59 years ago, President John F. Kennedy was killed in broad daylight.
It starts with Operation Northwoods, a proposed false flag operation that originated within the US Department of Defense in 1962. The proposals called for CIA operatives to both stage and commit acts of terrorism against American military and civilian targets, blaming them on the Cuban government and using them to justify a war against Cuba.
The list of potential attacks detailed in the document included…
• The remote control of civilian aircraft, which would be secretly repainted as US Air Force planes.
• A fabricated ‘shoot down’ of a US Air Force fighter aircraft off the coast of Cuba.
• The assassination of Cuban immigrants by sinking boats of Cuban refugees on the high seas.
• Blowing up a U.S. ship and orchestrating terrorism in U.S. cities.
The plan was drafted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, signed by Chairman Lyman Lemnitzer, and sent to the Secretary of Defense before it was rejected by JFK.

In the nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union that would have followed such an attack, more than 300 million human beings worldwide would have been killed. There already existed great distrust towards Kennedy among those in the military and intelligence community who perceived him as having mishandled the CIA’s ill-conceived Bay of Pigs invasion.
Following his rejection of Operation Northwoods, this distrust deepened further. At this time, the Kennedy brothers were making big changes and making powerful enemies in the process. As JFK was working to end the Cold War and the growing power of the Military Industrial Complex, his brother Robert was prosecuting organized crime figures with ties to the mafia who had lots of political influence at the time.
The President and his brother were becoming a problem.
Shortly after JFK was assassinated in Dallas, Lyndon Johnson took over as President. Once in power, President Johnson began escalating the war in Vietnam.
All based on very bad gouge…or just lies.
There were reports that Vietnamese torpedo boats had fired on the USS Maddox in the Gulf of Tonkin. Knowing these reports were false, Johnson retaliated with an attack that never occurred. By the end of the war in Southeast Asia, 58,000 Americans and 2 million Asians had been killed.
Of course, billions of dollars had been made in the process.
A conspiracy theory that, like MK Ultra, will be proven true–JFK was the ONLY one who wouldn’t sign off on staging a false flag to kill Americans to start a war. Now they do it all the time…the Boston Bombing, the Oklahoma Bombing, and the Las Vegas Shooting just to name a few.
So it goes.
I was alive on the day JFK died, and to this day, I still remember that day quite well, as well as the days preceding that fatal day, as the trip to Texas by Kennedy had been a hot topic of conversation where I was attending high school at the time.
When the news that Kennedy had been shot came over the school intercom, I was a junior in high school, and I was sitting in a study hall in the school cafeteria, and on hearing the news, a friend of mine and I looked at each other and pretty much simultaneously said, “wow, they did it,” because to be truthful, all of us were expecting it to happen, which history has been subsequently scrubbed and altered, for the “good of the nation.”
Why did we expect Kennedy to be killed in Texas?
Because it was thought, whether totally true or not, that Kennedy was hated and despised by the people of Texas, probably for many reasons.
As we understood it before he went to Texas, his reason for going was to demonstrate to the people of America who didn’t live in Texas that there was NO state in the Union that an American president could not go, and the reason for the open car was to demonstrate to the people of America, including the Texans, that JFK was not a craven coward, for which he had my admiration, anyway.
That is what I remember, but if one reads subsequent history, all of that has been changed, especially with regard to the feelings of the people of Texas towards Kennedy, and I still recall the discussions after JFK was killed about how that history was going to be changed, lest the people of Texas be reviled forever as the killers of an American president, for the “good of the nation.”
Such it was as I remember it to this day.