<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (pegs @ Jul 11 2008, 01:29 PM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Denny Crane @ Jul 11 2008, 04:25 PM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (pegs @ Jul 11 2008, 01:23 PM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Denny Crane @ Jul 11 2008, 10:42 AM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>"That would be that JFK was president, and there's always all kinds of international and domestic intrigue going on."
I thought I addressed the issues surrounding the conspiracies regarding foreign powers and the Mafia with that statement.</div>
Mafia? No, I was thinking Cubans, Soviets, FBI, and CIA...
You think Oswald acted alone? On his own terms?
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Yes. I think Oswald was a nut job, with his own motivations. The FBI was run by J. Edgar Hoover and had been doing all kinds of nasty things all along, coincidentally to JFK's presidency. Soviets wouldn't assassinate the US president, that's a huge joke of a conspiracy theory. Cubans? Doubtful.
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What's with Oswald's connections to Cubans, Soviets, the CIA, and the FBI?
And what of the letter to Hoover, received by the FBI, and ignored about a potential presidential assassination?
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Oswald was a nut job, what else is there to say? He wore out his welcome in the USSR, and maybe the FBI and/or CIA found him to be a useful tool as a low-level kind of operative or informant.
As for letters about potential crimes or whatever, I'm quite sure the govt. gets a huge volume of those kinds of things and they're all ignored for the most part.