The Kennedy Assassination And The Persistence Of Conspiracy Theories -- Part V

  • From reading the comments on this series, it appears that several people are eagerly awaiting my pronouncement of which theory of the Kennedy assassination I think is correct.

  • Unfortunately for those commenters, as I said back in Part I, “I don’t have any clear belief as to whether the official version of the events is correct or whether there was a conspiracy.” That remains the case. I have not intended this series as the way to advocate for my own preferred theory, although perhaps inevitably it would be perceived that way. Instead I have intended this series to use the Kennedy assassination as a vehicle to explore the question of how we know what we think we know.

  • The Kennedy assassination provides an excellent illustration of the proposition that, in considering the truth of a hypothesis, the accumulation of facts consistent with the hypothesis is not nearly as important as those facts, even if few in number, that are at least arguably inconsistent with the hypothesis.

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The Kennedy Assassination And The Persistence Of Conspiracy Theories -- Part IV

  • These Kennedy assassination posts have generated large numbers of comments. Most of the commenters, and certainly the prolific ones, have studied up on the issue and have formed firm opinions of their view of the facts. But then there is a large gulf of disagreement between those who have accepted the “Oswald acted alone” theory and those who have rejected it.

  • The smallest camp is those who admit they don’t know the answer. That’s my camp. Many people understandably do not feel comfortable with ambiguity in situations like this.

  • Back in Part II of this series, I expressed the view that biggest problem for those who support the official narrative of “Oswald acted alone” is that there are multiple factual anomalies that are at least potentially inconsistent with that theory.

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The Kennedy Assassination And The Persistence Of Conspiracy Theories -- Part III

  • As mentioned in Part I of this series, I don’t have a firm view on whether there was or was not a conspiracy to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. However, if there was such a conspiracy, then clearly that is something that would be significant, and that all Americans would have a big interest in knowing about.

  • The reason a conspiracy would be so significant is that its very existence would imply that its members foresaw important consequences from the assassination. If the assassination was just the work of a lone gunman, presumably Oswald, then there need be nothing more to it than the mania of one crazy guy. The lone assassin would not need to have any motive beyond the satisfaction of taking out his target, or perhaps the perceived public glory and notoriety of being recognized as the successful killer.

  • If there is a conspiracy, that completely changes.

  • In the Kennedy assassination, a problem for conspiracy theorists is coming up with a theory that is plausible.

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The Kennedy Assassination And The Persistence Of Conspiracy Theories -- Part II

  • “Conspiracy theory” — the label evokes connotations of something so preposterous that it couldn’t possibly be true.

  • With an obvious simple explanation for some incident easily at hand, generally involving a single perpetrator or a natural cause, the alternative “conspiracy theory” posits that a large group of people plotted to bring the incident about. The very size of the posited group alone makes the conspiracy theory seem unlikely, because such a large group could never hope to keep the secret.

  • And then, in the classic conspiracy theory, the large group of conspirators consists mostly or entirely of agents of the government, who have allegedly acted in nefarious and illegal ways against the interests of the people they are sworn to serve, and have then also covered up their illegal conduct. Our government employees and officials may not be perfect, but surely they would not carry out, and then cover up, massive illegal conspiracies against the interests of the people.

  • Put these factors together, and you can see why sticking the label “conspiracy theory” on a hypothesis has long been an effective way to dismiss that hypothesis out of hand.

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The Kennedy Assassination And The Persistence Of Conspiracy Theories -- Part I

  • A few days ago, pursuant to an order from President Trump, the National Archives finally released some 76,000 pages of documents that were previously withheld as classified from what they call their President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection.

  • Many voices — not the least of them Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the current Secretary of Health and Human Services and nephew of the slain President — have been calling for the release of these documents for years, even decades. Surely today, more than 60 years after the event, the secrets that justified withholding these documents from the public for decades can’t be all that significant any more. So let the truth be known!

  • A big reason given by those advocating for the release of the documents has been that it might put an end to the so-called “conspiracy theories” that have long swirled around the assassination of President Kennedy.

  • Since immediately after the assassination, the official government story has been that Kennedy was killed by a single lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, who acted entirely on his own. That version of the facts got the ultimate official stamp of government approval with the issuance of the Warren Commission Report on September 24, 1964, about 10 months after the assassination. President Lyndon Johnson had appointed the blue ribbon Warren Commission specifically (supposedly) to get to the bottom of what had happened. The Commission was headed by Earl Warren, then the sitting Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and included as members such luminaries as future President Gerald Ford and then-recently-retired head of the CIA Allen Dulles. The Commission’s Report is long, detailed, and seemingly definitive. Since the issuance of the Report in 1964, the government’s official story has never changed.

  • And yet, when polls are taken of the American people even today, the large majority don’t believe it.

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New York Takes A Stab At A Green New Deal Demonstration Project: The Case Of Ithaca

New York Takes A Stab At A Green New Deal Demonstration Project:  The Case Of Ithaca
  • Many political jurisdictions claim to be on a path to eliminating emissions of carbon dioxide from their energy systems. Notable examples include California and New York in the U.S., and the UK and Germany in Europe. The Biden administration during its term in office even claimed to have set the entire U.S. onto a path toward what they called “net zero.”

  • But so far none of these places has gotten anywhere near the goal. Indeed, as of today, many hundreds of billions of dollars into the effort, not one of them has even issued a detailed engineering plan of how this is supposed to be accomplished.

  • For reasons expressed in some dozens of posts on this blog, with the exception of a vast expansion of nuclear energy, I don’t believe that this “net zero” thing can actually be done, at least without entirely impoverishing the people. However, I’m completely willing to be proved wrong.

  • For many years, I have been calling for a Demonstration Project . . . .

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