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THE JFK ASSASSINATION: STILL HAZY AFTER ALL THESE YEARS

Michael Carlson
14 min readNov 23, 2020

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I wrote this essay on the 50th anniversary of Kennedy’s murder, in 2013, for the London Library magazine. On the 57th anniversary, it remains relevant.

If you are of a certain age, you will remember. It was 50 years ago, 22 November 1963 and, with respect to Philip Larkin, a moment more influential than the Beatles’ first hit. We were sent home from school that Friday afternoon; President John Fitzgerald Kennedy had been killed in Dallas. We watched Sunday’s live television news coverage as Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin, was gunned down by Jack Ruby. Life magazine declared Oswald guilty, its cover showing him posed with rifle and Marxist pamphlets. JFK’s Camelot, the 1,000 days of the New Frontier, the ‘best and brightest’ in his service, the beautiful wife and children, had been struck down by a misfit would-be communist defector. Everything seemed open and shut.

The commission appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson and headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren endorsed that simple explanation. But rather than calming the nation, the Warren Report raised more questions than it answered. Over the past half-century, the debate has become a mire of investigation, speculation and disinformation, with more than a thousand books written on the subject, some utterly bizarre. Were shots fired from an umbrella? By a gunman from a nearby manhole? By a Secret Service agent? Are some of the crackpot theories published deliberately, to discredit serious research? In the movie JFK

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Michael Carlson
Michael Carlson

Written by Michael Carlson

Yank doing life w/out parole as UK broadcaster & writer. micarlson.bluesky @carlsonsports Arts, books, film, music, politics & uh, sports. Accept no substitutes

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