Tuesday, January 15, 2013

I believe Dr. King was opposed to the USA culture of violence.



I hope this honors him on his birth day. It is the way I see it. Dr. King had magnificent insight and he knew the actions and loyalties of President Kennedy. I can't imagine his reaction when he realized the President was murdered.

I also believe the Late President Kennedy was murdered because he opposed the invasion into Vietnam when his Vice President did not.

If Dr. King knew nothing of the murder of our President, he knew there was a force at work he could not deny. The drastic change in policy in Vietnam occurring with the oath of office of Lyndon B. Johnson cannot be ignored in the larger picture of why a man of distinction such as Dr. King spoke out against the war.

Dr. King was not a man of violence. He believed in life. He was not a martyr, nor did he expect those surrounding him act as one. He was a man of peace and non-violence. He knew this country and he knew the unrest and violence that lay ahead for our nation with a country returning to war when Kennedy was clear about his path of peace. President Kennedy hated nuclear warfare. Kennedy was extremely clear on his vision regardless of the politics.

Vietnam was wrong. And. The Warren Commission is a lie.

MONDAY, JAN 14, 2013 08:06 AM EST

...Almost 50 years (click here) after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, add another name to the list of Warren Commission skeptics — the president’s brother, then attorney general Robert F. Kennedy.
At a panel discussion in Dallas this weekend, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said that while his dad supported the Warren Commission’s official conclusion in public, he told friends and family that the lone gunman theory left too many unanswered questions in his mind.
“In private, he was dismissive of it,” Kennedy said. “My father believed the Warren report was a shoddy piece of craftsmanship.”...