I have taught at universities in the US, the UK, Germany and China and I have published in numerous academic journals. I was active in the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s demanding equal rights for Blacks. NOW I SUPPORT CIVIL RIGHTS AND DEMAND EQUAL RIGHTS FOR ALL CITIZENS, INCLUDING WHITES AND MEN. (For some of my more formal writing, go to http://www.anthonyflood.com/murray.htm you can find photos, etc.) For most of my writing, see Tulane University's Library, Special Collections.
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
OBAMACARE = OBAMONSTROSITY
The more we see of the failure of the Obamacare website, and learning how many cannot keep their present plans, and will be forced to pay for plans that do not apply to them, like men having to purchase maternity insurance, one can see more clearly this is a scheme to hurt most productive Americans. When 40 million uninsured Americans are added to the pool, but the number of medical doctors remains the same, even if the system were cheaper, there would not be enough doctors. The waiting time to see a doctor will become much longer. For the elderly, this will mean just what Sarah Palin said it would mean - Death Panels for the elderly, because the doctors will have to see the young. Obamacare does demand more affirmative action doctors, but recall Dr. Patrick Chavis, the poster doctor of affirmative action in the New York Times Magazine, proof that a-a worked. Dr. Chavis, it turned out, was so bad, he performed liposuction on his Black women patients without anesthetic, and finally one died, and he was disbarred. (For more on this, see the excellent book by William McGowan, Coloring the News.) Or what about Dr. Conrad Murray, who was the physician for Michael Jackson. Will these be our new doctors? Affirmative action means NOT getting the best qualified, but the lesser and the unqualified. Flooding the hospitals with affirmative action doctors will be another way of creating Death Panels.-------Hugh Murray
Monday, October 21, 2013
HIGH-POWERED BOOK SHOOTS DOWN WARREN REPORT
From an Office
Building with a High-Powered Rifle: A Report to the Public
From an FBI
Agent…(Walterville, OR: TrineDay, 2012) by DON ADAMS
Rev. by Hugh Murray
Don Adams
has written a short, repetitious, extremely important book. The repetition stems from the many FBI
documents which support and expand upon material described in the text.
Why is the
book important? Don Adams was an FBI
agent who interviewed a character who may have been involved in the Kennedy
assassination. Adams queried him a week
before, and then several days following, the murders in Dallas. Adams knows what he did and what he was
ordered to do. Yet, it
was not until some three decades after the assassination of Pres. Kennedy that
Adams began to study some of the FBI documents; only then did he become aware
of how his own information, his reports, had been revised, distorted, and
falsified. True, from November 1963
Adams was aware of pressures placed upon him and other agents from supervisors
to avoid certain questions and to silence doubts about the official line on the
Kennedy assassination. Only later,
however, did he begin to read critics of the Warren Report, and only after
that, did he become aware of how his own FBI reports had been warped by his
superiors.
Adams wrote
this book from personal experience. In
1963, as an FBI rookie agent, he was assigned to the small FBI office in
Thomasville, Georgia. Soon after
arriving in town, he overheard his local FBI chief warn the sheriff that Adams
was “a Catholic, a Republican, and a Yankee.”(p. 30) On 13 November 1963 Adams was assigned to
interview a right-wing, racist, crank, Joseph Adams Milteer of Quitman,
Ga. This was a high priority assignment,
for the agency had been alerted that Milteer had threatened President
Kennedy. On Saturday 16 November Adams
spoke with Milteer as he distributed right-wing literature on the street. Milteer quickly disclosed that he hated the
Kennedys, Blacks and Yankees, but he issued no threats. A week later when Adams heard the news from
Dallas, Adams worried that Milteer might have been involved, and that he, the
FBI agent, might have failed to prevent the murder.
Adams was
not the only FBI agent concerned about the local Kennedy-hating crank. By 5 pm on 22 November 1963, Adams received
orders to locate Milteer immediately, interview him and then hold him for the
Secret Service.(8) Adams rode to
Milteer’s home, then to that of his lady friend and all his usual haunts,
searching for his VW bus which was covered with right-wing signs. Neither Milteer nor his vehicle were to be
found. Days passed. Finally, Adams spotted the propaganda bus,
but then, following FBI procedure, had to get another agent to accompany
him. The interview with Milteer began on
the night of Wednesday 27 November into the early hours of Thursday the 28th. By this time, his superiors had commanded
that he ask Milteer five, and only five questions. Adams wanted to ask many more, but his boss
made it clear, these five questions only.
Adams (with his silent colleague present) interrogated Milteer. One question was, did Milteer have knowledge
of the bombing of the 16th Street Church in Birmingham on 15
September 1963. Milteer denied any such
knowledge. The fifth question Adams was
assigned to ask was, did Milteer ever make threats to assassinate the
President, or had he participated in a plot to kill Kennedy. Milteer adamantly denied ever making such
threats or conspiring with others to kill the President.(42) Case closed, as a prominent author might
conclude.
What Adams
did not know at that time was that both the Miami Police Dept. and the FBI knew
that Milteer had in October and November 1963 spoken with others on ways to
assassinate the President. Some of these
threats were tape recorded on 9 November 1963.
The agency clearly knew of Milteer’s threats. That is why they dispatched Agent Adams to
locate Milteer both in mid-November and again on the day of the
assassination. Yet, the FBI did not
inform Adams that the FBI had a copy of the tape of Milteer speaking with an
informant and discussing how to take out the president with a high-powered
rifle from an office building. Adams was
not informed about the tape, or the threats that Milteer had made, and he was
constricted as to what he was allowed to ask Milteer by his FBI superiors. Thus, when Milteer denied making threats or
conspiring, Adams had no information with which to dispute Milteer. And even if he had had the information, his
superiors ordered him not to ask any more questions than the original five.
Just what
kind of investigation of the assassination was this? It was one in which the FBI chief, J. Edgar
Hoover, conferred by phone on 22 Nov. 1963 with newly sworn in President Lyndon
Johnson and by 9 pm they had decided that Oswald was guilty and he had
performed the deed alone, without conspirators.
Once the FBI Chief had made that decision, all information from the FBI
agents was to bolster that view, and any evidence to the contrary was to be
dismissed, denigrated, destroyed, forged, or falsified in order to promote the
lone-nut Oswald theory. Adams’ book is
an indictment of the FBI in the case of the Kennedy assassination.
Adams was
not the only FBI agent to break ranks. I
recall at the time of the Garrison investigation, an FBI man appeared on local
New Orleans television asserting that there had been FBI teletypes warning of
an assassination soon before the deed in Dallas. This was being exposed about the same time as
the FBI’s destruction of a note hand-delivered to the Dallas FBI office in
November 1963 by Lee Oswald.(52, 94) Yet,
the agency did nothing to reveal that Oswald might be dangerous. Later, it was revealed that even a page of
Oswald’s address book had been removed because it contained information about FBI
agent James Hosty. The page had been
removed so the Warren Commission would not see it.
Adams was
slow to publicly question the FBI’s Kennedy investigation. The FBI was the agency for which he worked
for decades, and which he still holds in high esteem. Yet, he is convinced it failed on this, its
most important case. The Adams’ book is
more like the reluctant good soldier who grows to doubt, to question, and then
to condemn, his commanders. Adams
condemns the FBI leadership on this most crucial case, crucial for Adams, for
the FBI, and for the nation.
Yet, Adams’
writing style and organization leave many loose ends. For example, in a memo from the FBI’s Civil
Rights Div., the SAC of Atlanta (the larger dist. which included both Agent
Adams and the extreme racist Milteer) requested to have Milteer’s long distance
phone checked “to ascertain if there were any calls to Dallas or New Orleans,
during pertinent period.”(77) Why the
inquiry regarding calls to New Orleans, specifically? Did the FBI have someone in mind in New
Orleans with whom it thought Milteer was conspiring? If so, who?
Oswald seemingly left NO in September 1963. If the pertinent period is narrow, and closer
to the assassination, who in New Orleans did the FBI have in mind? (Recall, shortly after NO DA Jim Garrison
arrested Clay Shaw, US Attorney General Ramsey Clark proclaimed that the Feds
had already investigated Shaw and found no conspiracy. Might the FBI have been thinking of Shaw in
1963? Of Banister? Of whom?)
Even more
intriguing, Adams reveals more about the informant, William Somersett, who
spoke with Milteer in Florida where the conversation was taped on 9 November
1963. This taped discussion provides the
title of Adams’ book, for then Milteer spoke of killing the President by using
a high-powered rifle from an office building.
He also said a patsy would be quickly arrested to divert the authorities
from the real perpetrators. Adams
reports that the same informant, Somersett, continued his contacts with
extremists and authorities later in the 1960s.
Writes Adams: “On April 3, 1968, Somersett called the Miami Police Dept.
to alert them that he had obtained reliable information that Martin Luther
King, Jr. was to be assassinated the next day.
Somersett’s information was ignored.”(117) King was assassinated 4 April 1968. One wishes Adams would have written more
about Somersett.
What Adams
does expose is how the FBI “mistreated” Somersett. Somersett not only spoke with Milteer on 9 November
concerning the method to kill Kennedy, he met Milteer in Jacksonville on 23
November, where Milteer was “jubilant” about Dallas. “Everything went true to form. I guess you thought I was kidding when I said
he would be killed from a window with a high-powered rifle.” Somersett asked if Milteer had been guessing
when he had predicted the assassination earlier in the month. Milteer snapped, “I don’t do any
guessing.”(103)
Milteer’s
jubilation and bragging that he predicted the Kennedy assassination reminded me
of a personal incident. I had swum
against the stream in high school and college in my native New Orleans. In 1960 I was one of the early members of New
Orleans CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), and in September of that year was
arrested in the city’s first lunch-counter sit-in. Some of my relatives were horrified, and to
restore honor to the family, one uncle sent money to George Lincoln Rockwell
and the American Nazi Party. I rarely
saw this uncle, but he would occasionally stop by my parents’ when I was
there. His usual greeting to me was,
“How are the burr heads doing?” This
teasing would annoy me, which is what he wanted. But, in time, the shock wore off, and I
shrugged it off as his “hello.”
Nevertheless, there were serious differences between our world
views. In the early 1960s, if he had a
few drinks, he would groan, “Ouuu, that Bobby [Kennedy]! They’re going to get that Bobby.” I tried to ignore that comment, too. It was probably in early 1964, the first time
I had seen him for awhile. At some point
in the visit, he smiled and said, “Didn’t I tell you! Didn’t I tell you they were going to get
him?!” It took a moment for his comment
to register with me, for at first I did not comprehend his reference. Then my jaw dropped when I understood. I replied, “You said they were going to get
Bobby.” “Well, they got the other one
instead.” Exasperated, I finally asked,
“Who is this ‘they’ you keep talking about?”
Nonchalantly, he answered, “The mob, out in the parish.” Out in the parish meant Jefferson Parish,
adjacent to New Orleans, and the leader of the mob there was Carlos
Marcello. In early 1964 no one else was linking the Mafia to the Kennedy assassination. So, in 1964 that remark only
confirmed my view that politically my uncle was on another planet.
Milteer’s
teasing and bragging, like my uncle’s, may have been simple bluffing,
braggadocio, bull s***, or it might have been…
Informant
Somersett also told the FBI that he received a phone call at 10:30am on Friday
22 November from Milteer calling from Dallas!
Milteer then assured Somersett that Kennedy would never return to
Miami. At 5:30 pm that day, the FBI
assigned Agent Adams to locate and interrogate Milteer with only five approved
questions. Adams searched, but was
unable to find Milteer at his home in Quitman or at his lady friend’s, driving
by many times. He could not locate Milteer
in his Georgia locale until several days later.
However, unbeknownst to Adams, the local FBI office reported that Milteer
was in Quitman on 22 November. Adams
maintains that he was the agent assigned to find Milteer, and the vocal racist
was not there. Recall, Somersett had
reported that Milteer had called him from Dallas. Because Somersett’s information contradicted
the official FBI story, Adams discloses how the FBI began to undermine Somersett,
inserting comments into his files that Somersett was not a reliable
informant. This discrediting of Somersett
BEGAN only with the Kennedy assassination.
The point
is that Milteer was let off the hook by the FBI that declared (without good
reason to do so) that Milteer was in Quitman, Georgia on 22 November 1963. This attempt to deflect suspicion from
Milteer was in direct conflict with the reliable information supplied by
Somersett. Therefore, Somersett had to
be discredited.
There is a
minor discrepancy I should mention in this book. On Sunday morning 24 November 1963 a young
woman rang the doorbell of the Adams’ home in Georgia, and after some fearful
misunderstanding, she identified herself as a student at Tulane/Newcomb Univ.
in New Orleans. “Ms. [Vereen} Alexander
told me she had come to me because she knew Lee Harvey Oswald…”(39) Yet, Adams, in his FBI report of the
discussion does not report that. He
writes that there was a party in the summer of 1963 at the home of Dave
Hoffman, at which Ms. Alexander “had the strong belief that Lee Harvey Oswald
was also possibly present at the party.”(70)
Ms.
Alexander identified Al Peccarero as “a leader” and member of a local socialist
group in New Orleans.” Peccarero, in
another FBI report, (not in this book), was also presented as the publicity
director of the New Orleans Council on Peaceful Alternatives. Yet, the same Al Peccarero, during the early
1960s, presented a speech before a large audience of the local White Citizens’
Council. Which side was Al on? I suspect he may have been on the payroll of
Guy Banister, Kent Courtney, or some agency to spy on the student and
university left. (Admittedly, one may
change views. I have changed, and am now
a conservative. But this change took
time. One does not actively partake at
the same time in integrationist and segregationist organizations, or, like Oswald, pro-Castro
and anti-Castro, unless for covert reasons.)
There are
many other tidbits in this book that provoke thought, and illustrate that even
with excellent agents on the ground, the FBI investigation of the Kennedy
assassination was flawed, forged, and distorted to support the instantly fossilized presupposition that
Oswald was the lone-nut assassin; to do this the FBI ignored, warped, and
buried in trivia evidence to the contrary.
Here are
some revelations from Adams’ book, which is excellent for several reasons. It includes a transcription of the tape in
which Milteer on 9 November speaks to informant Somersett on how to kill the President
using a high-power rifle from an office
building and then having a patsy arrested while the real culprits escape. Milteer’s threats were taken seriously enough
by the Miami Police Dept. that Kennedy’s itinerary was changed when he visited
Miami on 18 Nov. 1963. The FBI had a
copy of the tape, but it did not push any change in the itinerary when Kennedy
visited Dallas a few days later. And
when Oswald visited the FBI office to deliver a threatening note, the FBI did
nothing to watch Oswald; it did nothing except destroy his note after the assassination!
On the morning
of 22 Nov. Milteer phoned William Somersett from Dallas who assured him that
Kennedy would never again return to Miami.
On 23 Nov. the exuberant Milteer met Somersett in Jacksonville, assuring
the informant that his prediction of how to take out the President was no guess
work. Receiving such reports from Somersett,
the FBI decided to destroy the informant’s credibility. 3 April 1968 Somersett alerted authorities
that Martin Luther King would be assassinated the next day. The warning by the discredited informant was
ignored. King was killed the 4 April
1968.
Adams
produced a short book with numerous photographs and copies of official
documents making the text even shorter.
It is repetitious. There should
have been an expanded index. Yet, this
is a book essential to all interested in the assassination of President John
Kennedy.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
CELEBRATE COLUMBUS DAY! - DEFEND WESTERN CIVILIZATION
Chinese explorer Zheng He may have discovered America
before Columbus, according to new book
Eric
Pfeiffer, Yahoo! News 7 hours ago
`Does a 600-year-old Chinese map prove that Christopher
Columbus was not the first explorer to navigate the New World?In his book “Who Discovered America?,” published Tuesday, author Gavin Menzies says the settling of North America by nonnative peoples is more complex than previously thought.
‘The traditional story of Columbus discovering the New World is absolute fantasy, it’s fairy tales,” Menzies, 76, said in an interview with the Daily Mail....
My comment:
There is little doubt that Zheng He's fleet sailed to SE
Asia, and even to East Africa. But, the
Chinese sailing to Europe and even the Mississippi River in America? I doubt it.
In the 1990s someone discovered bones in the western state of
Washington. It appeared to be a murder,
with an arrow in the man’s leg. The
sheriff looked and thought a white man had been killed by an arrow. He sent the skeleton to scientists who judged
it about 9,000 years old, the oldest full skeleton found in N. America (Kenniwick Man). Immediately, the Amerindians demanded the
bones. The hate-science Democratic Party
prefers to appease the religious superstitions of Amerindians than explore
science. An outrageous law signed by
Dem. Pres. Jimmy Carter was used to restrict the time the scientists could
study the bones. Dem. Pres. Clinton
returned the "white" skeleton to the Amerindians for burial. I suspect they buried these bones so no white
man will ever see them again. (Some of
the absurd privileges granted to Amerindians today is bases on white guilt for
killing so many of the savage Indians when Europeans came to North America. If, whites were here before the Amerindians
came, then they were the truly murderous group, and whites have no moral
obligation to allow them to own casinos, a right often denied to whites.) Democratic Pres. Clinton also destroyed the
site where the bones were found. The Democrats
dare not disturb the cult of multi and its hate-whitey views.
Chinese may well
have sailed the Pacific to the west coast of the New World. The Vikings clearly came across the
Atlantic. Some Olmec sculptures appear
quite Negroid, so it is possible Africans also sailed to the New World.
Still, the voyage
of Columbus is the most important one.
The earlier discoverers of America resulted in short-term contact. With Columbus, there would be continuous
contact between Old World and New.
Columbus united the world as never before. Like it or not, he began a new globalism. It is Columbus, and the European sailors who
followed him, who made the modern world.
We may recall Zheng He and Leif Erickson, but it is Columbus whose
discovery created the modern world.
Slavery, disease, death: the dark side of the Christopher Columbus story
Jay Busbee 8 hours ago
And according to The Oatmeal’s Matthew Inman, Columbus Day is a dangerous farce.
Inman contends in his current strip on The Oatmeal, a humor/political commentary website, that the legends we believe about Columbus are not only misleading but grossly unfair. He cites primary sources and journals recounted in Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States” and James Lowewen’s “Lies My Teacher Told Me” to dispel the traditional narrative of Columbus as brave traveler who connected the Old World and the New.
Here are a few of The Oatmeal’s conclusions about Christopher Columbus:
• In 1492, no one actually thought the earth was flat. “Pretty much anyone with an education knew the earth was round. The Greeks had proved it 2,000 years before Columbus was born.”
• Columbus didn’t actually “discover” the New World. Not only were there natives living in the Americas for 14,000 years, Leif Ericson found the same territory 500 years before Columbus.
• Columbus wanted gold, and lots of it. His initial ideas for a new trade route to Asia fell by the wayside as he realized how much gold was available in the New World.
• The natives would provide little resistance. According to his own journal, Columbus believed the indigenous Lucayans would not be a significant challenge. “I could conquer the whole of them with fifty men,” he wrote, “and govern them as I pleased.”
• For his second visit, Columbus armed for war. When Columbus returned to the New World, he brought 17 ships and 1,500 men.
• Columbus treated the natives brutally. Columbus demanded treasure, food and sex for his men, and when the Lucayans refused, he ordered their noses and ears cut off to serve as a warning.
• Columbus treated his conquered people harshly. When the Lucayans rebelled, Columbus crushed the rebellion and carted off 500 Lucayans to be sold into slavery in Europe.
• Columbus disrupted the entire economy of three continents. Post-Columbian disease and starvation killed three to five million people over the next fifty years. And the influx of gold disrupted the global economy to the point that African slaves became a dominant commodity.
…MY COMMENT
The hate-the-West
crowd is at it again. Educated men in
Europe may have believed the earth to be round, but they opposed the voyage of
Columbus because they believed it far too large, and the one huge ocean far too
long to reach land (imagine the earth with no New World, and a watery journey
from Spain to Asia). The learned in
Spain opposed Columbus because they thought the sailors would not survive such
a lengthy voyage. It would be like
sending a manned voyage to Mars today - in effect beyond the technology of the
times. Columbus was wrong in that the
earth was much larger than he presumed; however, his mistake resulted in the “discovery”
of the New World.
The most developed of the Amerindians, the
Aztecs practiced mass murder that makes the conquest by Europeans seem
mild. Indeed, it was often only with the
help of the oppressed Amerindians that the vastly outnumbered Europeans were
able to topple the empires of the Aztecs and Incas so quickly.
Others surely
discovered the New World before Columbus.
But there discoveries remained cut off from their lands of origins. Only with Columbus' discovery, would the
world become united, a global economy that would allow all people to
flourish. Only with Western Civilization
would the stone-age Amerindians grow to their numbers of today. Only with Western Civilization would all,
including the descendants of African slaves, multiply and prosper (and have far
more modern lives than those left behind in Africa.) It is Western Civ., with its rejection of
superstition and its embrace of science, that has wiped out and curtailed so
many diseases.
Hooray for Columbus. He made the modern world. Celebrate Columbus Day!
Saturday, October 5, 2013
LEE HARVEY OSWALD – STUD?!? (updated 28 Nov 2013)
By Hugh Murray
I am
bewildered by some of the items I have read about Oswald. Clearly, he was married to Marina and
fathered two children with her.
Yet, when
the question of the influence on David Ferrie on Oswald became an issue with
the Garrison investigation of the mid-1960s, there was a subtext of
homosexuality. Was Oswald’s mentor gay? Was Ferrie the man who urged Oswald’s mother
to sign the underage teen into the Marine Corps? Ferrie was gay. The question was how much and in what ways
did he influence Oswald? One researcher,
Al Rodgers, informed me that had Oswald had a boy with Marina, he would have
named him David.
I had read
in at least one book that when Oswald was stationed in Japan at Atsugi base, he
frequented a gay bar.* In the 1980s I
even published a short article in a New York gay newspaper beginning with the
question, was Oswald gay.
By the
1990s, without studying the particular topic, I had assumed that the troubles
Oswald was having in his marriage with Marina were probably due to his own
homosexual tendencies. In the 90s I was
researching for an article on the New Orleans Council for Peaceful Alternatives. The group is mentioned in the Warren
Commission material, and some thought the government’s version was
inadequate. One researcher even sent me
an old copy of the Councilor, the publication of the White Citizens’
Council. That paper had several photos
of a march along St. Charles Ave. in New Orleans sponsored by the NOCPA. I was asked if I could identify Oswald among
those partaking. I could not, but I did
identify Tulane students Mel Jones and Ruth Ann Kloepfer, among others. They were an attractive couple, and Ruth Ann
was a real beauty. I telephoned Ruth Ann
– my first discussion with her since the 1960s - and asked about some other
things too. One of the most important, I
asked about her meeting with Lee Oswald.
In the
summer of 1963 Ruth Paine, a Quakeress in Texas, had called the clerk of the
tiny New Orleans Quaker group to ask if they knew anyone who spoke Russian, and
who might help a Russian woman with a small child and who was expecting
another. The clerk of the NO Quakers was
Ruth Kloepfer, mother of Karol and Ruth Ann, her two college-age
daughters. In September, the trio drove
to the Magazine Street home of the Oswalds.
For the
first time, in the 1990s, I asked Ruth Ann about that meeting. Anger filled her voice. She related that while the pregnant Marina,
her small child, Ruth Ann’s mother and sister were in one room, Lee was coming
on to her in another. She was
furious. She and her family had not come
to visit him; they had come to help the pregnant woman in need. And she was in the next room! What kind of man would try to come on to
someone when his wife and her mother and sister are so near? What kind of, well she was still angry at him
over three decades later. With this
conversation, I began to revise my thinking about Oswald’s sexual orientation.
I even
began to revise my thoughts about Oswald and Ferrie. I had roomed with a white civil rights
activist in New Orleans during the university year 1960-61. Oliver told me that as a youth, he had been
on the wrong path, sliding into juvenile delinquency. He was saved as a teen when he joined the
Civil Air Patrol headed by David Ferrie.
Though Oliver was by then a senior at Loyola University, and was no
longer close, he still maintained contact with Ferrie. Indeed, I recall, he looked forward to a
party Ferrie was giving at his apartment in the spring of 1961. I had never met Ferrie, was not invited, and
did not attend that party. When I next
saw Oliver, I asked him about it. He was
not enthusiastic, “Oh, David was playing soldier.” At the time, I thought nothing of it. But that party was about the time of the Bay
of Pigs invasion of Cuba. David may have
been doing more than “playing” soldier.
Oliver was
greatly influenced by David Ferrie.
Ferrie was clearly gay. Yet,
Oliver was straight. He was a staunch
Roman Catholic and made it very clear, in words and deeds, that he was not
gay. If straight Oliver could have been
so influenced by gay Ferrie, without becoming gay, so it is surely possible
that Oswald may have been influenced by Ferrie without becoming gay.
In the
summer of 2009 (I think) in the Special Collections section of the Tulane
University Library, I chatted with an older librarian, Kenneth Owen. He remarked that he had encountered Oswald in
a beatnik-hippie place on Rampart St. in 1962 or 63, a place that preceded the
Quorum Club. The Quorum was raided by
the police in 1963 and the names of over 30 customers were printed on page 1 of
the local newspapers. The club was
raided because in was an alleged center of drugs, homosexuals, and
integrationists. I assume the club that
had opened and closed prior to the Quorum must have been somewhat similar. In the conversation between Owen and Oswald,
the librarian became convinced Oswald was gay.
In 2013 I
became aware of the book, Me & Lee,
by Judyth Vary Baker in which she alleges that in the summer o 1963 in New
Orleans, while Oswald was married to Marina, and she was newly married to Robert
Baker, she and Oswald conducted a secret affair. Indeed, she maintains that Oswald was going
to divorce Marina and she and Oswald would soon be together, probably in
Mexico. Because they were both married,
theirs was a most secret affair.
In her
book, and The Secret Order by H. P.
Albarelli, there is discussion of Oswald having a short affair with Silvia
Duran, who worked in the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City. On the other side, also in Albarelli’s
volume, he claims that Rose Cherami accused Jack Ruby and Oswald of screwing
each other.
Michael
Snyder, in his fascinating analysis of the plays and writings of Clay Shaw, writes
that Gore Vidal asserted that the young Oswald in New Orleans knew Clay Shaw
because the youth was hustling in the gay community.
Was Oswald a stud? A president killer, or a lady killer, or both. One should also consider this paragraph from a new book.The following is part of a page from Charles E. Hurlburt’s It’s Time for the Truth: The JFK Cover-up: The Real Crime of the Century (2012), p. 115.
Was Oswald a stud? A president killer, or a lady killer, or both. One should also consider this paragraph from a new book.The following is part of a page from Charles E. Hurlburt’s It’s Time for the Truth: The JFK Cover-up: The Real Crime of the Century (2012), p. 115.
“Although
Oswald espoused a fondness for the Russian language and political system [while
in the Marines] so openly that he was given the name ‘Oswaldskovich’ by his
fellow Marines, he was assigned duties that allowed him access to ‘top secret’
areas and data. Atsugi [US base in
Japan] was not far from Tokyo, and Oswald often went into town, like most of
the American servicemen, to visit the many nightclubs and meet girls. One such club, named the Queen Bee, was too
expensive for low-paid enlisted men like Oswald (one date there could exceed
what Oswald was netting per month).
Nevertheless, he was seen there on several occasions in the company of
one of the hostesses who, according to another Marine buddy, was questioning
Oswald about his work at Atsugi. Some
researchers hypothesize that Oswald was being funded by his superiors to
frequent this over-his-head establishment and feed false information to this ‘KGB
spy.’ Fueling suspicion that Oswald was
more than he appeared tp be was a Marine medical report showing that he was
treated for a venereal disease that he contracted ‘in the line of duty, not to
his own misconduct.’ His dates with the ‘KGB
spy’ may be the explanation for his being treated for gonorrhea contracted ‘in
the line of duty.”
Was the US
government subsidizing Oswald’s amorous encounter for his role as a spy. Was Oswald a stud, a cold-war
Chippendaler? Was he a President
killer? Or a lady killer? Or both?
Was he a lone nut? Or someone who
spread such cheer, that the government paid for his romances?
I am not
the expert. I have written this short
essay because I find the material so contradictory. If others are interested, they might research
further – although proving who is bedding whom is not so easy a task. But,
for the moment, viewing all these claims, it appears that Lee Harvey Oswald was
some stud.
*(My own excuses - I am poor, reside in an
efficiency flat, and have had to move a number of times. I have had to dump my libraries from time to
time, painful as that has been. I know I
had read of Oswald going to a gay bar while he was stationed at Atsugi, but
cannot recall in which book. Most of my
older, underlined, JFK books are gone, and about to turn 75, I do not want to
re-read all those volumes. So, here I am
relying on memory. If some complain that
I am posting unfinished material on the blog, my excuse is that I feel I have
to post unfinished material before I am finished. I have a dead line!)
(A
few of his marine buddies thought Oswald was gay, but they were basing their
conclusion on rumor and his aloof personality.
Their assertions may have been nothing more than a manner of indicating
that they did not like him. Posner had
Oswald frequenting an expensive bar where he associated with a Japanese woman while
he was in Japan, and others also thought he was having an affair with a
Japanese gal. Bottom line - others, if
inclined, may search further on this topic.)(The phrase lady killer does not mean a man who murders women; it means a man whom women find sexually attractive and whom they would like to bed.)
Email from Judyth Vary Baker
Subject:
Re: LHO study
Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2013 09:37:31 +0200
Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2013 09:37:31 +0200
In Me & Lee I
also mention that Lee told me he fell in love with a Japanese girl and that she
was beaten when she tried to refuse any more prositution (high class style, she
was an expensive girl at the Queen bee). Lee told me he thought he would return
for her, but time slipped away.
I am sorry you are in
impoverished circumstances. I,too, have often suffered. Even though you write
the word 'claim' instead of 'assert' regarding my relationship with Lee Oswald,
nevertheless, I'd like to send you the second volume of David Ferrie (there
will be two, I had so much to say and to provide evidence for). It will be a
year from now and hope you will be well and stay well.
Judyth
My
reply:
Hey Judyth,
I was trying to use synonyms for allege, claim,
and so forth. Until I wrote this piece, I did not realize how many
encounters Oswald may have had, or tried to have. The sentences in the
Snyder work imply that he was hustling quite a lot as a teen, yet I am most
skeptical of that claim. But as you have discovered, proving or
disproving sexual hook ups is extremely difficult. I just wanted to place
on the net what seems to be a growing list of claims about his sexual
activities, and surely one that does not fit the lone nut image of Oswald.
I normally do not complain about my lot.
I made my choices, and have paid for them. I have not had a teaching post
in the US since 1969, so I have no office or place to keep books, or access to
a univ. library, etc. [except when I visit New Orleans]. But I
suspect you have had to pay a price too.
Also I am now old. One reason I place
reviews on amazon rather than submit them to journals is that I want to be
alive when my review is posted/published. For academic journals, even if
they accept, it may take 2 years.
My memory is still good. I met the
librarian at Tulane on one of my annual summer week in NO. It may have
been 09 or 2010 or so. I was less interested in getting the year right
than describing what he said. The basic point of what he said is there.
Hope your session in NO goes well.
Take care,--------Hugh
I
should have added in my letter that I am poor but not impoverished. I have no luxuries, like an automobile. But I have enough for most of my needs. I fume when I feel my writing is limited
because I lack access. But I enjoy all
the basics, heat, good food, vitamins, etc.
And I do get to travel. This
article would have been stronger had I access to some of the pieces I have
written previously, like the newspaper article from the 1980s. I simply do not have copies of most of my own
writing, much less than the ability to retain the volumes by others. I do not have the room.
The point of this article,
unfinished, incomplete, as it is, is this, --- the image of Oswald as a lone
nut may have to be revised. ---- Hugh Murray
Thursday, October 3, 2013
CIA, SHRINKS, TORTURE - IN CONTEXT - & JFK KILLING
A SECRET ORDER:
Investigating the High Strangeness and Synchronicity in the
JFK Assassination, v. 1 (Walterville, OR.:
Trine Day, 2013) – by H. P. ALBARELLI, JR.
Rev. by Hugh Murray
After
reading this book, I can only rephrase Gurtrude Stein, “Is there a there
there?” After concluding the book, I am
still wondering, what did I read? I can
understand why the author declined to write a concluding chapter – there is
nothing to conclude.
I was angry
after reading one chapter on “the bizarre diary of Eric Ritzek.” The diary, found 9 months following the
Kennedy killing in Dallas, was left at Trailways bus ticket office in Los
Angeles. The diary describes the
hypnotic abilities of two college students, Erik and his roommate Charles. These two master craftsmen use their powers
of mind control to hypnotize Oswald to kill Pres. Kennedy, and then do the same
to Jack Ruby so he can murder Oswald. At
one point, Erik implies that his superiors are from another planet. (p.
336) So, the people behind the
assassination in Dallas are from another planet! Seems I read that decades ago in headlines of
the National Enquirer, or was it the Globe?
That chapter was a total waste of my time.
In later
chapters the author describes something, and then he repeats the same story as
it was told to Congressional investigators, or the FBI, or other officials.(as
on 336) This redundancy both lengthens
and dullens the book. While Albarelli
pads this volume to over 400 pages, he promises to detail certain items in the
next volume. Had Alb removed the
repetition and fluff, and added what might be interesting from the proposed
volume 2, then he might have written one worthy book.
Despite my
criticisms, the book is not worthless.
On a very personal note, Albarelli answered one lingering question for
me. I recall a pretty girl in my high
school named Rose Cheramie. I have
always wondered if she were the same person that warned of the impending
assassination of Kennedy when deserted by two men on a road in rural Louisiana
a few days before the killing in Dallas.
As I attended the same high school (and junior high) as Lee Oswald, I
have always wondered if he might have known the gal in school who years later
predicted the assassination of the President.
Well, Albarelli cleared it up.
The Rose Cherami who was in the Louisiana State Hospital was some 15
years older than my high-schoolers.
Moreover, she had been born Melba Youngblood in Houston. The older Rose also asserted that she knew
Oswald, but more through Jack Ruby, whom she claimed was a lover of Oswald.(97) She was not the same Rose Cheramie from
Easton High. Or, to echo Stein again, a rose is a rose is a rose, but in this case, they are two distinct roses.
Many years
ago I attended as many sessions of the Clay Shaw trial as my schedule permitted
– I was then teaching at university and could occasionally arrange time to see
the trial. For a few sessions, I met a
friend there, and we sat as spectators.
After I left New Orleans, I maintained an annual contact with that
friend, and usually asked, if there were new leads on the Kennedy case. Decades ago he told me about a woman, quite
respectable, a scientist, who had a story of conspiracy. But she had no physical proof of her
story. I was pleased to read that the
experience of Adele Edisen is now a chapter in print in Albarelli’s book.
Albarelli,
who had previously written about CIA experiments on innocent Americans, one
such that resulted in the death of a CIA agent, here elaborates on such
experiments. Indeed, the chapter on
Adele Edisen might be nothing more than a famous doctor, Dr. Jose Rivera,
spiking her drink with LSD. But it might
have been that, and considerably more, as asking her to telephone Oswald in New
Orleans and giving him an order to kill the boss.
Albarelli is good at showing that government agencies
were involved in medical experiments on Americans, in juvenile detention
centers in New York, in Louisiana in this hospital and that. Perhaps, I have become more cynical concerning
medicine, doctors, and their opportunism.
Albarelli shows that some of David Ferrie’s gay teen “friends” were
treated with LSD in the hope of curing them of homosexuality. This was in the same Louisiana hospital in
which Oswald later filed a job application, and in which Rose Cherami was
treated in November 1963. It is also
where doctors connected to the CIA conducted experiments. Albarelli spends many pages connecting
doctors who were engaged in CIA medical inquiries. Perhaps, Albarelli should have gone the other
way in his writing – asking, if the CIA requested them, were there any
hospitals or facilities that would refuse unwarranted experiments upon
patients?
That Dr. A
knew Dr. B who knew Dr. C who was involved in CIA experiments with Dr. D is
more reminiscent of the 6 degrees of separation from Kevin Bacon than proof
that all were engaged in misconduct.
Reading page after page, I am thinking, what does this prove? And to take a totally contrarian view, it was
not that long ago historically, when doctors had to rely on grave robbers to
gain access to a corpse upon which to perform medical teaching techniques and
discoveries. And one might glance at my
article on Nazi medicine to appreciate more the methods of Western
medicine. Though one may readily
criticize the arrogance of the American doctors working for federal agencies, I
suspect they were quite minor when compared to the practices to end deviancy
(especially the political varieties) as practiced contemporaneously under
Communism in the Soviet Union.
In his
first chapter Albarelli exposes the opportunism of a psychiatrist who had examined
Lee Oswald for half an hour when the youth was truant, apprehended, and processed
by NY Social Services. When Oswald was
arrested and murdered years later in Dallas, the New York psychiatrist seized
the moment to gain fame, prestige, and probably more money, by lying –
pretending that he had predicted many of the problems Oswald was to encounter
because of his distorted personality. So
what if the doctor exaggerated, lied? He
was simply stepping on the grave of one of the most hated men in America. The doctor was squeezing that half hour
interview into 15 minutes of his own fame.
Is such opportunism – a very human characteristic – a crime? Unfortunately, Albarelli devotes nearly 90
pages of a chapter to this psychiatrist.
There were
a few facts I learned in this chapter. I
was surprised to read that Guy Banister put up the bail for Nazi leader George
Lincoln Rockwell when he was arrested in New Orleans for picketing the film
“Exodus.” (81) There were rumors in New
Orleans at the time that the powerful political leader of Plaquemines Parish,
Judge Leander Perez, had sponsored the trip to New Orleans of Rockwell’s “hate
bus.” This was meant to counter the
Freedom Rides of the Congress of Racial Equality that were also making
headlines in the spring of 1961.
(Strangely, the NOPD was not very sympathetic to the Rockwell
group. Recall, in the 1950s Banister had been active Superintendent of the NOPD. Yet, not only were the Nazis arrested for
merely picketing a movie, but they were required to cover the main sign on
their hate bus – gas (or kill, I forget which) Jews, Queers, Commies, and
perhaps, a 4th group to be terminated. We arrived too late to see the uniformed
Nazis arrested, but did see police arrest picketers in civies.)) Perhaps, more pertinent to the events in
Dallas, spring 1961 also witnessed the defeat of the Bay of Pigs invasion of
Cuba.
Much of Albarelli’s
work centers around US agencies and their efforts to use medical experiments to
modify, control, interrogate, torture, etc.
I shall now go off-topic in order to return to the topic of the book
later. On 29 Sept. 2013 CBS TV’s “60
Minutes” opened its new season with a segment on how the closing of mental
institutions in the late 60s-early 70s has resulted in many insane people being
warehoused in jails and prisons. Worse,
because it is now much more difficult to commit someone to a hospital for
treatment, many of the insane are on the streets. Some of them are quite dangerous. In a similar vein, Ann Coulter, in her column
of 18 Sept. 2013 noted that with the closing of the old asylums, and the
difficulty of having someone committed, America has seen the rise of the
homeless, AND the shootings by crazies of large numbers of innocents in movie
theaters, in schools, in universities, even in a naval facility. Before the reforms of the 1960s, both Coulter
and “60 Minutes” asserted, one did not have the mass shootings by crazies that
have occurred since. Now, it is even
difficult for relatives to commit a son or daughter, unless the child is
willing to be committed. They note the
result is often disastrous.
Three films
of the earlier era are related to this topic: 1) “The Snake Pit” (1948)
depicting in a shocking and frightening way what may occur in the mental
institutions, 2) “Street Car Named Desire,” (1951) in which Blanche DuBois
(Vivien Leigh) is committed to the insane asylum after being raped by her
brother-in-law (Marlon Brando), and 3) “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” (1975)
in which inmate Jack Nicholson contends that those inside are just as sane as
those on the outside (indeed, the inmates may be ever more sane). The latter film (and the book that preceded
it) may well have persuaded public opinion to close down most of the older
mental institutions and accept the newer notions making it very difficult to
have someone committed against their will.
I was quite
active in the civil rights movement in my native Louisiana. A friend in New Orleans CORE was a white
college gal from Birmingham, Alabama.
When she returned home, her parents were quite upset. Connie had to flee hidden in the floor of a
car to get to the airport so she could fly out of town. Her parents had planned to have her committed
to a mental institution and then lobotomized.
One wonders, how many suffering from civilrightsophrenia might have
suffered similar fates? (Blacks might
have been diagnosed with uppityitis; gays with upthea__iatis, and so on., but
whatever the scientific terminology, it was all determined to prevent deviance
from the dominant society.) Albarelli
mentions LSD (90) and electric shock (128)
to cure homosexuality; and what about lobotomy for this disease
too? The parents would have their
children committed for their own good, of course. Unlike the Muslims, there was little need for
“honor killings” when the state provided mental institutions and “cures.”.
And so the
promiscuous teenage girl might be committed.
And what of the wealthy widower who was suddenly enamored of a pretty
young stripper? Surely, his family might
want to inherit the wealth and not see it squandered by the horny old man who
must now be certified as mad? He should
be committed. Or the poor man married
to a rich woman; but he now wants to be with a poor beauty? His wife must now be certified as
insane. If he knows the right lawyer, the
right doctor, he may well have her committed.
And the reverse – the poor wife with a rich husband. And so on.
Indeed, some of the women’s films of the era were explorations of this
very theme - the husband seeking to drive the wife insane, such as
“Gaslignt”(1944) with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer. To put it bluntly, family values were often imposed by brute force using the state via its
mental institutions. It was probably
allowed AND EXPECTED, that the family would prevent deviancy through these
measures. Clearly, there were many
abuses in these institutions that had nothing to do with the CIA.
Perhaps the
most amazing example of what might happen in a family dispute occurred in
Louisiana in 1959. Democratic Governor
Earl Long, was brother of the more famous Huey Long who was assassinated in
Baton Rouge in 1935 by a Dr. Carl Weiss.
(Dr. Victor Weiss examined Rose Cherami in the Louisiana hospital in
November 1963, but I have no idea if Weiss of one assassination was related to
the Weiss of the other.)
Earl Long was Governor. He and his wife, Blanche, had a falling out,
possibly about his friendship with stripper Blaze Starr. (A 1989 film starring Paul Newman, “Blaze”
was a fictionalized version of their relationship.) Blanche then had her husband, the governor of
the state, committed to the insane asylum.
Earl Long, inside the hospital, was still governor. Earl then fired the state’s head of the
institution and appointed another doctor as chief administrator. The new health chief then determined that
Earl was sane, and had him released.
When Earl ran in the next election, he asserted that he was the only
candidate who had been certified as sane.
On one level, it is a funny, true story.
But on another level, when even a governor could be committed against
his will, for perhaps displeasing his wife, or perhaps for only on a political disagreement,
one can see how reform was necessary.
Yet today, many like Ann Coulter, “60 Minutes” and myself believe that
the pendulum of reform has swung too far one way, and now America must make it
easier to commit the crazies.
My purpose
here is NOT to defend the CIA and its use of medicine to enhance torture or
captivate minds. But actions by CIA
doctors should be placed in the context of the times. This context is not simply the Cold War
against Communism, in which case the Soviets and their allies were probably
doing worse things. But the context of
those times must include the “normal”
cures and procedures inflicted by families and doctors upon patients.