the case as they stand today.
Saturday, 17 April 2021 23:00

Fred Litwin Smooches Clay Shaw’s Lawyers

Jim DiEugenio calls into question the credibility of Fred Litwin’s primary sources for his book On the Trail of Delusion by exposing the clear deceptions of Clay Shaw’s lawyers regarding Shaw’s long-standing connection to the Central Intelligence Agency.
Jim DiEugenio outlines and hints at who and what was involved in the defense of Clay Shaw against Jim Garrison. The reader will note that the trail seems to lead above New Orleans and into higher echelons of power in Washington, D.C. (From the archives of Probe Magazine)
Sunday, 18 April 2021 23:00

Bill and Ed's Washington Adventure

Jim DiEugenio documents that intervention by the CIA—and other federal bureaus—on behalf of Clay Shaw and against Jim Garrison was actively sought by Shaw’s defense, and as early as May of 1967, was officially approved by the CIA, and later, other agencies. (From the archives of Probe Magazine)
Milicent Cranor determines that, despite its flaws, Last Second in Dallas is a stimulating book about an eternal puzzle concerning the confounding details of this monumental murder. Josiah Thompson’s book is rich in detail and a lot of it is factual and not well-known.

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