Assassins definitely change history, but do they achieve their goals?
Do they “win” politically or do their actions usually backfire? Here’s a look at the ugly realm of political assassinations from Ken LaCorte in a new edition of Elephants In Rooms.
History says John Wilkes Booth shot Abraham Lincoln and died twelve days later on a Virginia farm. But FBI forensic tests revealed his diary is missing 86 pages filled with names and payments.
The body pulled from that burning barn had the wrong injuries and features. Multiple witnesses claimed it wasn’t Booth.
Then a Texas bartender confessed on his deathbed to being Lincoln’s assassin, and his preserved remains toured the country for years.
DNA testing could prove the truth, but every request has been blocked. Was Lincoln’s assassination part of a larger plot to control America? And did the real killer escape? Here’s more from The Why Files.
What do the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Abraham Lincoln have in common? The Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt joins noted scholar Dr. Joseph Farrell in a free-wheeling discussion of both of these political murders.
In each instance, a president who was working to ensure peace was murdered by cold-blooded blackguards trying to foment more war, death and destruction. These were not rogue assassins, either, but criminals directly aligned with the military-industrial complex.
Interesting how both murdered Presidents also had vice presidents named Johnson. Lyndon B. Johnson likely had a hand in Kennedy’s death. There’s no indication Andrew Johnson plotted to murder Lincoln, although John Wilkes Booth, the Lincoln assassin, did try to pay a visit to Johnson the day of the murder, and even left a calling card at Johnson’s hotel.
Liszt and Farrell also talk about President Donald Trump and his Golden Dome, as well as Trump’s uncle John Trump — the scientist who secured Nikola Tesla’s papers and inventions. Farrell has two new books dealing with much of the financial chicanery and international intrigue around the Civil War. He promised to return soon so he and Liszt can discuss the research behind those books. Chief among them is Rialto In Richmond: The Money War Between The States & Other Mysteries of the Civil War.
Gene Decode says that the failed assassination of Donald J. Trump is abound with Freemason symbolism, suggesting this might well have been an attempted blood sacrifice.
Appearing on “The Missing Link, with host Jesse Hal, Decode exposes the unusual coincidence of three-named gunman tied to Presidential assassinations–John Wilkes Booth (Lincoln), Lee Harvey Oswald (JFK) and now Thomas Matthew Crooks (Trump). “This goes back to masonry, where when you go into court and testify … you’re at the third level–the jurist, the judge and you,” Decode says. “So you’re given the third degree, or the death sentence.”
Decode says that perhaps the most glaring connection to Freemasonry were that the Secret Service and/or Department of Homeland Security personnel on the roof behind Trump, who were all wearing blood-red-colored, braided bracelets on their wrists. “This is a symbol of masonry. It goes to the red shoes,” Decode says. “I think everyone knows what that symbolizes and I don’t need to state that’s a blood sacrifice.” He elaborates, plus shares more of his thoughts surrounding the assassination attempt.