This a presumably modern video made for an old song… I wonder how they did this? I am assuming it was done in after effects with some kind of “old film” filter / LUT applied on top of it? How you think they did it? The tunnel effect at 25 seconds in particularly intrigues me…. They could have used just any kind of 3D app, but I wonder if it wasn’t something in After Effects. One way they could have done would be to make a light grey and black striped surface at the top of a Photoshop file and then colored stripes on the bottom half of the image- then apply a cylinder effect in After Effects. But they had the camera move like it was a round donut, and then the tunnel does an “S Turn” after a point. Can this be done in after effects?
My attempt to duplicate the shot with a grey and black striped Photoshop image with the After Effects “CC Cylinder” effect applied to it. I made it a 3D object and had the 3D camera move through it:
I still haven’t figured out how to make a curved tunnel in after effects.
Animated cartoon Octopus made for an upcoming music show promo.
I hand drew the octopus in Adobe Animate, and composited into the scene by making the octopus a “3D Object” with a “floor” (water surface) made as a “cloud” in Adobe Photoshop. I added a ripple effect to the water in After Effects.
In front of the octopus I added a layer with bubbles.
The I added a brief fade in glow behind the octopus by duplicating the layer, and adding stylize> glow and radial blue and light streaks. I had it dissolve in by moving the TRANSPARENCY from zero to 100 a second later, then back down to zero another second later after that.
This was my first attempt:
I realized that the front arm of the octopus looked odd in a 3D scene.
So i sunk the octopus lower, so that it was partially under water. I duplicated the water layer and reduced its opacity to 75 percent. ( i had to make a copy of that water later and move it lower and under the first water layer. That way the black background wouldn’t make the water look darker.
This was my second render attempt.
You will note that I didn’t add the band logos over this render attempt. This time, I rendered that as a separate composition (with an Alpha channel) to be added later.
I did NOT do the actual book cover design. I downloaded the book cover artwork off of Amazon.com and cut it up into layers in Adobe Photoshop.
I mainly used the bezier pen tool to isolate the objects into layers. Some of the letter were isolated with Photoshop’s “Magic Wand” tool and other I just typed in using the IMPACT font ( heavily modified through scaling and kerning).
I imported the Adobe Photoshop (dot PSD) file into Adobe After Effects and animated them.
This piece of motion graphics may be used in a future podcast.
Welcome to another edition of On the Trail of Delusion where we try to separate the wheat from the chaff separate fact from fiction and try to give you something a little more substantial than the conspiracy nonsense you typically get on YouTube today my guest is Michel Gagne who is the author of an amazing book called Thinking Critically About the Kennedy Assassination: Debunking the Myths and Conspiracy Theories and here is a copy of his book i hardily recommend it this should be in every single library well every personal library about the JFK assassination and of course in libraries around the world Michel is a teacher he teaches in Montreal at a CJP which is sort of a a college and teaches a course on conspiracy he also has a podcast PARANOID PLANET about conspiracy thinking and a variety of topics and so it’s just want to welcome you to On the Trail of Delusion well thanks Fred it’s it’s nice to see each other again i think we’ve done this a few times but it’s the first time on your podcast So let’s let’s start off and tell me a bit about how you got interested in the JFK assassination uh well like many of us I mean I’m Gen X i was born in 72 so I’m in my early 50s uh I was in university when the Oliver Stone film came out i took my mother to see it for Mother’s Day back in what was it 90 I guess it was Mother’s Day 1992 it was still kind of lingering in some of the smaller movie houses back then and I I I don’t I didn’t become a conspiracist overnight but it kind of just sat with me and became part of the the zeitgeist
you know like I I remember Guns and Roses had some lyrics about you know uh who was there when we shot Kennedy and the and also the the Rolling Stones had a lot of the music I was listening to stuff on the Simpsons you know who killed Mr burns of these things kind of fed reminded me about this whole enigma about the man on the grassy knoll and I think I was on a trip to Europe with a choir back in ’95 i took a year off studies and it was just this ongoing joke about the man on the grassy null and I think by the time I came back went back to university and kind of and the internet was around right the internet emerged somewhere around between ’92 and 95 so now there’s access to these other things and I remember trying to read the transcript of the uh the garrison trial of Klay Shaw particularly the deposition or the the um what do you call it the Yeah is it do you call it a deposition in court the testimony yeah yeah and I remember being left in my hunger though it didn’t make me think less that there was a conspiracy theory because at the same time I started following Fletcher Prouty (o3:35:17) There’s a man he was a young man at that time called Len Osanic who before we had podcasts had this internet radio program called Black Op Radio so I guess from Oliver Stone I kind of discovered Mr X (0:03:45:15) Mr Colonel Prouty through Len Osanic’s website I went to visit Len Osanic when I took some high school students on an exchange trip to Vancouver And so I remember sitting in his studio when he was interviewing somebody about I think it was flight 800 it had nothing to do with the Kennedy but we’d certainly talked a lot about Oliver Stone and Kennedy after that so I guess around that time this was the early 2000s I was hooked i was into it i was even telling my high school students: “Oh you know this conspiracy theory has got to be real.” and I would even lecture about it at lunchtime you know showing the the impossibility of the magic bullet so I think all of those things made me obsessive over Kennedy (0:04:33:23) and I mean there were personal issues as well I think emotional issues that made me want to believe that someone was out to get me and it took it was only about 2011 after I started teaching in a in a college so a seup is a a junior college
which is kind of I would say it’s a bridge between high school and university that doesn’t exist in the United States or in the rest of Canada but it’s like a grade 12 freshman year combined
and that’s when I actually started teaching critical thinking and I wanted to teach a course on conspiracy theories
I didn’t believe in most conspiracy theories (0:05:18:04)
i had a very quick kind of slow interest in 9/11 conspiracy theories
but eventually I realized no it wasn’t a missile that hit the Pentagon 0:05:11:18
and I think from that I started kind of reverse engineering my own beliefs about Kennedy until I took out the Warren Report from our college library 0:05:20:23 back in 2011 or so and I looked all over for that zigzagging bullet and I didn’t find it and that’s when I lost my faith in Oliver Stone 0:05:26:01 that was the time that was the point in my life when I said why did he have to lie about that to try to get me to believe in a conspiracy so there’s a long answer for you but between Oliver Stone’s film in ’91 and my reading of the Warren report in 2011 so that’s a 20-year period I was in the rabbit hole and I eventually clawed my way out many people don’t but I managed to I think yeah I’m really happy you did as as did I and some other people how long did did that journey take you to really climb out I I remember around 2002 or I was reading a book on 9/11 conspiracy theories my brother came into the room he goes “It was a plane.” I’m like “Oh come on.”
You know and and then eventually he sent I don’t know if it was he or someone else sent me a website and it was one of these debunking websites about 911 and I think because I wasn’t as invested in 911 it was easy for me to kind of take a step back and go “Well what if I am wrong about this uh it took a lot longer for me to be willing to reconsider the whole Kennedy thing so it started kind of with realizing that 9/11 wasn’t an inside job it was it was an inside job in the sense that there were 19 you know hijackers a nd maybe maybe the FBI CIA kind of let it happen or at least were I think it was just you know really neglectful investigations
but it explained to me how these things can happen without a grand conspiracy and uh and I think from there I kind of eventually realized there’s more there’s more information uh I I went to grad school of course in the early 2000s and I think having to do your own archival research and I know you do that a lot of that now that goes a long way to make you understand all the minutiae of history that 7:22 and ironically I think it’s um it was Tink Thompson the famous JFK conspiracy theorist who was in it a short documentary by Errol Morris it’s called the Umbrella Man and Ting Thompson although I disagree with almost everything he says I wrote a very scathing review of Last Second in Dallas but he was right in this one thing is that when it came to the umbrella man so many people jump to conclusions without understanding that there’s a whole other story there that makes no sense to anybody except Louis Steven Whit the man with the umbrella and the reason he was there was not to shoot at Kennedy was to protest you know um uh the way that Joe Kennedy senior had encouraged the uh the British premier prime minister to uh uh what’s the word um to go easy on Hitler to appease Hitler that’s right so this idea that history it’s kind of like quantum mechanics and Hollywood movies have this economy of character characters everything has to fall in line there has to be kind of one single narrative thread history doesn’t work like that so I think going to grad school doing a lot of um archival research in my case it was on the Northern Ireland troubles I realized that the story we hear even sometimes we read in academic textbooks is a streamlined story that gives no room for chaos and chance and that’s really what I think happened with Kennedy is I realized there’s a lot more chaos and chance happening than people give it uh do and and that’s a big reason that made me kind of step back so I was not brainwashed by the CIA i was not uh compelled or or uh threatened in any way uh I just I just realized that I was I was listening to a very simplistic story that turned out to be manipulative and wrong it’s kind of funny when when when people sometimes people ask me if I believe in any conspiracies and when I tell them that yeah al-Qaeda conspired to bring down the World Trade Center then they look at me they don’t like that conspiracy yeah that that one doesn’t quite fit when when when you when you finally sort of changed your mind on the Kennedy assassination how did how did you feel i mean I mean for me it was a it was like a feeling of of relief i don’t know it was a feeling of oh my god it all makes sense now it’s like I I just felt this calmness overtake me how did you feel uh I felt the same way but not immediately i think at first I felt stupid and I think this is one of the reasons I got into conspiracy theories in the first place is growing up you know I was bullied uh like a lot of kids my generation parents divorced but uh there was no supervision left alone a lot and um you know and so there was a lot of opportunities there for me to either feel neglected or taken advantage of by you know older siblings kids in the street things like that and I think there was a certain sense of anxiety about safety about the world being an unpredictable place and conspiracy theories do give you a kind of a false sense of security you know who to blame you could point your finger i wrote a whole concluding chapter in my book about scapegoating so I think in that sense the conspiracy theories had given me a way of understanding history it wasn’t accurate but at least it fit with how I understood the world um so at first you know how sometimes when you feel embarrassed you say something stupid at a party or whatever your ears get warm and you start wondering like okay did any everybody see me you feel like you’re walking around naked in front of a crowd i think initially I kind of felt like that which is why I was reluctant to pick up the Warren report just in case it had something but by 2011 what was upsetting me more is whenever I taught about the Kennedy assassination in my conspiracies class and usually I focused on UFOs and other things but whenever I did I realized how excited I was getting as if I have to defend this almost like it’s a point of faith and uh I grew up in the Christian faith you grew up in the Jewish faith you know sometimes we feel as though we don’t understand something but it has to be true otherwise everything else falls apart right we can maybe hold on to some principle and over time I’ve had enough enough brushes with doubt in my faith that I realized that it’s not the end of the world to be wrong about something because the truth is the truth and it might actually make you more grounded in the things that are true and make you able to look past the things that are not and I think it was the same thing so because I was feeling this anxiety teaching about Kennedy (11:38) because I thought I knew the story but I realized I never read Posner,i never read the Warren Commission report i never read the HSCA report and by that time around 2008 Vincent Bugliosi’s book came out it was just getting trashed by the conspiracist media that I was reading and I thought wow that must be a horrible book uh but it was so big and so expensive I didn’t want to actually read it myself so eventually I think I had to I had to overcome that look if I need to prove that my position is right I need to be able to understand my my enemy’s position is the more I read my enemy’s position you know I did read Posner I did read some I don’t think I’ve read all of Bugliosi has anybody I mean it’s just it’s just huge I mean there’s like 900 pages of footnotes on a CD ROM how do you get through that but I did read big chunks of it and eventually I thought story makes so much more sense it’s simple It’s it’s easy to grasp it doesn’t ask me to imagine human beings as they are in movies you know they’re not Darth Vader they’re not Sauron like me they desire things they hate things they fear things and in the end sometimes they act rashly and all of that fit Lee Oswald so I was listen to I was listening to one of your previous podcasts where you were talking about um that biography of Lee Oswald and and I forget the name of your guest there um that of Scott Mosley that’s right and uh and I remember he brought up this you know that once you look into Oswald’s life you realize there’s no need for the CIA to explain who this guy is from a young age particularly if you’ve grown up like I did in a broken home from a young age these anxieties mount up and you can either become the resilient survivor or you become the victim who perpetually blames other people and at some point lashes out somehow and maybe this is a good time for me to say this but we might talk about Oliver Stone later on i have a lot of I don’t know if it’s empathy i I have some sympathy for Oliver Stone because as a Vietnam veteran he’s what Jonathan Kay calls a a damaged survivor right he’s looking for some reason that could say my friends didn’t die for nothing right he saw people’s heads blow off and you know he got into drugs he you know it was a horrible experience i completely sympathize with how angry he must feel about the Vietnam War but it doesn’t mean you make up stuff right it doesn’t mean that you somehow falsify history in order to justify your position and so he was at it again a couple weeks ago which is sad uh I’m more upset at the other people like Dugeno and uh and so on who I don’t think have a reason to have that veil over their eyes they just they’re just really bad critical thinkers um so I I forgot what your question was there but once you get to know Lee Oswald’s personal life yeah from there you can kind of understand how the other people are acting you know everybody is and I I pardon the expression but I sometimes say things to my this to my students you know the CIA what they ultimately do is you know f around and cover their asses you know uh it’s only after that they can rationalize that it was all for national security but in the moment of kind of anticipation of danger you do a lot of stupid things and then you realize you went too far and I think when we look around what was happening in Mexico City uh the way that the FBI was scrging around trying to find Oswald but not really find O look for Oswald you know there’s a lot of incompetence and a lot of shortness of time and we all cut corners and and unfortunately security agencies do that as well you know a lot of these security agents for for Kennedy were drinking the night before that is preposterous but it’s humanity so at some point we have to look all of this and I use I used this word uh I think it was the Cohen brothers who used in the movie it’s a it’s a cluster [ ] you know it’s one of these events that makes no sense until you realize that there’s bungling on a whole bunch of different sides including Oswald who’s trying to figure out until the last minute what to do and how to do it and how to run away right i don’t think you even thought about that until the third shot rang up um so anyway so I I’ll stop there because I think I’ve rambled i I think you’re raising a really good point about the fact look you know we’re talking about human beings here and so human beings you know make mistakes they do all sorts of things that maybe we can’t personally understand um I I mean you just find the conspiracy theorists who just don’t seem to accept that there might be an error in a document that the CIA sometimes makes a mistake or misfiles something or or or you know we even have people analyzing the routing slips for the CI documents and trying to oh my god this doesn’t make sense but you know would it would it make sense i mean it’s you know I worked I I worked at Intel for 9 years and if you looked at the emails I received from various people I mean why am I copied on this email i don’t I’m not interested but I’m copied doesn’t make any sense so that human factor is just missing from conspiracy books yeah two things the hobos right the uh the three men who were found the tramps who were found in this railway car actually like a half mile from Dy Plaza turns out they weren’t really all that close uh their booking slips were misplaced for was it 20 25 years 30 years and it was a conspiracist author who found them so eventually we found out oh so it wasn’t you know eh Howard Hunt after all uh the other thing is yeah I got copied on a list of Freemasons you know back in the 90s when I was really into these conspiracy theories I I had a colleague whose friend who family friend was in the Freemasons and kind of looking for all these Masonic secrets in Nova Scotia with Lee lines and basically rock formations that they thought were like ancient druidic temples or or you know things from the uh the Nice Templar i don’t know what it was but I kind of got into that he sent me some emails and eventually I started receiving emails from these Freemasons talking to each other and I’m like “Uh guys I’m not sure I’m meant to be here you know because I didn’t want to get in trouble.” So eventually they took me off their list so I can understand how a journalist will get uh you know information about bombing Yemen uh by accident when people are just not paying attention yeah and you know I mean it’s when I was back in conspiracy land I used to I used to feel a special bond with my conspiracy books you know there was like all this like sort of special knowledge that you know that I had access to and and and I could tell people about they weren’t that interested but I knew and it was like all this special stuff and then you change your mind you realize oh my god what’s in those books is pretty is a lot of nonsense yeah i remember reading I I see it over there across the room there this big fat book by um Mike Roupert called Crossing the Rubicon and Rupert was this uh Californiabased exapd guy who was really obsessed with the concept of peak oil and I remember reading that when I was starting my college career wondering how much of this is real or not but I wanted to believe Mike Rubert cuz he was an LAPD guy he seemed to know what was going on and he had this whole kind of secret personal life about um I guess the CIA trying to tap his phones or or bug his computers whatever it was and it turns out a lot of it was just this paranoia and a few years later you know I found out he shot himself and he was kind of ruined he he was running away to Venezuela he came to Toronto I actually met um one this uh what’s his name he’s a English professor for California but he’s Canadian he used to work in the foreign service area (19:27) peter Dale Scott that’s right i met Peter Dale Scott at McGill University really yeah around 2007 or so and again he was also talking about peak oil and 9/11 and Kennedy and I went to see the Peter Dale Scott to ask him about my grouper he’s like “Well I don’t know you so I don’t know how much I should tell you.” Right there was this cloak and dagger feeling um so what happens is when when you’re trusted in the group you get the stuff you feel initiated but there’s always going to be a a a smaller circle of initiates that you can’t enter it becomes really cultlike um I I never was in a cult per se but having grown up in the evangelical culture there are cultish elements sometimes and there are certain groups that I’ve been to certain churches that I was like okay I’m not sticking around here because this is a step away from the Kool-Aid um so I think having had like that that nearness to extreme fundamentalism made me a little bit more wary of that you know my father was very religious but my father was also very wary of extreme fundamentalism and so I think when I started realizing that my conspiracy quest was leading me in something like that but because it wasn’t religious it didn’t I didn’t realize what it was until later on when I was isolating myself from others very fearful having this very us and them you know um way of thinking and ultimately what’s interesting is I was never on the brunt end of discipline when I was a conspiracist but when I did write my book well then now the the very hateful comment started appearing some on Amazon uh D Eugeno and what’s his name the doctor the uh the oncologist (21:09) dr mantic Dr mantic yes yeah they both wrote some nasty things i also found out that David Mantic phoned Michael Shurmer who who who endorsed the back of my book and really tried to box in Shurmer to prove that Shurmer was incompetent didn’t know anything about the Kennedy assassination of course that’s not why I had Shurmer endorse my book it’s because Shurmer writes about critical thinking all the time i had John McAdams endorse my book because he knew about the Kennedy assassination so it was interesting how the discipline started coming in when they realized that not just that you’re saying bad things about them but you’re also saying I used to be one of them i think there’s more dislike for ex-members because we are apos we’re apostates right we’re not just crit critics who don’t get it we are people who got it and then decided that actually that was wrong very very true i totally agree so tell me a bit about um you know writing of this book or you know why you decided to write it the process of of writing it and the publishing it it’s it’s it’s a terrific book i mean I actually don’t keep this on my bookcase i keep this on my desk as a handy reference because I think it’s such an important book oh thanks Fred that’s that’s very nice of you because at first I was thinking does the world need another Kennedy book i know there’s what something like 30,000 publications on Kennedy so this is just another drop but what I did notice was that there was uh there was a lack of books that were not just skeptical but were looking at the arguments of conspiracists uh Pausner Bouiosi etc are excellent for identifying many of the factual mistakes but they’re lawyers right they’re people who are used to cross-examining witnesses (22:49) and I think they do good jobs in what they do McAdams did write a book called Assassination was it JFK assassination logic yep but it’s not really logic he’s a political scientist it’s more kind of practical wisdom if you wish or identifying um you know vague language and misunderstandings my advantage is that I was although I’m a historian by training I was teaching philosophy in a humanities department one of the courses that we all have to teach in my department whether or not you have a philosophy background is critical thinking and basic the basics of inductive deductive logic uh identifying fallacies these sorts of things and so that that led me to say hey this is not my expertise I better study more about that so I studied a lot of logical theory uh which of course for 17 18 year olds you can only kind of scratch the surface but it taught me to be much more disciplined the way that I study so in a sense what I wanted to do with this book is my problem as an historian even though I had a master’s degree by this point but I could still miss the uh I could still be mis uh misunderstand an argument because I was only looking at the facts and if you line up a bunch of true facts you can still end up with a false conclusion because there’s nothing linking those facts to that conclusion right there’s a there’s a there’s an assumption that these things prove the other but they don’t and I realized that that was a big problem with conspiracy theories it’s not so much that they have bad facts you could they might actually be quite right in fact as you know you argue with a conspiracy theorist and they will they will know the minutia of statistics so much more than any skeptic because they’re absolutely obsessed with it you know um Alex Jones is a great example right he can talk you under the table with statistics but only because he uses them to try to prove something he already believes is true he doesn’t understand anything about inductive or uh deductive logic so I thought that I would expose that the the problems in reasoning so I didn’t want to read every single possible conspiracy book out there i decided I’m going to take a cross-section certainly Garrison is one of them oliver Stone’s one of them uh there was there’s some stuff about Robert Groden in there Fletcher Prrowy Mark Lane and a few others no David Lifton uh James Fetzer David Mantic so I took some of their main writings and I tried to organize a number of chapters by theme i looked at a number of the people that were accused of killing Kennedy the CIA the FBI um the uh the military-industrial complex whatever that means right it’s a pretty large category um and Lynden Johnson uh as well as the Oswald so I kind of start with a section or it’s actually the second section of the book the first section looks at myths about Kennedy the second section looks at you know I think I called it who wants to be an assassin you know how all the different people who have been said to be uh suspicious and in the end yeah everybody’s suspicious who doesn’t like Kennedy but that doesn’t mean they killed him and then ultimately when you actually look at the um the nuts and bolts when you look at the forensics and that’s what the the second the sorry the third and fourth part of the book are it’s looking at the gunshots looking at the bullets looking at the uh the autopsy um evidence whatever is available i could not get into NAR i did ask but uh you know there’s only so many people can get in but what’s wonderful is that some television and print media have gotten professional doctors to look at this stuff (26:24) you know there’s this great show called Cold Case JFK that came out while I was already starting to write this book and this was a mint for kind of getting my head wrapped around well how could a single person do all that shooting and it gets interpreted as multiple shooters um and then of course trying to kind of unpack the the Zapruder film and these kinds of things so the I would say the latter half of the book deals more with forensic issues um you know weapons and bullets and pictures and the first half deals more with the issues of the story of Kennedy the story of Kennedy’s so-called enemies and how these stories get written according to certain agenda historians do this all the time if they’re responsible they’ll say “I realize that I left this out i left that out left that out but what I really want to focus on was say uh Kennedy’s love interests or Kennedy’s foreign policy but when you start with the conclusion without actually investigating all of the different possible opinions out there and conspiracy theorists are very good for cherrypicking only certain viewpoints then you end up constructing a story that’s a myth and by myth I don’t necessarily mean like um a story that is always an all completely false it’s a story that starts with um looking for meaning or purpose rather than looking for truth and if your purpose is to try to be vindicated for your anger about the Vietnam War then you’re going to cherrypick only those things that will vindicate your feeling of being outraged rather than understanding that a lot of stuff happened about Vietnam and it’s not your fault you suffered you hated it but that doesn’t mean that the man you liked was murdered because of it yeah i think Oliver Stone makes that horrible uh uh assumption or or or the way he approaches the the evidence is to say “Oh I want to I’m going to answer the question of why before I answer the question of how it was done.” And so he he answers that question he knows the why and then that forces him into a conclusion about how it was done and and and so it’s just a forced it’s just a wrong way to look at things very much so very much so uh when you start with a why you start ignoring the fact about why not or why this way and not another way it it makes it forc you to write history teologically you know you start with an idea of where everything is going to go so either it’s going to go to the military-industrial complex controlling the world or it should have gone to a fabulous workers utopia world peace and everything that you thought Kennedy was going to achieve and both of those uh both of those possibilities are wrong right the history kind of just takes on it’s chaotic you know I think that’s what I say in the in the opening uh in the pro the the preface of the book is when I realize that number one history is absolutely chaotic there’s too much chance to be able to say that this particular group was able to achieve exactly what they wanted and not get found out for it for example and at the same time human nature is very predictable and so AAM’s razor can allow you to say look is it likely that a guy like Oswald after all these years was faking being a communist since he was 15 years old or is it more likely that he actually believed in it and when you actually read his readings and I one of the great books uh was Norman Mailers’s Oswald’s Tale (30.00.00) right here’s a man who believed in a conspiracy who hired Russian interpreters to help him go to the so uh the former Soviet Union in the mid ’90s and tried to find the smoking gun and in the end what he found was a scared little child who thought that the world needed him but no one realized how great he was right there’s this narcissistic manchild who comes back to the United States so um so obsessed with his own uh his own self-standing his own uh self-importance uh that he beats his wife he doesn’t keep a job he tries to shoot uh a a retired general a racist i don’t think anybody should love um General uh what was his name walker general Walker but at the same time you know it shows it shows Oswald’s uh MMO from very early on uh and so you know shooting Kennedy was just one more thing to do on this on this line to proving to the world that he was a great person yeah you talked a bit about um how people line up their facts it’s kind of interesting with the new documents you have Jefferson Morley who looks at the new documents and says “Oh I have found a fact pattern.” First time I thought “A fact pattern and this fact pattern leads me to believe that counter intelligence was you know responsible for the assassination (31:2) and you look at the fact pattern and it’s like it’s it’s every part of it is all questionable yep you know and it and but he’s convinced you know because the pattern fits the theory in his mind and the pattern does not allow for other patterns to also exist simultaneously as as kind of a comparison right um yeah Mley was on my podcast i’m I’m always thankful when a conspiracy believer comes on my podcast (31:54) i’ve had very few Lenosic Jefferson Moley Nick Pope you know when they come on I want to give them a fair hearing but at the same time I always find myself having to push back a little bit because they they they they jump they they do this gish gallop you know these assumptions that well we know this is true so therefore this is also true and this is also true and at some point I say well hold on a second right you’re you’re are are you not making assumptions here so I’m thankful he came on but at the same time and I’m I’m getting this from Max Holland Max Holland’s word words here um Jeff Morley is dangerous because he’s a smart guy because he should realize that his theory is full of holes but he presents it as though it’s a given and he’s also smart enough to know where to stop he knows that he says enemies inside the Kennedy administration caused his death he doesn’t say the CIA murdered him right he’s leaving it open that if somebody says Cuba did it okay Cuba did it but the CIA just kind of stepped aside it’s not illegal they could just say we didn’t know what was going on or we didn’t catch on so Morely uh thrives in ambiguity and that’s where he finds strength but unfortunately um it’s kind of an empty shell yeah i think he also u finds strength in that in that a lot of people won’t check the primary documents that he cites so he’s citing all these primary documents hoping or or and and few people will actually go to them and actually read them for themselves and that’s where a lot of his stuff falls apart i mean he’s always I mean before the redactions in fact I’m doing a blog post right now about you know Morley was pointing to a certain CIA document about material coming out of out of the CIA in Mexico City about Cuba and oh this is going to there’s a lot of redactions this is going to tell us a lot about Oswald well then the redactions come out and it tells you nothing about Oswald and and you just see that sort of pattern over and over again yeah uh Mark Lane was also great for that um you you follow Just Stanton Freriedman was great for that holding up pages that were redacted and and assuming that under the dark print there’s going to be some great revelation um yeah it’s unfortunate i I have not spent a lot of time factchecking morally as much i mean when I was writing my book he didn’t stand out to me as one of the worst ones out there so I gave him a little bit of coverage here and there but I I found that um Fletcher Prrowy was so bad at doing this because he spent something like 20 25 years talking about classified documents that he allegedly had copies in his home but couldn’t share and when these documents are finally released particularly in the ’90s under the ARB you’re like that’s not at all what he’s trying to say right kennedy removing a thousand troops is not removing all troops it’s really just moving things around to send a message to DM who ends up getting assassinated by his generals so I found that um uh Fletcher Prrowy was constantly taking advantage of his status his his his title as a retired Air Force colonel as if he’s the inside man and he knows what’s going on did you talk about Did you talk about Fletcher Prrowy with Lenosic i did in fact I had him on uh long before I did my Kennedy series i did a series a short series on deep state and I had three people there i had Lenos Sanic talk about Fletcher Prrowy’s concept of the deep state you know the secret team running the world through the banks um I I think I may have had a long conversation with my co-host after that cuz I felt there’s so many things that need to be uh adjusted and explained and one of them is that Fletcher Prrowy I don’t think was himself an anti-semite but when you read him closely it’s essentially the protocols of the elders of Zion Americanstyle you know uh 20 for for the 21st century in fact he often would quote the report from Iron Mountain which was a satire but he used it as though it was a veritical report Allah you know protocols of the elders of Zion so there’s a lot of problems there with prrowy and then what happened is I had a former congressional aid called Mike Lofrren come on and he wrote a book about the deep state but of course Lofrren is talking about the revolving door between Congress and lobbyists right so that’s a very different kind of deep state it’s not Jews running the banks it’s just politicians who are in the pocket of you know weapons developers and then I also had um Kathine Olstead uh American professor at University of California uh not Berkeley the one up north in Sacramento uh near there anyways uh so uh she came in and and we looked at what she understood to be the deep state which is largely the IRS and income tax uh no she she doesn’t believe in a deep state she was saying this is where the idea came from after World War I this massive bureaucracy for admin administering taxation uh became kind of this secret opaque group that people were wondering what’s going on there it’s no longer our elected members to Congress it’s rather some kind of invisible bureaucracy that really runs our lives so I looked at these different concepts of deep state i felt that Leno Sanic’s version was the one that left me most wanting uh but yeah so I did did chat with Len what’s interesting about Len and I don’t think you’ve been listening to this and I don’t think he listens to my podcast he did contact me a few weeks later and he told me “Uh I don’t want to receive your updates your email updates anymore because your show is too paranoid.” I thought that was interesting i call it paranoid planet because I think all of us have a tendency to be paranoid uh what Lens suggests is that other people are paranoid but he’s he’s right um and if you can’t have a sense of humor about yourself if you’re not unable to say “I’m willing to be wrong on this,” then that’s when you’re most in danger of conspiratorial conspiracist logic yeah one thing about Fletcher Prrowy is that you know he did attend uh a conference for the Institute of Historical Revisionism which was a Holocaust denying outfit he attended one of their conferences and I actually put on my blog he wrote a letter to their journal um congratulating them on what a great magazine they were publishing um which is like bizarre you know you must know that this journal is dedicated to denying the Holocaust um and yet he loved the magazine because he got attention from them you know it was the same thing with Scientology he was an apologist for Scientologist but I don’t think he ever screamed at ashtrays or you know went to a Tom Cruz uh movie or whatever like I I don’t think that he was interested in Scientology’s teachings but he found a kindred spirit because they also thought like him that the world is being run by some kind of secret government and in many ways Fletcher Prrowy I think fits the description of the aging crank as as um uh Jonathan Kay describes in his book on 911 you know the crank is not is not a mentally ill person it’s not even a person of ill will it’s a person who’s kind of the the the hamster wheel is turning but they’re retired there’s not much for them to do so conspiracies becomes this kind of great puzzle and they start getting very imaginative with this puzzle you know Fletcher Prrowy never protested I think one day in the street about the Kennedy assassination but he was willing to say anything to anybody who came to his house namely Leno Sanic who filmed you know hundreds of hours or whatever of of interviews with him you know I mean many years ago I I was working on a political campaign here in Ottawa and so I went to a lot of events and you know you start going to a lot of events and like almost at every event you’d have somebody who would come up to you with like a big file some sort of big file of paper and they want to talk to you about it could be fluoride in the water or it could be it could be something or you know it could be a a building or something in Ottawa that’s taken over by the federal government or something but they have this massive file they’ve accumulated over the years and they have to talk to you about the something that’s really important that only they know about and you and those are the cranks you get them almost at every political meeting you go to yeah yeah um you know I was one of them i was one of them and what happens is I think you know I forget which philosopher said you know every human has kind of a god-shaped hole i think we all have a Satan shaped hole we all need to have some kind of a devil figure uh that can explain the why there’s evil in the world why there’s suffering and it helps to believe that some very powerful and and very secretive person or group is behind a lot of the chaos in our lives uh no religions try to explain that but what happens in a secular age when people don’t really have any kind of overarching system to explain why these things happen they end up creating new ones and I think that uh the you know I mentioned the Freemasons earlier uh the military-industrial complex the deep state these are all equivalences of some form of demonic uh world that helps us explain why we suffer why and I think it’s time for us to go back to the real villain it’s the the Jews i mean why invent something new we we we already know yeah i I don’t know if I said this with you because I know you’re Jewish but on my podcast every now somebody somebody will say “You know what the problem is?” I’m like “Please don’t say the Jews please don’t say the Jews.” Uh yeah yeah one of my best friends whenever whenever he calls me during the day and we talk about some problem he says “You know whose fault this is?” I said “Yes it’s the Jews.” Yeah yeah was he going to say that so Len you know I mean I have to laugh at Len Oanic i mean Black Op you listen to Black Opt you know this is the radio show the NSA does not want you to listen to yeah yeah yeah the NSA couldn’t give couldn’t give a [ ] about this show they don’t even know what’s in existence yeah i I I did ask him about that and he says it was tongue and cheek i think he does have a sense of humor um but you know Len has become a a kind of a he was I don’t know maybe not today but in the ‘9s he was a bit of an underground superstar i mean he’s the guy who got all these people on the record when no one on TV would talk to them you know Stone Mley and D Eugeno are in front of Congress now back then the only press they were getting was Black Op and he was having all those people on so in many ways it was a one-stop shop for conspiracy research right that’s what he calls it um but I think Len has a deep need uh to you know explain why the world is so and he found it in this kind of father figure Fletcher Prrowy and I I said this on my podcast it’s a little bit like that relationship in that Mel Gibson movie Man Without a Face no you you you’re the young man who befriends this aging man who is kind of ostracized by society and there’s some good in him but you don’t want to hear the story where he was a pedophile or that he uh hates the Jews or whatever right that’s just beyond the pale you think there’s enough in him to redeem you and so you follow his crazy stories ignoring the things that other people are trying to use to discredit him that’s why in my book I kind of started the section I talked about prrowy i said “Look Proud’s been accused of a number of things i want to focus on his arguments it’s it would be easy for me to say he hangs out with anti-semites but the the thing is he says Kennedy was going to pull out of Vietnam let’s deal with that let’s look at if NSAM263 or whatever it was really says I’m going to pull all the troops out of Vietnam.” And it doesn’t right and there’s enough background there and I looked at other historians um uh Mark Silverstone most more recently he’s just recently written a book called I think the the Kennedy withdrawal um and there’s also this great Stanley Carau has big fat book on Vietnam that I started reading way back in Seap then my high school teacher gave me a copy um when I was in university and I think I finished reading it while I was writing my book so it took about 20 minute 20 years for me to write read that whole book but once you kind of get the whole the whole context of Vietnam you realize that people like Fletcher Prrowy are really just creating a a fairy tale yeah i I I I uh talked to Mark Silverstone in Dallas he was there uh lecturing at the Sixth Floor Museum last um last November so it was nice to to meet him and his book is really really terrific there is sort of a Kennedy cult out there that sort of sees Kennedy as this this incredible peacemaker who is going to usher in a a whole new era of peace and dant peace with with the Soviet Union peace with Cuba he was going to end poverty he was going to you know fix race relations he was going he was do going to do everything and that’s why he had to be killed yeah um in in the first part of my book I talk about these three myths about Kennedy and the first one is one that kind of died with him and that’s what we might call the myth of the Irish mafia uh a lot of um journalists who were very anti- Kennedy at that time uh you know right-leaning journalists who knew about the affairs uh who thought that he was a reckless youth right in fact there was a book called JFK reckless youth um you know they kind of saw through the Kennedys as you know a good-looking corrupt um dynasty then there was the myth of Camelot which many of us still abide by today right this idea that he wanted civil rights he was going to change the world he was a progressive all these things turns out you know the the other president who was most like Kennedy was Ronald Reagan you know Kennedy wanted massive tax cuts uh Kennedy was a hawk and now he was against nuclear weapons but so was Reagan you know he was a hawk against communism and even though as and I think Silverstone’s interesting because he says Kendi until his death was of two minds about Vietnam we don’t want to put all of our what is it all of our ducks in that basket no that’s a mixed metaphor um we don’t want to put all of our whatever it is all all of our stuff in that one thing uh he was much more obsessed with Cuba right and and Berlin uh but Kennedy was a hawk in in in financial relations so the the m and civil rights yeah he was in favor of civil rights but he didn’t know a lot of black people uh he didn’t spend a lot of time you know on the campaign trail looking for uh you know places to support civil rights he was much more interested in international affairs international relations it’s only once the Klux Clan started bombing churches in Birmingham that he felt okay he has to take a stand now right before that it was kind of like let’s let’s do the diplomatic kind of uh you know behind the scenes thing um and and so this myth of Camelot is kind of misleading but it’s made us think of Kennedy as larger than life and then there’s this third myth that the conspiracies do they take they take Camelot and then I guess it’s like Camelot on crack they I call it the prince of peace myth uh he becomes not King Arthur he becomes Jesus Christ he becomes the crucified Messiah who unfortunately never rose from the dead right christians have a hope that he their messiah is coming back but the Oliver Stones Messiah is buried in the ground and he’s not coming back so we you know we we the conspiracy believers are the ones who have to change the world right it’s a it’s a very dark and depressing hopeless form of messianism and and it’s also not just changed the world but the but until we uncover the facts of the JFK assassination we cannot have a better world yes that’s right a better world is predicated on on uncovering the the malicious forces at play here yeah but that’s not entirely their fault i I think and as much as I don’t want to blame the victim here but Mrs kennedy really fed this whole idea that she even said it there will never be another Camelot what happened from 1961 to 1963 was essentially an aberration a good aberration of American history and we can never get that back which is unfortunate because you’ve had people I think uh Obama might be one um at the time I I’m always been a little bit more rightle leaning i thought John McCain would have made a fine president in 2000 certainly better than George W bush so I think there are a lot of people who might have had that you know maybe not the same thing as Kennedy but that kind of idea that the charismatic man can also be the servant of the people can also usher in an era of of change of positive change i thought Jimmy Carter lacked the charisma for that but he was a good man right so there are other people who could have taken on that Kennedy mantle but Mrs kennedy and other Kennedy supporters will not allow that to happen we have to keep living in 1963 and and we can never we can never let that moment go we can never move on uh from that moment a very good book to read is have you read Gary Wills’s book The Kennedy Imprisonment no I think I heard the name but I haven’t excellent it’s it’s Gary Wils is a Catholic theo the theologian and he wrote a really good book about the Kennedy family and and and uh you know some of the beliefs particularly about women that that John Kennedy got from his father about the multiple affairs I mean his father did that as well Robert Kennedy didn’t um but the imprisonment particularly of Edward Kennedy who basically wanted to have the type of affairs that his brother had but it was age of feminism where it was really frowned upon to sort of be that kind of macho guy who was always having an affair and sort of he was always getting caught and didn’t know how to behave but it’s it’s a very very interesting book i’m I’m just struck by you know again this this whole thing about you know this this this myth about Kennedy i mean I find it funny that had the CIA or the FBI really wanted to get rid of Kennedy that they could have easily just told the press about his affair with Sam Gian Kana’s girlfriend or Alan Romesh right the um which did endanger national security and at that time would have sunk his candidacy and would have been a very easy and quick way of to really sink him yeah yeah that was uh what was her name um ex Judith Xner exner uh but there was also Alan Romesh right who was an East German spy at least she was connected to the Stazzi yeah and of course the fact that that Hoover found out about the affair with Exner and rather than go to the press he actually went to the Kennedys with Robert Kennedy and said “Hey tell your brother to knock it off.” Yeah hoover conspiracists say that was Hoover blackmailing the Kennedys and it could be i would not put it past Hoover but at the same time here’s another person who’s often misunderstood hoover was devoted to the concept of serving the the state right he was a bureaucrat parex salons as was Alan Dulles yes so these people certainly they were not white sheep they were certainly uh morally ambiguous but everything they did was in the idea of national security and making sure that the state was safe from its enemies namely the Soviet Union and so I can imagine I I can imagine um Hoover keeping this under wraps because what if the Russians got a hold of this right but of course he puts it in his do not file file which means that now Hoover’s got a hold of this and But the fact that he warned the Kennedys to stop it tell tells me that okay he you know he could have derailed Kennedy immediately with a little leak he didn’t do that and and and certainly he could or he could have gone to the CIA and say you do it you leak it um he didn’t do that um just to change course do you want to tell us a bit about your class my class at school yes so well I teach a number of classes because so as I said I teach in the humanities department i have a history background so I like to teach everything kind of a from a historical perspective even though I don’t teach history per se um I teach the history of ideas and sometimes it pertains to religion or politics or ethics so uh there is a particular class that’s called knowledge and conspiracy theories i’ve been teaching it since I think 2008 so uh since I guess before some well next year my students will not have been born when I started teaching this course so I’m starting to feel old um uh and so I think it’s it’s it’s gone through a number of different iterations there are a number of different subjects that I like to look at obviously since I have the Kennedy book out I I do use the book as a as a textbook now but I think I can see myself kind of leaving the book for other people i know some other educators are using the book in their classrooms now and I’m very thankful for that uh but uh I might move on because right now I’m kind of doing a deep dive into eupfology uh I’m not saying I’m going to write a book on eupfology but there are some good ones out there and I might decide to make that my central theme so essentially what happens in this course is um uh as other teachers who teach similar titles knowledge and something else uh we all have to teach the basics of critical thinking and epistemology so what is knowledge what are different approaches to knowledge rationalism empiricism introspection revelation right there’s a number of ways that we claim to know things how reliable are they uh I look at things like paridolia you know looking at an image that is kind of confusing maybe a lot of visual noise and then seeing a shooter in the bushes or a flying saucer or something right so these are the different things that I look at that are more kind of generally related to epistemology the basics of inductive deductive logic and then and I’m starting this this week we’re hitting the Kennedy assassination so in fact uh starting tomorrow we will be watching the Oliver Stone film JFK Okay although sometimes depending on time I might watch something else we watched um uh was it JFK Revisited last year uh or maybe some other conspiracy film but you know even though it’s an older film JFK is kind of a one-stop shop for every conspiracy theory imaginable that’s right though it obsesses over the New Orleans thing so um uh we I end up making students write more about Garrison’s theories and then in class I talk more about ballistics and uh autopsy and and also about Lee Oswald’s psychology and things like that so over the next few weeks that’s what we’ll be doing we start with Oliver Stone’s uh theory then uh perhaps talking about how Gerald Pausner uh Patricia Lambert have responded to Stone and Garrison and then moving on to well what are the things that the video does not tell us about you know the the attempted assassination on um on General um I keep forgetting his name walker walker thank you uh Edwin Walker um I’m opening a parenthesis here this is really interesting um the fact that Edwin Walker had the same first name as Edwin Eddall Lee Oswald’s stepfather who cheated on Alswald’s mother and left or was forced to leave i forget where I read that but it’s kind of was really interesting that Oswald kept going after people who were the the dad he never had right so anyways I I close that because it makes it very interesting to see how someone like Lee Oswald in the context of all of the other assassins and and school shooters that we’ve seen in the 20th and 21st century most recently you know Thomas Matthew Krooks we’re still waiting for some kind of report i think the FBI is trying to find some kind of proof of a deep state in there but uh it appears like an Oswalt type of figure the more you understand shooters and what motivates them the less you need all of this cacophony of factoids um I I often talk to my students and this is one of the last class of the semester about my father meeting Mlein who you may be familiar with Americans will not be he was the shooter of the poly techchnique the University of Montreal shooter back in 1989 he killed 14 women blaming feminists for everything that was wrong in his life and my father was friends with his mom and I later met Makipin’s mom we had dinner she came and spoke to my students in many ways she’s a victim as well because she did not raise her son to act that way but she was physically abused and and emotionally abused by her husband who was a biggamist who also neglected the children both of whom ended up in tragic circumstances magnipin killed these women and killed himself his sister basically killed herself with heroin or drugs anyways um so I I look at Mle Pin as a type and then you know you put Lee Oswald you put Matthew Krooks you put a lot of these other people beside and you realize there’s a long line of a long pattern of people who pick up weapons particularly you know assault rifles or or or other types of of guns in the States and decide that they’re going to destroy someone and it doesn’t mean that they hate that person it means they are angry and they’re looking for something to tell the world I’ve had enough right and and I think Oswald was kind of like that i I know I’ve heard a lot of theories uh I’ve talked to former Warren Commission council Berg Griffin you know many people are not sure what exactly was Oswald’s motive but I think he fits a profile if it’s a profile of a person who is just empty and hopeless and the violence just allows them to stake to put that beacon in the ground saying here I stand look I’m somebody and you know what how is that different from from Oliver Stone who I don’t hasn’t shot anybody since Vietnam I hope but makes these films that says “Look I’m a somebody i matter i was hurt and I want to be vindicated you know I’m going to stand in front of Congress and say things that are absolutely false but I matter you know and I think that’s what it is it’s a cry for maybe not for help by that time it’s too late for help but it’s a cry for recognition right and how is that different from all human beings right we all want to be if not admired at least acknowledged and I see Oswald as a kind of a a very pathetic you know uh Shakespearean tragic character right so how do how do your students react to the whole Kennedy assassination and do they change their opinions over the course of of the course i think as most of my students are young you know they’re 17 18 when they start my class uh this is more it’s not a matter of debunking so much for them unless they have a a dad or an uncle who’s really into conspiracy theories there are some sometimes and they say it makes for very interesting conversations at home uh but I see it’s more like pre-bunking i I tell them look I apologize for assaulting you with all this historic history that you didn’t even know existed but I’ll show you why it matters as we go on during the term but there’s enough interest in things like true crime or esoterica you know when I deal with euphology or when students can do essays on you know who shot Tupac Shakur or why did Princess Diana die or how did she die you know uh a lot of students are emotionally invested in those things so I think they can’t help but see that Kennedy is not only is it like that it’s it’s the mother of all conspiracy theories uh so I’m sure some students are bored but you know I could be dancing naked there and they’d be bored anyways uh so uh you can’t please everybody but I would say that a lot of students realize that um this is a this is a very deep and complex uh story but fortunately you don’t need to know everything to start kind of unraveling the yarn you know I I on the first day of the semester I say “This is a crash course in [ __ ] detection and if you remember nothing about Kennedy after the semester I don’t care but I do care if you go back to your social media um you know um services you know I don’t even know what they’re called because I don’t use them you know your your Tik Toks or your whatever it is your Instagram.” And then and then you just swallow some more BS you know I said I want you to be able to look through advertisements political speeches conspiracy theories and other types of claims that are going to be abusive and manipulative and that’s the purpose of the course so I’ve always treated Kennedy UFOs and these other things as just a a case study in order to help them think for themselves i I don’t do this alone i did not invent this course a colleague of mine did uh James Jervis and I’m very very thankful that he proposed it way back when and uh you know we do have some basic stuff that I had to learn myself before I could teach it but the Kennedy part is something that was kind of a boule was that in English uh you know a thing I was dragging along my leg you know like in those cartoon prison uh I I was dragging this heavy uh ball of iron right we all have that ball we’re all dragging it and then I I realized I I could put some training wheels on it and turn it into something that was more positive you know a a learning experience so okay tell tell me tell us a bit about your podcast uh so back in 2018 or so you know every now and then I think I every now and then we get a midlife crisis i think I’ve had three by now and in the mid to late 2010s I was starting to feel like I do I want to teach until retirement i might want to do something else i even looked into some jobs in government i had thought about running for municipal politics i don’t think any of those things would have been suitable for me and then a friend of mine said another colleague he says “Why don’t you start a podcast?” And I knew nothing about the technology of producing stuff so I thought I can’t do that but fortunately I have a friend who is in the movie industry um Joan Lejo he’s my co-host co-producer and he knew a lot about it in fact his uh his ex-wife was a recording artist so he had a lot of experience with video audio technology which was exactly what I was missing i can write I can research I can tell stories i think I have a I have an okay voice for the radio you know I did some uh student radio when I was uh in in Sea myself so I thought well I guess I do have a certain skill set and so we started prepping this and it’s been going on for almost 5 years now uh three seasons but it seems like I I don’t know when a season should be over and uh at first I thought I’m gonna talk to just a few academics you know Joe Yuzinski came on uh I met a psychiatrist from the University of Chicago uh who was on and then eventually I thought I got to get to this Kennedy stuff eventually uh but not yet i didn’t want to just start with that but eventually you know I got around to doing a very long series on Kennedy and now I’m doing a long series on UFOs i guess those would be the two main themes uh I did one very interestingly on on cults and cultishness and I learned a lot in that i’ve always had an interest in these these groups not necessarily religious groups nexium is not a religious group but these very exclusive communities that would take advantage of people’s goodwill and desire for community right and completely turn that against them and and that’s when I learned not to shy away from the word cult if by cult you don’t mean a religious group you don’t agree with but rather uh an organization that abuses its members by gaslighting them by isolating them by disciplining them right so I looked at Scientology i looked at the church of unification i looked at Did you look at Jonestown i did i did i did like a three I did three episodes on Jonestown because I got to talk with um See it’s it was a while I’m trying to remember his name
um I I’ve got a blank but it it’s there i’ll I’ll scream it out in the middle of the night uh when I remember it but he’s the um he’s the director of the Jonestown Institute uh which is uh attached to the University of San Diego and uh his wife sisters his two uh sisters-in-law died in Jonestown uh one of them actually was one of Jim Jones’s mistresses and I think she had a child with him possibly so uh yeah so it’s very interesting because there’s a whole personal story the reason I bring that up is because Mark Lane was also involved with uh with Jim Jones yes and when I found that out I I was livid because it was one thing for Mark Lane to say silly things about Lee Oswald and try to sneak into the Warren Commission’s uh you know um auditions uh their their their uh audiences uh it was another thing when I found out and there’s even recordings of of him telling the people in Jonestown that the CIA wants to murder them and he was there on that day and of course he didn’t take the Kool-Aid he ran into the forest he ran into the jungle and survived and to this day I still wonder if he has survivors guilt and I don’t know because he was such a you know we use the word shy i don’t want to use that in a derogatory way but I think I think he fit the bill of the lawyer type who will make up anything in order to win the case and he used this he honed these skills arguing that Lee Oswald was set up uh by the CIA but he ultimately I think is partly responsible i mean Jim Jones bears the majority of the the blame but he is partly responsible for that massacre uh and so to me that is one of the examples of how deadly conspiracy theories can be uh it is shameful yeah yeah so getting back to your podcast oh can I can I say yes sure go ahead fielding McGee i remember Fielding McGee so I want to thank Fielding and I I apologize for uh for forgetting his name um can you recommend to our audience a good book on UFOs that debunks stuff well uh I had Greg Age on my podcast last fall and he has written the first well technically it’s the second comprehensive history of eupfology but the first was written by a man who now has been largely discredited as a bit of a nutbag uh eupfologist himself um so I think that Greg wrote a fantastic um chronicle of 50 years of the UFO uh movement let me see if I can find it here somewhere it’s it’s in my it’s in my office somewhere around here i forget where I put it um and it’s called uh when the when the flying saucers came so that I would say is a great book and it’s one that you can start with if if you like to read history and you read it slowly because every five pages or something it moves on to uh some other case and it looks not just in the United States but around the world so I thought that was a fantastic book for me to read uh I’ve been going back and reading some older uh UFO debunking books by Robert Schaefer by um Philip Klass uh these are all kind of you know I think I think they were remarkable men who spent decades and decades you know kind of holding holding the the the the fort of of critical thinking of uh of sober second thought uh to this movement that I hesitate to say cultish i think eupfologists are a little bit more open to outsiders and but they they definitely don’t like apostates uh you know people like us of course you have the people who mil things together who say JFK was killed because he was going to spill the beans about UFOs yeah that’s true but I I don’t see a lot of those maybe I’m just not reading those books but the the I would say the central euphologist today people like Nick Pope who was on my podcast nice guy but at the same time I think Nick Pope’s Nick Pope’s business is to promote Nick Pope and he does a good job at it but if you’re going to be on Ancient Aliens you’ve lost my you’ve lost my you’ve lost credibility in my eyes uh Leslie Kaine who I to me is uh she’s the Oliver Stone of the UFO world um you know a lot of these people I don’t think get into candidate you know what’s interesting they don’t even get into Roswell because they understand they know that nothing happened at Roswell a trail of balloons holding up a microphone essentially to listen in on whether the Russians were exploding nuclear bombs that’s what crashed at Roswell you know Project Mogul it was called and there’s no evidence of anything else what they found was the remnants of a box kite tin foil wax paper balsa wood glue and tape that’s what was found and then the story evolved into a huge flying saucer in fact several crashing all over New Mexico and they all know that it’s not the case and they all know that evidence is not there but they keep saying something happened at Roswell and then they keep using expressions like Britain’s Roswell Canada’s Roswell uh Brazil’s Roswell and at the end if there was no Roswell then all these other things are are to be doubted as well so you know you know that I I publish on my blog a uh a letter from Ray Palmer to Jim Garrison okay uh because they were friends and so uh they were all comparing notes about Fred Chrisman and what happened in Puet Sound with UFOs yeah yeah so I I found uh this letter that um that Ray Palmer had sent Garrison i did not find Garrison’s letter back to him unfortunately yeah palmer’s the guy who was running like a science fiction magazine and when he was when he found out that Kenneth Arnold had seen these quote unquote saucers skipping on water on he didn’t even describe them as saucers he described them as bat wings it’s very important to point out that what Kenneth Arnold saw were shiny distant bat wings moving like the the tail of a kite or he said saucers skipping on water so that was to describe their movement not their appearance but then Ray Palmer and other people flying saucers wow that’s catchy and they started talking about flying saucers and then for the next 50 years people are seeing what they’re not seeing bat wings they’re seeing flying saucers so no one’s seeing what uh what what Kenneth Arnold saw which I I’m almost convinced we’re pelicans but because of parallax because of glare in the sun the fact that he was expecting to see something unusual and and deep down he Kenneth Arnold was looking for a downed plane he took 20 minutes off in a transit from around Seattle to not Boise but he was kind of going into the interior across the mountains and he’d heard about this crashed Marines um transport plane that had crashed around Mount Reineer and there was was it a $5,000 award i mean a lot of money for 1947 uh he certainly could have that could have been half his year’s salary right and uh he didn’t find anything and on his way back he sees these lights now I’m not saying he made that up but it was convenient that when you when you got sucked out of 5,000 $5,000 and you can actually see something that might bring in the same kind of income and attention you know it it it kind of didn’t take too much for Kenneth Arnold to just go with the story he went to the media you know this was not a shy man who want to keep it to himself he went to multiple media outlets say “Guess what I saw?” And then he wrote a book and he became a euphologist did you follow the the Fred Chrisman story no which one’s that that’s the Pugid Sound hoax that’s the one in Nova Scotia no don’t no that’s right that’s right out in Washington State with him and and a friend and they were out logging and they claimed they saw these flying saucers and there were a beam came out of the flying saucers and and it killed the dog and and there was stuff on this island that they could get yes yes and and uh it was all a hoax of obviously but they that Ken they called Kenneth Arnold in That’s right and he believed it was true he got these two guys from the Air Force to investigate and the tragedy was the two guys from the Air Force their plane crashed on the way back and they both died yeah I remember that greg Agillian does write about that in in his book uh yeah and that’s interesting because of course when something happens like that and the people who host die uh then the story kind of dies with them or at least the the ability to disprove it dies with them uh and then it becomes larger than life it becomes another myth and you know one of the things that really uh uh sort of made Edward J epstein think was when he went to Sylvia Mar’s apartment for the first time and he saw all of her UFO books on a bookcase oh yeah and that got him uhoh what’s going on here okay she was very much into UFOs okay sylvia Mars i’m not Is she related to Jim Mars and anything no no sylvia Mar accessories after the fact oh oh oh yes i say I didn’t pronounce her name that way in my head i guess uh it’s it’s spelled uh m h e r okay i always thought it was meager i always Sylvia Mar okay my my mistake sorry i And I know that um Leslie Kane I pronounce it Keen all the time but uh you know all the Irish soccer players called Keen we pronounce it keen so I don’t know why she’d be any different so I hope you’re not at risk of having having to teach your course in French are you with some of the new laws interesting you might say that um I’ve been asked to teach the ethics course in French my college has decided to do that i’m I can teach in French i’m a franophhone though I’ve been teaching in English since 2001 but you know what i don’t think it’s right um I I I know I know this is not the subject of your podcast but uh you know Canadian politics is something I’ve always been interested in i majored in it in my undergrad and even at that time I want to go into politics uh I was uh you know as Canadians know what a federalist is or a separatist is i was a I was I was a centrist conservative federalist up until the Charlotte Town Accord or the the lack of an accord and then I think I kind of followed a lot of people like Lucen Bousuchard out the door and I became a a separatist a Quebec nationalist for a couple decades and then uh the the Quebec government started becoming very xenophobic against religious minorities uh and and other groups as well and that’s when I kind of thought you know I don’t know if I want to be part of this movement and I found my way back to a more kind of a centrist conservative federalist position which ironically we don’t have a party to represent us right now right it’s uh all the other parties been taken over in different directions so what’s happened in Quebec in the last few years according to me is very unfortunate rather than encouraging people to want to participate in the franophhone um you know nature of this province you have a very rich French history uh I mean the Catholic Church has been basically thrown out the window but there’s a lot of the um you know there’s a lot of the cultural elements there of Quebec’s history that I think it’s worth preserving and the language as well the problem is you can’t do that putting a gun to people’s heads and Quebec also has institutions that have been you know protected English-speaking institutions including hospitals and and seeps and high schools that I think need to maintain funding and their ability to teach to uh anglophones uh who who are born and raised in Canada and that’s what my college is meant to do and now suddenly we are compelled to teach more French get rid of our complimentary courses that this is unfortunate when I was in SEAP you could um take up to four classes and things had nothing to do with your concentration i took a class called the history of African-American rock i took a class on uh poetry uh I took an astronomy class these all really first of all they helped me de develop an interest in these things and and and they really helped kind of give me some some some cultural richness and now all this is dumped in order to make people ready for the working uh you know for for the working world and that includes just drilling them with a lot of French including making them take classes in French where it might not be their mother tongue i mean a lot of our our students do come from a a French background they can hack it but that’s not why they’re in an English- speakaking sea they’re there to actually become bilingual and so it was interesting up until the 19 up until the the early 2000s um most Canadian politicians who want to be successful across the board you know being elected as prime minister or leader of the oper opposition had to be bilingual and very often that meant they were franophones from Quebec or maybe from Ontario who also spoke very good English but since I’d say 2005 or six what’s interesting is it’s the Anglo uh politicians who are learning French and they’re the ones who are actually you know being more bilingual steven Harper Pierre Puv uh you know uh Jack Leighton right the none of these people come from Quebec and then they come and they can debate in French in Quebec and the Quebec nationalists are the ones who can’t express themselves in English as well as they used to now there are some exceptions i think that the block leader is is quite uh fluent but well you it also used to be that the well Renie Lec and a lot of the PQ leaders were very good in English we had gone to English schools uh abroad or elsewhere in Canada but yes I I you know when I grew up in Montreal I mean there was no French language immersion in public schools which was I really regret i mean I really wish they had French language immersion where I could have all we got was a half an hour of French a day oh okay and and our teachers were all from France because they really weren’t sure how to teach French and we used to have these horrible arguments in class about which word to use um various times and and so thank God that’s changed but I also think franophhone should have the opportunity if they wish to go to school in English um it’s very isolating when you you teach a a people to close in on themselves and Quebec for the last 50 years has been very open internationally um if anything it’s because of the voters in Quebec that we had free trade with the United States for 30 years until Donald Trump decided it shouldn’t be anymore uh we had always a a very big
opinion and and they’re exporting Kebekqua culture in a way that is much bigger than actually the sum of its parts but the problem is what we’re seeing now is the people who are bilingual and triilingual and being effective are more and more people who come from the the minorities the Anglo and alophone minorities in Quebec rather than franophones and to me that’s that’s shameful uh when I was in university my hero was Ten Kier he was the co-founder of modern Canada in many ways with John A macdonald uh fortunately no one’s been attacking his statues maybe because he’s been forgotten but uh you know he’s a person who saw a great advantage to this bilingual bicultural uh you know non-American view of of a state here in North America and I I think it’s to our loss if Canada doesn’t preserve that um I know you might know I’m a member of the Aristotle Foundation and I’m a senior fellow and uh their view a bit like Qulette magazine which we’ve both contributed to is very much kind of a radical centrism you know some people say they lean right but they only lean right in the sense that they lean in the favor of common sense and if people on the right start acting crazy then they’re going to talk they’re going to speak up against that as well i love Qulett quette is just I just I just adore Colette oh my god john Kay does some good work you know he used to be at the National Post but uh I think maybe the National Post was a bit too right-wing for his flavor not that it was like super rightwing when he was there but he’s he’s a diehard centrist and uh he’s been to my college he’s spoken to my students uh you know uh he’s been on my podcast and and I really appreciate the work that he does i think we need more journalists like that there’s not enough there’s not enough in Canada definitely okay look I think we’ve uh reached the end of our time um again I well thank you very much but I strongly recommend that everybody go out and buy a copy of this book there will be links in the notes uh below and in the blog post accompanying this interview so go and buy Michelle’s book buy two copies give one to a friend they will thank you uh immensely and so um thank you i will thank you too thank you very much yes thank Thank you thank you Fred it was great to be here
okay so I’m going to stop the
recording if I can find the button it’s going to be edited
This is not “MY” Book cover. I took someone else’s book cover design, cut it up into layers in Adobe Photoshop and animated the layers in Adobe After Effects.
Music by: Power Music Factory Suspense Background Music No Copyright
Channel URL : / powermusicfactory
I want to thank everybody for coming this afternoon my name is Fred Litwin
noted author Fred Litwin and of course Fred is also the author of I was a teenage JFK conspiracy freak on the trail of delusion and Oliver Stones film flam at the demagogue of Dealey Plaza
Fred Litwin is here he’s a longtime author and certainly Watcher of politics
joining us uh Fred Litwin great to have you here thank you very
okay good evening welcome to another edition of on the trail of delusion the my online podcast where we actually try to separate fact from fiction uh the wheat from the chaff and actually give you something substantive on the web rather than the usual conspiracy nonsense that is all over the place so welcome to another episode my guest today is Gus Russo a good friend of mine and just an absolutely amazing investigative journalist so let me tell you a bit about Gus
For 30 years Gus Russo has been an investigative reporter author of nine non-fiction books writer and producer of many national and international documentaries for major networks
his books have received book of the month club and history book club featured elections and five of them have been option for films uh one of them the outfit was a Pulitzer nominee he’s written three books on the JFK assassination Brothers in Arms was his last book The kennedies the castros and the politics of murder um he’s also written where were you he is an expert on the JFK assassination he was a major investigator for the PBS Frontline documentary on Lee Harvey Oswald and so welcome to on the trail of delusion Gus Russo welcome to have you hey thank you Fred great to see you okay so speaking of on the trail of delusion I have to show you the shirt I wear Appo the flat Mars Society okay right very very appropriate okay so my first question is you know what got you interested in the JFK assassination well you know uh I’m old enough to uh report that I was alive when it happened if you went through it especially as a a Catholic from a Catholic Family JFK was our first Catholic president our family worshiped the Kennedy’s and it was a bit it was quite uh a traumatic experience and there were some initial you know confusions about what happened obviously in the fog of war and all that and they kind of I wrote I write about this in the introduction to live by the sword some of the things that looked a little sketchy to me as a kid even but when the Warren Commission came out I think most people I fact I know most people pretty much accepted it I had this interest in it everybody you could not be interested in it it was an incredible event but the Warren Commission I don’t know if you know this Fred but uh when it came out 80% of the American people actually believed it you know they bought the commission the report and I was probably one of them but then a couple years later Mark Lane came out with rush to judgment which really changed everything as a young person never occurred to me that an attorney could write a book with all these misstatements and lies I thought I thought it’s got to be true he wouldn’t be lying about this about the testimony of Jack Ruby or this or that and and the uh the murder of JD tippet and I said my God this guy you know he’s an attorney he’s got a real publisher and it was a big bestseller so that really got everybody going including me I was too young to do anything really firsthand but I was reading the books majored in polyi my career path was going to be music I was a musician since I was 13 and I’m professional playing teen centers and all that stuff and uh I minored in music at at College at University of Maryland and I majored in polyi
and after college I moved to New York to be a musician
but I was always interested in the case so some of the Bands I was in at the time were touring bands traveling all over pretty much the eastern half of the country especially New England so anytime I was in a town where there was some connection to the JFK case that’s where I became sort of you know an amateur gumshoe I would say oh Jim hosty lives here I’d call him up you know let’s have let’s have lunch you the day after our gig you know so it was more of a hobby uh but I was obsessed with I I I felt I think I learned early on that I had some ability to talk to people probably because when you’re a front man in a band you learn how to talk to an audience and the rhythm of how to communicate so um it came naturally to me uh so I was doing it like crazy I was building up a database of of people phone numbers and people all over FBI guys um uh Cuban Exiles what a CIA you know whatever and so um Along Comes The U I still living Upstate New York and then the house select committee happened and I was really aimed to be on the scene for that as much as possible so I would drive down or take a train down from upstate New York whenever they had an open hearing a public hearing and I was there for a lot of the big ones when they showed the zuder film when they with when they did the uh uh when they showed the U the the sound of the acoustics with the the BR film I was in the front row which was wrong I snuck in because that was where the Witnesses were supposed to sit I sat next to HB mlan and and you can see me in the footage of that day so I was there I got I spoke to Weiss and ashkenasi who were I mean I was crazy I I’d speak to anybody so after the thing was over I took them out went to lunch with Weiss and ashkanazi and picked their brains because I didn’t it it didn’t make sense to me the whole static filed tape with uh all this with alleged gunshots uh and I gave him you know a bit of a piece of my mind it wasn’t very wasn’t didn’t go down very well with him anyway during that period uh I became friendly with Scott Malone who uh was a DC uh private investigator and and reporter he worked for the New Times magazine and a few others maybe Mother Jones I can’t remember but we became friends and he introduced me to a lot of the staff of the hsca uh like Kevin Walsh and people like that uh so I was part of that it was a tighter Community back then it wasn’t a thousand millions or whatever of JFK researchers it was only a handful of us and we all sort of knew each other um and we very Cooperative we go over to Scott’s house after hearings and hang out with some of the staff and it was just a great time the only reason I mentioned all that is that that’s how the Frontline thing came to be because Scott Malone went from there to be one of the lead reporters for Frontline when the show started in the early 80s and stayed with them for a long time so I continued my music work and my Private Investigations in 1988 I got a communication with from Jack Anderson who was doing a big special on the assassination who shot JFK and that was my first paid gig I sent him some of my phone numbers that I had for the show I was like a longdistance connection I didn’t I wasn’t out in the field with it but I sent him my some files and some phone numbers and uh that really got me interested in the documentary world I’m trying to get to a Frontline and so that’s my interest just by doing it for my own thing it wasn’t never pretended to be a money maker or any or a book or anything it was just my I had to figure out what this all about what made you sort of skeptical of the conspiracy stuff that you were you initially believed in well yeah uh the house committee I was I was really impressed with and I met some of these folks when I was there the um the scientists who did the uh the trajectory studies the ballistic studies I I came away okay Oswald shot him I knew that from the time of the committee done he did it but then there were big mysteries about what else was involved you know what who did somebody get him to do it did somebody know he was going to do it there was you have to understand that in the 70s and 80s the CIA was the big Bugaboo you know it they were in in the 70s it was all about killing foreign leaders allegedly or trying to and then in the 80s it was all about drug running uh you know working with the contras and uh the CIA was just this evil empire and so the question was did they what did they know and what were they covering up about this even though Oswald shot him in my opinion in my conclusion was what did the CIA know about Mexico what did they know uh you know about uh oswal allegedly being a fake Defector right all these things were swirling and it was all around the CIA so that for me the rest of my time was spent not investigating Oswald but investigating the CIA and stuff like that yeah yeah so that gets me up to around 1991 or 92 uh Scott Malone who was still working with Frontline said gosh we got to do something we should propose a show for the big anniversary 1993 and so we spoke to Mike Sullivan who ran who was the lead executive producer at Frontline and he loved the idea and uh he gave us a little discretionary funds to travel around and put together a proposal Scott and I and uh we put together after a couple months maybe three or four months actually Scott and I had a really nice proposal and we took it up to Boston for front line is headquartered and Mike loved it and he said well let’s let’s try to do something and um and Mike was great uh it wouldn’t have happened obviously without him and without him going to England and getting the be I think it was a BBC could be wrong about that but he got the britz to co-fund it because it was what we were going to do was really expensive Scott and I proposed that we would just travel the world and and figure we put more money in into it than the hsca did I mean it was a big budget and they went for it and I’m going oh my God this is like a researcher’s dream come true I’m going to be well paid I’ve got a ridiculous budget to go anywhere I want and interview everybody I could fly any all days notice I could go anywhere uh we Scott and I started it and the team expanded obviously we brought in Tony and Robin Summers also known as you really indefatigable uh workers when did you get the budget like how long did you have it how long a time did you have to research the JFK assassination you know it we started out slowly Scott and I it got serious and so it’s hard to Define it it was almost two years I’m sure first was Scott and I and then the team grew and that was about a year once maybe even a little longer than a year it was crazy it was I mean I didn’t have to get permission to do anything I just I had a my own Frontline credit card if I would to go to LA to interview somebody I just did it you know and sent them the bills and uh uh they trusted Scott and I and Tony and Robin I was going to say that uh Tony’s book uh conspiracy yeah was originally supposed to be entitled if I remember correctly was there conspiracy question mark and it was a book of questions to in in Tony’s defense it wasn’t supposed to be he was saying it was a conspiracy but he thought there was questions to be asked it was well researched and uh so Tony was on for a while he and Robin his wife who’s a great investigator and writer they did great work in in Russia for us they went to Moscow and Minsk they did all those interviews with the KGB uh they went to Mexico City Scott and I did all over the United States right and and Scott also went to Japan I mean Scott spent a month in Japan running down oswalt’s Connections in the queen bee club or whatever it was right and oh man that almost killed the budget because at the time uh the Japanese Yen and whatever the exchange rate was such that if you went out for a dinner it was $300 you know and if you took somebody to dinner it was 600 so right Frontline was getting all these receipts for oh he bought somebody an Apple for $20 and but that’s the kind of money they were willing to spend we came back from Japan with nothing right I mean1 $20,000 must have gotten spent just in Japan but we were committed to to do things nobody else had done and run down everything and that’s what people don’t understand about that show they think oh they set out this St I was well did it we were talking to every everybody 99% of whom didn’t make it into the final film right right but once we realized that it was Oswald That’s Mike said okay that’s our show we started out without saying that we said let’s look at everything and see where we land well that’s where we landed you know it’s I’d like to in a future show I really do want to talk to Anthony Summers about where he now stands on the J he’s gened a lot of uh a lot of stuff about the case over the years yeah he should be spoken spoken to you know it’s same with well I think the book he the title he originally wanted was called not in your lifetime which was his F which he eventually used for republishing but that’s what he really wanted but the publisher that no conspiracy is the way you’re going to sell a million books and you know he was right same with pner with case Clos that was the publisher suggestion I think Gerald told me I could be wrong about this that he thought it was a little arrogant to say case closed but the publisher said no no no you’ll sell 10,000 more books with that title so you know I could be wrong Gerald will correct me if I am but I I remember him telling me that so the Publishers have a say in how these books are marketed and and it does affect the the writer you know the author um he’s got to present it that way at that point that’s how we did it uh and uh and we interviewed so many people uh who didn’t make the show uh and those are some of the funnier crazier stories of beh we should do it behind the scenes front line let’s we should let’s talk about I mean it was it’s a terrific documentary I mean I really I’ve watched it many many times and you know it’s you know what always strikes me when watching something like that or reading your books for example is that it it’s real history as opposed to the when you read a conspiracy book it it reads differently because it’s it’s it’s it’s full of of conjecture and nonsense so it’s always a a pleasure to read Real History oh well thank you yeah watch a real documentary well you know I was sort of trained by some of the best people you know I worked with Sai Hirsch a lot I I worked with Tony Summers who’s a hard worker Ren Robin I worked with Frontline which is one every award you can win and they sort of gave us our marching orders and they told us here’s how you do it here’s how you corroborate uh who else have I jack Anderson who was an award-winning uh columnist in the US here um and these I was fortunate you know having to connect to DC that I had I uh uh met a lot of really you great reporters and investigators who sort of brought me in um to that World um I was just doing it as a hobby I just you know I’m sort of like a farest Gump in a way you know my whole life and so I just stumbled into these characters in DC and uh they said okay here’s how you do it you know and and so I did it and the other thing I like is is the doc injury is is on Lee Harvey Oswald it’s not focusing on you know the the medical evidence or you know there’s evidence of sick Shooters and it’s you know the all that crazy nonsense that right it’s it’s it’s very very interesting so tell us you know what what are some of the crazier stories from that time I mean you you met all all sorts of characters I mean for instance God Tosh plumbley for instance uh you know Tosh plumbley yeah I met TSH before Frontline um I mean I was one of the early ones maybe Gary Shaw was on to him before I was but uh Tosh is a character I the way I got into him was again my DC connections I think that Scott had introduced me to a guy named Jonathan Wier in DC who was the leite the chief Aid to Senator John Kerrey later became Secretary of State and they were fascinated with all this CIA uh drug running stuff and he Carrie did the carry report he worked on the Iran Contra report the CIA stuff in in Central America was the big thing in fact we all we all read this book I pulled this off the shelf you see this one uh yes yeah yeah yeah yeah this was like all about the CIA and a lot of drug smuggling 1981 and this is the first place plumley’s name is mentioned um and so when you mentioned you want to speak about him I remember this anyway I think car’s office must have read this book and they read everything and so they deposed plumbling at some point I got a call from Jonathan weiner said you want to come down to Washington senator wants to meet with you we have somebody who mentioned the Kennedy assassination during all of our interviews and maybe you’re the guy to talk to him so that’s where I learned about plumbley so I spoke to him called Plum he lived in Colorado at the time and uh he had the wild tale that you can look up everybody knows about flying in aort team into Dallas on the morning of the assassination he had a long history allegedly of uh helping the CIA run drugs and and he was involved in the Bay of Pigs supposedly just everything and um it got so intense with him that you know and I don’t want to say yet unbelievable but just off the- wall kind of stuff I brought him to Baltimore where I had just moved back to Baltimore from New York around 1989 and I I uh bought him an airline ticket I said let’s hang out for a few days so he came to Baltimore and he hang out he hung out with me for three or four days and uh I didn’t know what to make of it he um he had no corroboration for anything he came across as a little sketchy I learned a lot more later when I got his FBI file that he was arrested many times for forgery and fraud and and he had this flight plan that he gave me of the trip to Dallas which is probably in my papers at Baylor I don’t even have it anymore but with everybody’s name who was on the plane you know including Johnny roselli yeah Johnny roselli and I think aracha crazy things our teamate I can’t remember all the names but they were names who would never e Howard hunt eventually was one of them on the plate too anyway so um coule okay so we do the Frontline show I didn’t even utilize plumbley that but skip over that a couple years later a friend of mine from 60 Minutes a producer wanted to interview plumbley so uh because he wanted to do something explosive when the Kennedy cas so I brought him I brought him and this lady friend of mine Liz uh and this producer down to Miami we all flew to Miami he was going to set us up with all these Cuban Exiles and we were going to do extended interviews with plumbley and get all the details once and for all I still have about four or five hours of videotape of him in Florida uh telling us his story uh to cut to the chase it went nowhere uh uh there was you know it was that’s other thing you should know about that era was a lot of wasted money traveling around interviewing people who had ended up having nothing but um plumbley was just one of many uh I should point out that the one of the big things that got everybody interested in the CIA and Drug running was a Frontline show on the CIA and drugs it was produced by Olivia wild the actress uh her mother and father produced it or I know her mother did she was a reporter for Frontline Leslie Coburn so they had gotten into this whole Nexus from which plumbley came and um but I can’t it’s hard to remember any more deal details than that other than oh I remember I do remember one detail he showed us he said he was on the south null right yes when the assassination happened right so we got pictures of the South no and there ain’t nobody there it’s crazy well it’s amazing that he’s now in in in Rob riner’s podcast oh sure yeah it’s like it’s a new thing it’s new it’s only like 30 some years old and uh you know one of one of the one of the allegations was that uh you know plumbley was at nag Head North Carolina that’s the other one yeah of course with Oswald as part of this false Defector training or whatever oh it was the illusionary Warfare yes and in fact I got the memo I think that Mike Sullivan wrote for for you guys uh with you I published that about uh there was nothing in nag head there’s no facility in nag head you said Mike Selvin wrote a memo or so yeah or was or was it Mike solivan but there was a there probably two uh oh could you send me that please yeah it’s a great memo basically that that there’s there was there’s nothing in Naga R yeah we ran that all down we even knew o where Oswald was at that date I think he was in Minsk you know I mean I mean just incredible story and and uh but there it is in Rob riner’s podcast don’t get me started on the Rob Riner show oh my God we’ll be here for a year well the other another character like like Tosh Plum is a Gordon Novel you know Gordon Noel is another sort of character who has all these stories I knew Gordon I knew Gordon he called from time to time I met him in New Orleans uh and uh yeah same things it’s a good analogy uh a lot of stories no evidence and and a lot of ways to disprove it I can’t remember all the details these years later I do remember he sent me a patented invention of his a car engine that runs on water and of course that never happened Gordon what a character he was doing all sorts stuff like that and and and wow we I mean but again I mean people believe him you know and and I know there’s Richard case Nel is another one who told all sorts of stories I mean for some reason you know the J these JFK researchers are skeptical about everything but these guys come along with these ridiculous stories oh yeah that kind of makes sense the hobo the fake hobo oh chony chy oh I was dealing with H God there was one after another Oh Thomas Beckham well that get Scott and I went down to Louisville Louisville Kentucky what a great character I mean if you catch he’s a fraudster and he has a sense of humor about it he just thinks it’s the biggest joke in the world and everything he does is phony if you when you catch him on it he busts out laughing oh you got me that time Gus yeah just to tell our audience I mean Thomas Beckham was a character out of New Orleans uh who basically early days he was sort of a musician and that didn’t go anywhere but he decided to he was sort of into being a con man and so he would put on a concert some famous star is coming and of course Ricky Nelson he bring in a Ricky Nelson bring a somebody named Ricky Right somebody named Ricky Nelson and just rip off all the money and um and uh or for a while he wore a priest outfit trying to raise money for Cuba which he pocketed um so he had a history and of course he got entangled in the Garrison invest investigation and the funniest thing is he testified before the Garrison grand jury you could read his testimony online and it’s hysterical because first off he’s claiming he has all these degrees you know so I got a PhD in in anatomy he does I saw all those degrees in his storefront he Harvard Yale you name it you know he’s making it all up and at one time they wanted ask they asked him about the precept what what denomination are you and he he couldn’t answer the question I’m not really sure what Den what what denomination you know I’ll have to look it up when I get home well the important thing about Beckham is that you know there was this rumor going around in the 80s that there was a confession tape and with the hsca that’s what got us interested or me interested and uh I mean I got to such a point with my craziness and that I found a way to get a hold of some of those hsca tapes long before this stuff was all released uh don’t even asked me the details but I heard the confession tape long before anybody outside of the committee and uh and so I said to Mike SUV I said well this guy’s telling this wild story of uh knowing all about the conspiracy in New Orleans so he said go down and check him out so we Scott and I flew down to Louisville and it we had a great time I mean it was another big waste of money but we had a blast with this guy uh his his little storefront was like on Main Street or whatever it was downtown Louisville uh with the whole wall was every wall was filled with fake diplomas he was trying to sell me some Gus where where do you want to graduate from he had Harvard Rings want to gra you want a Harvard classroom and then he tried and he was a musician right or he thought you know he played guitar and he said yeah I wrote that song From a Jack to a King I said no you didn’t I knew who wrote it right I said no I’ll tell you who wrote it Tom and he said oh you got me we bust that laughing so we got out the guitars somewhere there’s a tape recording of me and him jamming for most of the afternoon because when he testified and he actually he test after he told that crazy confession story they actually deposed him uh the hsca deposed them and he told the the hsca that he had he had more degrees than a thermometer well he had them laughing didn’t he I mean they were once the once once they got on to the degrees and he was saying well yeah you know I’m I’m I I could practice uh surgery and whatever and a I’m a brain surgeon and and then they realized okay this is this is we have to end this interview because it’s just nonsense you know that was the end they realized it but yet he goes on and Joan melon bought all the stories made him the central character in her book it’s crazy uh he uh he signed some a some pictures for me I think at the time he was gone by the name Wade Hampton uh and I still got those pictures somewhere uh he showed me the Ricky Nelson poster and it was great it it showed uh uh sort of a blackout image uh profile of a guy playing guitar you couldn’t tell who it was but all around it had all Ricky Nelson’s hits Traveling Man all the different hits and it said hear him sing all the hits and he did thing all but it wasn’t the same Ricky Nelson some fun what’s interesting is he had for a while I I put on I have online I found in the files Bob lavender was this guy who was a I guess a print manager ran a print shop in Seattle was his manager for a while and Bob lavender was the guy sort of I guess maybe introduced them to Fred Chrisman because for a while Chrisman and uh another con man Chrisman and Beckham were working together as a con right a variety of schemes and then Chrisman of course was also the target of Jim Garrison I mean it just it the whole thing gets so crazy right it it just you you can’t make this stuff up and yet people still talk about these guys yeah I know it’s amazing they’re still talk when I saw that on the Riner show that he brought up plumly I said oh my God where’s this guy been you
know so so so getting back to to to front line I mean you have a lot of crazy stories but but you actually you did an amazing amount of work and and tell us of course everything LED back to Lee Harvey Oswald yeah and so so tell us a bit about Oswald and what you found out and you you talked to everybody from I’m sure the Ruth pain to oh yeah we film we filmed Ruth we filmed everybody I spoke to Jean de Mor Shield Jean I can’t remember how she pronounced it but she was Ill she was in California at the time we wanted to get her on the show uh now we spoke like I said uh 90% or more of the people we spoke to didn’t even make it on the show there was just not enough time in the world but we wanted to I mean I we were on fire I was doing eight interviews a day sometimes I mean it was and Scott was off doing his and we were filing reports um it’s crazy but um we interviewed for for instance Jay Walton Moore the CIA guy who lived in Dallas who all these conspiracy Notions were about him running Oswald or some nonsense and he was a great guy I interviewed um another guy who didn’t make it on the showed Ed Walker Edwin Walker I interviewed him well on the phone I interviewed him I didn’t go to his house but uh it didn’t work out because he was kind of out of it uh there’s a funny story there but you don’t have time um uh I interviewed Walker we interviewed just about everybody we nobody was off limits you know we gave everybody the opport to make their case and um I’m trying to think of U I’m looking at some I scribbled down some names here U oh John Thomas Mason the oswal look alike I spent an afternoon at a barbecue with him great guy what he was not well Charles steel who handed out the the pist we interviewed Charles he didn’t want to go on camera uh one of the tramps we we found out who the tramps were before it was made public I think because Jim lvll had been keeping those police records Secret in his own house and I was good friends with Jim and he said go I’ll tell you who the tramps really were he brought down the file I think one or two of them had passed away I interviewed the family of one one was in Florida and they described the whole thing oh yeah they just a bunch of friends got together once a year and they would ride the trains and you know the family had no idea that this guy was mistaken for E Howard hunt they said really my father was he how so we ran down the tramps and they never made it into the show we never even talked about it because it was a waste of air time how about can you tell us a bit about the the picture of David ferry in Oswald yeah yeah well I I was pretty much living in New Orleans during that show I was back and forth so much uh that was one of my main territories New Orleans and Dallas with side jumps everywhere um and um one of the first people I went to see was Colin HR uh who was in The Civil Air Patrol with Oswald one of the first first people I think I spoke to down no no it’s Ed Butler first Inca and then Colin so I went to the library the New Orleans Public Library where Colin worked and I I walked up to the third floor and there he was in the science division or whatever he was in and he was very nice guy and he said yeah i’ be happy to talk to you about I remember Oswald and and and so we spoke and U he said oh you might want to go down to the first floor Carlos koga’s wife works down there I said okay and then I went to see Carlos koga’s wife and and she set me up with Carlos and also there was a third person working in the library this is my first day on the job down there and I’m thinking this is really a small town you know you spend a day there and you meet everybody you can see how and right away I could see how Garrison could create any conspiracy theory he wanted to because everybody knew everybody you know it was a really small town and this is in ’92 and 93 I can only imagine how small it was in 1963 and of course everybody was running from Garrison to the FBI and from the FBI to the Garrison I mean back and forth yeah yeah I mean it was you know the thing I and so Colin speaking of the getting back to the photo again this is I can digress Forever on this stuff but uh I started talking to I had the FBI report of all the Civil Air Patrol guys with who were with Oswald at the time and allegedly fairy there’s an FBI Report with names them all and I looked them up and called them up knocked on their doors when I must have spoken to a dozen of them and it became clear some they didn’t want to talk they were still in fear of being involved in this story The Garrison thing is really strange um people don’t know that a lot of people who were connected to Oswald in any way we’re living in fear of the terror of Jim Garrison you know I don’t want to talk to you is Garrison involved in this oh geez you know when I called Sergio aracha Smith first thing do you work for Garrison I said Noh Sergio in fact I think he did Garrison just die at that point I can’t remember I said no we don’t work for Garrison I must have said that a half dozen times to people when I called them up they were nervous about this guy so the Civil Air Patrol kids who were adults by this point they um they were the same way some of them didn’t want to talk because of Garrison and I convinced some of them eventually and they said well okay being you’re a good guy you’re not working with Garrison yeah oswal was there one of the Biv wax and uh we we did have a picture floating around and blah blah blah I said oh I said got to get the picture we leaned on them and kept asking them well I don’t have it I’m I’m sure some of them had it some of the ones who said they didn’t uh and I the another guy said I had it but I destroyed it you know um and when Garrison came on the scene so it was hard to track it down eventually it led to a guy John sirolo I guess something like that and I when I found that out I called the people up at Frontline because srao I I don’t care remember if he wanted to be paid for it or whatever we weren’t allowed to pay anybody so I called Mike Sullivan and Ben Lerman was another one of our lead producers on this project and then Ben contacted srao who wasn’t living in Louisiana at the time and he made the deal I don’t know if it was we got it for free I still don’t know the details on that or whether he paid him something but uh they made the final thing to get the photo based on what these cap guys were telling me in in New Orleans uh that he had it uh so that’s how it came about we even had a big press conference at the national Press Club in DC about that photo and about the fingerprints on the rifle that we had uncovered that had that Waring commission never saw we got them from Rusty Livingstone the cop he sent us the uh the his original highdefinition photos of the prince on the trigger guard fresh prints and we had the hsca fingerprint we hired him to look at them and he said this is unbelievable if I had had this to the hsca days it would have been great but um so we had this press conference where we announced the photo at the same time we didn’t pretend that the photo meant anything we said here’s this photo that the hsca had been looking for there’s Ferry there’s Oswald everybody in the photo said that we interviewed them said that U Oswell and Ferry never had any communication you know Ferry was only there by fluke he occasionally went to these Biv whacks oswal only went to one or two meetings because his mother wouldn’t let him and she eventually completely stopped him from going so he was rarely there it wasn’t like they were Civil Air Patrol buddies they just happened to be there at the same day had no interaction and we said that at the press conference it was kind of weird because we said we got this breakthrough photo but it doesn’t mean anything right I think I think even John Cavolo said that he doubted that that uh Ferry would have remembered him and he took the picture yeah oh yeah yeah um and I went out to moan airport and interviewed Fair’s friends there and a bunch of people and you we we we ran down the fairy story really hard and obviously there was nothing there um and um I spoke to Sergio aracha he became a really good friend he he was in Miami and he opened up a lot of Cuban Exile doors for me and he told me all about Ferry and it was a consistent story you know he was just a victim of Garrison and uh the whole thing was that Garrison came up with was fantasy and it destroyed a lot of people that’s there’s a sad part to this I mean I’m convinced that Garrison is what caused ferry to have a stroke or you know whatever it was um uh and um caros Springer’s wife had a miscarriage from the stress of all this Clay Shaw David Ferry died uh Clay Shaw eventually died after the from the stress of all this there’s a there’s a lot of trail of bodies behind Jim Garrison aracha lost his job in ARA lost his job oh it was just he was a a sick guy Jim Garrison and um he destroyed people’s lives not even connected to the Kennedy case he had a history of inditing enemies and destroying them um you know and I asked I think it was who was the musician L Martin Lon Marts I asked Leon Martins I said why did you people keep voting for him for for Garrison and he and and Al Bobo they said in unison well he was good entertainment he was colorful you know I said great you know uh but um that was their excuse for electing this guy to Da but he was a bad bad guy I never saw so many people harmed by one guy at that point in my life and um so there you go so going back to you mentioned Leighton Martins I mean one of the things that fascinated me was that you know uh for a while Martins lived with David Ferry they were they were friends in New Orleans yeah but you had a you had a meeting with with Leighton Martins Morris brownley and Alba buff they were all friends of David Ferry um can you tell us about that and their thoughts about Oliver Stones JFK oh well they they they laughed at it pretty much I remember uh I I had more than one meeting I had a lot of meetings with those guys there’s a photo in my first book with all of us having dinner but no I spent a lot of time with them I remember Leighton called me that they all went to see the premiere of it New Orleans together those guys right and and Leighton called me as they were coming out of the movie theater and he said it was unbelievable he said we didn’t even recognize Jim Garrison in the movie he said that was nothing like him it would they he said we were laughing it was so opposite of the truth they thought it you know if it wasn’t so tragic it would have been funny but yeah I remember him calling me the night he saw it and said he was unrecognizable as Jim Garrison you know Kevin cner as Jimmy Stewart kind of you know every man whatever uh that wasn’t the guy they knew uh so and that was pretty much everybody’s opinion down there Rosemary James and everybody they they just couldn’t believe what they were seeing yeah they uh in fact I remember that um Harry conik Senor had met with Oliver Stone before they made he told me he said you know they came to New Orleans he and cner and one of the producers and they came to my office and he told them everything he said you’re crazy for doing this uh you you got it all wrong and and um Oliver Stone said thanks and left and did it anyway I mean he was well warned that you know that’s the thing that he was wrong about Garrison Stone needed obviously he needed a protagonist to hang this complicated story on the Kennedy assassination and so I could see in one way why he could do it through Garrison but not through Garrison as the hero you know as the anti-hero I understood as a as a having written some screenplays you need that you need a central character and I think there’s also psychological thing Oliver Stone is pretty much an outsider in Hollywood like a black sheep in a lot of ways he sort of likes that big you know I’m the little guy against all the big studios and Jim Garrison was the same thing in New Orleans he was the black sheep of New Orleans another of the other attorneys or you know people respected him and he ident they identified with each other I think as being you know the White Knight against all the big forces you know and uh so I think there was some bonding over that between the two of them and um so you know stone is very much like that um he he uh he does controversial things and he’s hard it’s hard to get his movies funded because of that reason he can’t I don’t think he’s got anything big made in Forever uh because uh you know I think I think the JFK thing helped him in the short run but in the long run hurt his career you know I who knows but um you know I could tell you a lot of stories about because I was down in in Dallas and New Orleans when they were film fing and uh the movie JFK and there’s a lot of stories there that aren’t fit for public consumption just right not just not good stuff you know so so getting back to just Sergio aracha Smith and Carlos Binger and Carlos Koga I mean those were three anti-castro Cubans who were living in New Orleans who uh basically were targets of Jim Garrison who were sort of was trying to put pressure on them to come up with stories about Lee Harvey Oswald yeah and and and of course Garrison painted Oswald as this right- Winger uh who putting on a a fake Act of being being a a Marxist yeah so what are what are your thoughts about you know bringier and aracha and and uh Koga well these are people who came out of Cuba these were Cuban Exiles who hated Fidel with a passion uh and some of them not not aracha but some of the Exiles hated Kennedy because of the Bay of Pigs right and uh I don’t I I know aracha didn’t hate Kennedy in fact he was one of the few who knew that the kennedies were their friends not their enemies the kennedies to the larger Exile community in Miami especially had abandoned them they were traitors to the Cuban cause arachin knew differently because he knew Bobby Kennedy and was sort of in that uh pipeline of information from was actually feeding information from New Orleans about Cuban Exile stuff that was going on he was helping plan the next Invasion that was going to happen they were sending Exiles down to Central America to train aracha was part of that pipeline so he was very close to Bobby Kennedy went up to Hickory Hill a number of times so the very guy that Garrison is after one of them was actually Pro Kennedy working in this very secret operation uh and he’s accused of killing you know a JFK which is ludicrous and as you know Garrison eventually thought Bobby Kennedy was in on killing his brother because Bobby Kennedy had Walter Sheridan spying on him or something so did did AR catcha give you the impression of being a gangster type uh person who would who or or a killer oh my God not just the opposite he was the most uh discreet gentlemanly guy always dressed to a tea uh and wore suit beautiful suits and ties and he was a diplomat and he came across as a as a diplomat and no no no he you have to meet these people to realize and right away all these theories go out the window soon as you just say hi to them uh aracha and his family were just the sweetest family his his wife and I met his kids and they stayed friends for a while aracha gave me box fulls of his things his family sent me things after he passed away I mean one of the things he gave me was um I still have it hanging on my wall there’s a few pictures of me with him but he he went up to to um Hickory Hill when Garrison was after him it’s in my First Book Live By The Sword and he um said Bobby will you help me get out of this and Bobby said it wouldn’t be right for me politically to make a statement about a DA and sorry I can’t help you but he said and this this did make aracha mad he said but here take please have this as a momento and he gave him a PT 109 tie clip which aracha gave to me and I’m hanging on my wall here in a frame um and uh so there were some hard feelings about that not being helped by the kennedies after all he had done for the kennedies but um he knew the kennedies hadn’t given up on Cuba and not all the Exiles knew that that’s an important thing bring air uh he may have been more right-wing in terms of um you know thinking the kennedies had abandoned them uh but he was anything but you know an assassin or an Oswald guy uh he introduced me to everybody in New Orleans all the other Exiles like kog and different people and um uh you know he was just hurt by like everybody else he was hurt by gison you know and um now these were good people and it’s hard to communicate that to PE folks who won’t go and meet people you can’t do it on the internet right yes and and and it’s too late now because so many people are gone and the conspiracy theories just flourish um and a great example is um de brues Warren De brues right the FBI agent he was accused of all kind of cover up in New Orleans right and about Oswald and I went down to meet with him great guy just the nicest guy and um he said we had a great conversation about the whole case at the end I said well I have to ask you are you aware that you’re accused of covering up osworld and you know it was a moment I’ll never forget he got real sad and he with he whole demeanor changed and he said Gus let me tell you he said you know I’m an Irish Catholic JFK was Irish Catholic he said I worshiped the ground He Walked on he said we all did most a lot of the FBI were Irish Catholics in those days um and he said I’d have turned over and A Tear came to his eye he said I’d have turned over every stone in this city if I could have found out who killed him yeah you understand I said yeah I think I understand I’m sorry to even bring it up you know really emotional stuff that you don’t get online well it’s it it it it really is incredible how the conspiracy theorists will almost there a whole cast of characters who are treasonous you know all these FBI CIA people they’re all oh they do they all hated Kennedy they’re all wanted to kill him um they’re all guilty of treason without ever talking to any of these people and seeing you know they what they felt you know I went all over the dullas thing as you saw in my first book I went to New Mexico and interviewed his sister and and some other family relatives and I went to Miami and interviewed his friends D’s friends down there I went to the library in New Jersey where they had his papers uh that’s the complete opposite of the truth the kennedies and dullas were as tight as you can be he was like a grandfather to Bobby Kennedy they looked up to him so much that’s why Bobby put him on the Warren Commission you know to protect the Kennedy’s interest and Jackie and Dallas loved each other they were trading James Bond books all the time um and uh I mean it’s just crazy just as crazy as saying aracha was involved as saying Dallas was involved I mean and no JFK didn’t in a fit of anger fir dullas after the bad pigs dullas came in and offered to resign and B Jack said no I need you and but he said no the thing is Dallas wanted to retire Jack begged him to stay on for a while during his administration so it wasn’t like I don’t want to be fired he would he would love to have been fired he wanted to retire so he went in and said Jack you know uh you know I was I wanted to retire this is I gotta leave you I I’ll take on the blame for this and this shouldn’t come on you and uh uh Ken said no don’t do that Allan eventually four or five months later uh when the heat was getting so bad Kennedy said all right maybe you should retire you maybe you should leave just read the oral histories at the Kennedy Library from Dulles from Bobby Kennedy about how conial and and gentlemanly the whole thing was it wasn’t like I hate Kennedy because he fired me that’s the complete opposite of what happened um anyway I could go on it’s it’s ludicrous you know well you see the same thing with a lot of sort of uh former CIA agents you’ve talked to a lot of CIA people um and uh you see a lot of lot of all of them are you know David Atley Phillips for example yeah yeah how many books is he in where he’s guilty of killing uh being involved in the assassination have you ever seen the letter from his son dley Philip’s son DAV David Jr he wrote a letter to I I to Dale Meers it’s I might have a copy I think it’s on Dale’s website um where he says what this did to our family this these crazy accusations you know speaking of interviewing CIA people I joined apio The Association of Former Intelligence Officers which really ought to spark a lot of conspiracy theories about me but the truth is a CIA guy told me he said gsh you know you can join this organization I said how I’m not an intelligence officer they said well we have this associate member thing hardly anybody knows about if I sponsor you in it was Ned Dolan he said if I sponsor you you can join us at all our luncheons I said well I’d be crazy not to and and I was the only journalist at the time who did it U so I’d go to these luncheons where three or 400 CIA guys all the cream of the crop in the 90s they were all still alive shackley and Helms Colby um Nester Sanchez the case officer for for kbella we were having lunch four times a year together and uh I did this as a journalist to get to know these people so they trust me to have interviews and I did I got interviews with all of them some off the Record uh n Sam Halper and he was part of this for 10 years I did this uh and and um we would go to Fort Meyers in in uh near DC and uh beautiful big ballroom and they even asked me to speak before the group it was so funny they asked me to present my First Book Live By The Sword to The Association of Former Intelligence Officers which I did and uh uh it was so funny because I’m looking down at the tables and there’s all these guys who know much more about this than me I made a joke about it I said I think I opened up by saying well the good news is I won’t have to explain to you who Alan dullis is like I do at a library the bad news is you know more about it than me and they all laughed they were very good to me they they they uh did anybody confess to you that they killed Kennedy privately I mean off the Record there was confession line no uh uh but you know Nester Sanchez told me among many people told me that Bobby knew about the amales operation and at the time it was off the Record uh nestor’s deceased now uh and uh uh a number of other people you know told me things that I could never use uh at the time uh who else um Elden Rudd of the FBI you know he was in Mexico City right and he wouldn’t tell me anything on the record and he told me a lot about Mexico City that I wish I could have put in the book but uh um it let me know that I was on the right track you know one of the things I remember asking Elden Rudd was he was in the American embassy as a leat the FBI legal atach and I he was he was out west too maybe Phoenix can’t remember I called him up and I said uh you we’re doing this show and uh he said I I don’t want to be involved I said can I ask you one maybe it was a book I was asking him for my first book and I said can I ask you one question yes or no and I said if I was to say in my book or in my writing that there was more to Mexico City especially regarding Cubans and oswal would I be right he said you’d damn well be right he said that’s all I’ll say and even that I couldn’t print but that that let me know I was on the right track right right very important yeah so that’s the kind of stuff you get that you can’t use but gives you the fire to keep moving in that direction he wasn’t asking for money like they always say oh they want to be famous he didn’t want to be famous he wanted to be retired in wherever he was Scottdale or whatever so it had the Ring Of Truth one other person I should ask you about the CIA Bill Harvey so did did did he confess to you or did you know told us about Bill Harvey well he was deceased by the time I got really into this spoke to his widow right I spent two days with her a house in Indianapolis I think it was Indianapolis there’s so many cities I can’t remember but I think it was Indianapolis he she was there uh CG Harvey uh his nephew who sort of ran the estate uh she was wonderful I mean but she hated Bobby Kennedy oh as did Bill uh no doubt about it he hated Bobby Kennedy didn’t hate Jack he and he wasn’t a murderer Bill Harvey wasn’t a murderer it’s funny in their big living room in Indianapolis there was a stuffed Mongoose right and I wish I really wanted to get this I begged them for it and it had a sash around it it said Robert F Kennedy man I wanted that she gave me a a copy of Harvey’s his copy of the church report which had all his Source his notes in the margins which some of the pages I duplicated in my first book Harvey had his issues he was a drinker uh he like many CIA people he thought Bobby Kennedy was weigh in over his head which he was with these Cuban operations he there’s an anecdote in my first book lived by the sord of where Bobby Kennedy shows up at the CIA station in Hemstead the JM wave Bobby just shows up unannounced and uh starts tearing uh confidential or top secret teletypes off the machine rips them off and Harvey says what the hell are you doing he said I’m taking these out of here and so these CIA guys are going nuts you know you can’t do this so that was part of the problem Bobby and Bobby later admitted it he knew he was you know in over his head with all this stuff he didn’t know about discretion and and how to run these things and it made a lot of people upset because they had to follow his orders and yeah there was problems but it wasn’t like let’s kill Ken JFK it wasn’t that kind of thing at all you know well you know look you know in can me there’s lots of politicians don’t like but I’m not going to kill them I mean it’s just and and they didn’t dislike Jack they they had a big problem with Bobby yeah because he was the one going to CIA headquarters every day after work at the justice department and Dick Helms used to tell me all the time about we I used to walk into his car from the AIO luncheons and he would just tell me horror stories about Bobby coming to the to the uh to Langley and just yelling at everybody and not knowing what he was doing you know and they just sort of said yes Bobby you know yes Bobby because they worked for him you know and uh so yeah it was it was just like a Keystone Cops at times you know and the CIA didn’t really want these operations they were told to do them you know and you witness the fact that after the kennedies were out of office all this stuff went away if the CIA wanted to kill Castor they’ have kept doing it this was White House stuff right right you know and same with Eisenhower and the that came Eisenhower the White House ran most of these big operations the CIA guys demanded what they called higher authority for any big operation because their careers were on the line so they always got it and very often the higher authority ordered ordered it Eisenhower ordered Iran overthrow Guatemala I highly recommend to your viewers get a book called The Declassified Eisenhower the truth about the golf playing grandfatherly Ike he was really proactive the as were the kennedies and the CIA they job is to follow the directives of the White House whether they like it or not and anyway that’s you know digression but that’s what you get from knowing these people okay look we’ve gone a little over an hour I don’t we’re not going to get we don’t have time to get into your the main Crux of of brother brothers in arms which is you which is fine it’s worthy of a complete show on its own just briefly before we end this episode can you tell us a bit about JFK’s foreign policy uh the conspiracy theorists would tell us that his foreign policy was one of rapmon uh with the Soviets and the Cuba he was going to exit Vietnam um he was going to bring in a new era of peace to the world and that’s why he had to be killed so could you speak a bit to that my God where do I start uh let’s see number one his reproach M the the peace speech at American University was aimed at Cru they were on good terms with each other they actually respected each other a lot witnessed what happened after the assassination how destroyed cruff was uh and Cru je was put under house arrest so all our hopes were gone Kennedy was killed cruff was destroyed uh those two if they had have lived and stayed in power everything would have been different I think however um uh Cru Jeff uh Kennedy gave the speech aimed at Moscow it was not ever aimed at Cuba that was uh called his bone in the throat he could never he and Bobby could never you know disabuse themselves of the uh uh I don’t know they they they were embarrassed by the Bay of Pigs and it never left them Castro traveled around the world after the Bay of Pigs was you know after he won the Bay of Pigs invasion He travel the world embarrassing the kennedies making speeches they’re cretans they’re cretans and they’re cretans and they and the kennedies just couldn’t take it um so um anyway um there was no rap ront with Cuba ever during the Kennedy years it just shifted from Eisenhower had the mob doing it Eisenhower’s CIA and uh Bobby got the Cuban Exiles he got a few Cuban loyal Cubans who were in on this uh to uh continue the operations and uh so what was the rest of your question uh Fred beyond the well the the fact that you know I think Cuba is a main thing the fact that they they really were were were very very dedicated uh they wanted to get rid of Castro they that was their their their number one goal in that and that uh conspiracy theorists misunderstand things like operation Northwoods right which really came out of out of operation Mongoose right I was the first person in my first book to write about it because uh as I was researching my first book in 1997 is when the califano papers were released and Northwoods is in that cache of 200 uh pages of documents or 300 I can’t remember but uh Northwoods was a part of it I referred mostly to the part of it called op plan 380 which was a new Invasion plan uh and I talked about that but I got I think I was the first one of the first people to get my hands on those documents and uh you know it had nothing to do with Killing Kennedy I mean I just don’t get the connection that they’re making uh you know uh in fact same with with Vietnam and all that lunacy Kennedy uh was a hawk you have to understand the 1964 election was looming and the Republicans were going to use all this against Kennedy especially Cuba and Castro 90 miles offshore and Kennedy had to show that he was strong on these things and uh hence he was trying to remove Castro before the election in my opinion that’s what it was all about and um with Vietnam he put the troops in there first he uh escalated the whole thing a lot of it pressure was coming from his own father because there was the Catholics and the the um in Vietnam who were being persecuted the the monks were emulating themselves on the streets and uh this was a personal thing too but at any rate um I caught up Kennedy’s uh head of sinpac at the time uh or um who was in charge of his Vietnam operation brute krulac Victor VI krak I think his name was brute and I called him up and I said I gotta find out was he pulling out of Vietnam you were in charge of it and uh he laughed he said Gus how old were you when Kennedy was killed I said 13 He said uh well you knew as much about what to do in Vietnam as we did and he said here’s exactly what he told me he said on Wednesday Kennedy was thinking of pulling out on Thursday he was thinking of escalating right and on Friday he was going to pull out again he said he didn’t know what to do he whatever the wind blew uh it was an intractable situation uh once the first blood was shed in Vietnam Everything Changes in Warfare It’s called the tripwire effect because then you can’t pull out because how do you justify these first Dead GIS to their families if you say oh was a big mistake and you you’re caught up by that point and once the trip wire had been hit uh there was no getting out of it and it was one of the great tragedies of the 20th century was Vietnam and Kennedy um and yeah I read a lot about it I can’t give you all the details in a short amount of time but there is no doubt uh he was going to stay in Vietnam if not escalate Johnson didn’t want to have anything to do with it but Kennedy’s cabinet stay with Johnson for a transition and they said oh Lyndon you don’t know as much about politics in Asia as we do uh and Johnson thought it was a bad idea and they convinced him he didn’t know what he what he thought and he said okay if you if if mcnamar and you guys know more than me let’s do it and he regretted that to the day he died that he kept Kennedy’s cabinet because had it not been for Vietnam his presidency would have been amazing yeah absolutely Vietnam destroyed his presidency and it was Kennedy’s cabinet who told him what to do uh oh it was it was tragedy on top of tragedy we could G for a year about that you know but anyway um one I guess the the funniest person we should talk about before we go is uh Fletcher proudy yeah I had one or two interactions with Fletch I I went to his house I think he was living in Virginia and uh uh it was one of those things that you didn’t waste too much time on you know you may know more about him than I did I of course he wrote uh uh his book The Secret team so he had to be spoken to but again it’s a guy with a theory with with no corroboration for any of it his big thing was that milit that book The Iron Mountain yes which he thought was real it was fic yeah it was fic it was it was it was like a hoax yeah it was a hoax and so I think when I found that out I said okay check please done with BR you know and and and interestingly um as everybody sort of Knows by now that’s the Donald Southern car character in E and JFK the ex- character and of course proudy never met with Garrison like that that was all fiction uh and and uh that’s the other thing with Oliver Stone that he bought on to that Fletcher proudy stuff at all it’s uh yeah $45 million wasted yeah and and I mean Fletcher proudy was was was a horrific anti-semite oh yeah that’s true I forgot about that yeah I mean my God he he was going he was writing for I mean he presented at one of the uh cardo uh the the intern the one of the Holocaust denal conferences I mean it’s just it’s just unbelievable wow Mark Lane didn’t mark Lane marry Willis cardo’s daughter well he was Mark Lane was also part of that crowd in facte for a while was the anti-zionist uh editor of one of the Publications a je a Jewish lawyer working for the anti-semites crazy I remember going through your papers at Baylor and I I found a memo uh uh to Oliver Stone about Fletcher proudy saying you know look we have we have an issue here oh yeah you know there’s stuff I think that was Jane rone wrote that letter right his head of research was trying to warn him about that you know this is this is really serious I’ve looked into this and and it’s actually true you know there there there’s it’s really bad yeah and it was uh that you I Stone hired me for a minute before I knew I didn’t I never had the script he wouldn’t but he he knew my he knew my work for some reason and uh uh no actually I had written him years before that he should do a Kennedy assassination movie Back in 88 long before we could blame you you mean it’s I may have been the first person but I think he always wanted to do it but he liked that I showed the kind of work that i’ done I to write the script and he flew me out there and and I thought my my day had come in this is around 1990 or something and I thought my my ship had come in and uh uh he said no no I’m doing something different he said but I want you I want you to help me because you you know where everybody is I had all these phone numbers that’s a great story so he I I did hang around on the scene in Dallas in New Orleans and if you needed to contact like Buelle Frasier or somebody I said I’ll call up you I know him and that was my connection to this thing but there’s a great story there which we you don’t have time for probably but uh uh all the people who uh Stone wanted to meet and the deal was he promised them dinner with Kevin Costner that that never happened oh Kevin got
sick there’s so many great stories about that movie we’ll we’ll talk about a whole separate hour sometime okay that’d be great well look I think we’re going to end it here because U going on to brothers in arms and yeah Cuba and Mexico City those are big topics very important topics which I really want to get to because your stuff on Cuba is the best around it’s very important part of the case that nobody really discusses or I should say they discuss but they get it all wrong and yeah thank you for that yeah it was so sad they did they just didn’t really read that book they you just skimmed it and I’ll give you for the next thing I will reveal uh one the name the real name of one of our sources the Oscar character in uh and I’m prepared to uh tell you more about him he was one of our great sources on Oswald in Cuba he had the Oswald file he was a G2 guy and
there’s a great footnote on what happened to him
and who he really was
so there’s a teaser great oh that’ll be a great future episode when we really get into Cuba in a in a big big way so Gus thank you very much uh oh thank you friend always is fun talking to you and uh we’ll be in touch soon thank you very much yep thank you [Music] [Applause] [Music]