johnny silver bear speaks about the corrupt politicians we've experienced;
Back in 1967, we had no idea, or even suspected that, four years earlier, Lyndon Johnson had been complicit in the murder of JFK. Most of the sheeple have never even considered that possibility, and certainly don't want to consider it today. Lyndon Johnson was one of the slimiest politicians in the history of the United States (or the world for that matter). Aside from Abraham Lincoln, (who was right on up there with the slimiest) Johnson was responsible for more American deaths than any other single individual. Johnson's Mentor, Senator Alvin Jacob Wirtz (a super slimeball lawyer who taught him everything he knew) held a considerable amount of stock in a company that just happened to be one of his clients; Brown & Root. Alvin Wirtz and Lyndon Johnson helped Brown & Root acquire huge defense contracts (non-competitive) from another slimeball politician; President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the late 1930s. When Johnson got America into the Vietnam War, Brown & Root continued to increase their fortune constructing military bases in Southeast Asia (good work, if you can get it). Throughout Lyndon Johnson's career, Brown & Root was always his single biggest financial supporter. His rivals couldn't begin to match his political warchest, which goes a long way towards explaining his political sucesses. Today that company is Kellogg, Brown & Root, and is wholly owned by Halliburton. LBJ and a group of Texas millionaires (crony capitalism) had also, understandably, become large stock holders of Brown & Root. Kennedy's desire to pull American Troops out of Vietnam (and killing the "cash cow") was totally unacceptable to these stock holders. Killing JFK (which would, in turn, make LBJ the President) was, what they considered, a very workable solution. So, with the additional criminal complicity of the Directors of several alphabet soup agencies as well as the Mafia, the Federal Reserve and the Catholic Church (???) the Dallas Book Depository became Dallas' most popular tourist attraction (beating out the bars on Greenville Avenue by a hair).............more........
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