Ever since the events of that fateful day in Dallas, Texas many people have questioned, disbelieved, and refused to accept the official story of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The culpability of the story that government officials had given to the press was beyond suspicious to the point of absurdity. This has been telecasted from the rooftops by men like Oliver Stone while the term Conspiracy theory was literally created for people who did not believe the media or the government.
The official story pushed by the Media had many bowling ball size holes and the entire context of the official investigation put out by the Warren Commission looked like Swiss cheese from the Moon. The whole story stunk to high heaven and as a child, when I first heard the history lesson of JFK, I had many suspicions that Lee Harvey Oswald was not the assassin. The main reason being, he was never able to defend himself in a trial. When you zoomed out for the full picture, no part of the official account made any sense. From the magic bullet theory, to the autopsy, to the motive, things just did not add up, and as the years have gone by, we the people have discovered; that for any suspicions about Kennedy’s murder to be squashed the narrative requires propaganda from the state to be forced upon the public. These unanswered questions and suspicions is what makes Kennedy’s murder the ultimate cold case.
The reality of the situation is that John F. Kennedy’s murder was just like anybody else’s murder. After all, he was just a man just like any one of us and every murder should be handled with the same amount of skepticism. However, his murder changed the course of human history for seemingly the worst because he was such a great leader who had such a positive influence on the nation. This realization proves that John F. Kennedy was truly America’s Shakespearian Julius Caesar. Many people bring