Here is a report by free lance
journalist and writer Nerin E. Gun:
We must wait for
Mrs Kennedy," said Lyndon Johnson. "She is bringing her husband's
coffin."
Someone commented that Mrs Kennedy's presence at the ceremony would
in a way confirm the continuity of the régime; she would, so to speak,
"legitimise" the new president.
At 2:18 p.m. Jacqueline Kennedy arrived.
Three Secret Service men, and some soldiers, carried the coffin to the back of
the plane—but still in the passenger cabin. Jacqueline sat down beside
it.
When Johnson took the Oath, Army Captain Cecil Stoughton, official
photographer at the White House, recorded the scene on a special 50 mm camera.
He took nine photos. Three journalists boarded the plane, as representing the
world press.
Jacqueline was on Johnson's left, as the
latter repeated the Constitutional formula after Judge Hughes. The woman judge
was trembling; she did not use the Bible she had brought with her, but a small
Catholic Missal, found in the plane near Kennedy's bed.
Johnson gently
kissed Jacqueline on the cheek, then his wife. Then he said firmly: "Now let's
take the plane back to Washington. (Gun, Red Roses from Texas, p. 183).
Johnson said that
he never felt better on the day of Kennedy's assassination:
On
Air Force One, Johnson had taken the oath of office from judge Sarah T.
Hughes. The photos clearly show a solemn new president beside the still shocked
widow undertaking his new job with deep regret, all as he should. Then, as he
completed the oath and officially assumed the mantle of president, he could not
contain himself. The last photo in the series shows him with his face turned,
the back left side of his face deeply creased with a big smile, apparently
winking at longtime colleague Congressman Albert Thomas, who was there as a
witness. The congressman winked back, and Lady Bird smiled. As he would later candidly say, on that day "I never felt
better." (McClellan, Blood, Money and Power, p.
212).
Dr. Travell
was completely excluded from the President's autopsy!!
After the
President was assassinated, he was immediately flown to Bethesda Naval Hospital
where the Pentagon took complete charge of the autopsy. Dr. Travell was
completely ignored.
Admiral
George Burkley.
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Admiral Burkley
performed the autopsy on President Kennedy at the Bethesda Naval Hospital. He
also signed the death certificate.
Dr. Travell was
his superior, yet Burkley never asked her to attend the autopsy.
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Bethesda Naval Hospital.
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Dr. Travell was
kept in the background after the assassination:
In the West Wing,
the Presidential office was being dismantled. During the night, I walked from
the Mansion past the shadowy Rose Garden, and I saw the familiar mementos being
trundled away. By Saturday morning, the Oval Room was bare of furniture, books,
and the paintings of ships. Only the blood-red new rug remained that Jacqueline
Kennedy had planned for her husband's return. He never used it. It was a piece
in the mosaic of life and death. (Travell, Office Hours: Day and Night,
p. 428).
Dead men tell
no tales!!
The entire
assassination was a set-up with a lone assassin named Lee Harvey Oswald
arrested as the perpetrator. Just like Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth, he
was conveniently liquidated before he could talk.
Lee Harvey Oswald
(1938-1963) was the lone suspect in the shooting of President
Kennedy.
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The
assassination of Kennedy was immediately compared to the assassination of
President Lincoln.
Lincoln was
shot in the head, and then his assassin, John Wilkes Booth, was killed soon
afterward.
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Dead men tell no tales....The lone
assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was conveniently liquidated. Bethesda Naval
Hospital.
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Oswald was shot
by Jack Ruby as he was being transferred under police custody from the police
station to jail. Oswald was shot and killed by Jack Ruby on live
television.
The funeral of
President Kennedy
Mrs. Kennedy took charge
of the funeral arrangements. She had a copy of a book on the funeral of
President Lincoln brought to her and she ordered it to be followed
exactly— even to the design of the catafalque in the White House. . . .
Mrs. Lincoln almost died from grief on the death of her
husband!!
Funeral cortege of President
Kennedy
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Mrs. Kennedy insisted that the funeral of
President Kennedy be an exact replica of the funeral of President Lincoln.
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Mrs. Kennedy praying for the soul of her
dead husband at the graveside.
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After the
assassination, Kennedy was compared to Lincoln, and many people noticed the
amazing coincidences in the lives . . . and violent deaths . . . of the two
Presidents.
The myth of
Camelot
During the
Kennedy administration, the media began to refer to the White House as
CAMELOT.
Here is the
dictionary definition of Camelot:
1. the legendary
site of King Arthur's palace and court, possibly near Exeter, England.
2.
any idyllic place or period, esp. one of great happiness.
3. the glamorous
ambience of Washington, D.C., during the administration of President John F.
Kennedy, 1961–63.
Kennedy was
depicted as a devoted family man and his wife as a paradigm of virtue. Nothing
could be further from the truth. "Camelot" was more like the infamous Court of
the Borgias.
It is doubtful if
Kennedy was even LEGALLY married to Jackie:
Durie Malcolm (first wife of Jack
Kennedy).
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Kennedy
married Durie Malcolm—a twice
divorced Palm Beach socialite in 1947.
Joe Kennedy was
FURIOUS. He planned on running his son for the Presidency and a divorcée was not
Presidential timber.
He had the
marriage annulled, but a formal civil divorce was never
obtained.
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Jackie Kennedy (second wife of the
President).
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Jack was being groomed
to take the place of his dead brother Joe in the quest for the White House. The
ambassador had a fit when he found out about the wedding. Father Joe had all the
money and Jack did not have the COURAGE to defy his father:
Even in early 1947,
Spalding said, it was clear that Jack was being groomed and financed for the
White House by his father. Joe Kennedy had "a hemorrhage" when he learned about
the marriage, Spalding told me. Malcolm, besides being twice divorced, was
Episcopalian. "He demanded that it be taken care of," Spalding recalled. "They
[the family] were afraid the whole thing was going to come out.
"I went out
there and removed the [marriage] papers," Spalding told me, presumably from the
Palm Beach County courthouse. "It was Jack who asked me if I'd go get the
papers." Spalding said he "got" the marriage documents with the help of a lawyer
in Palm Beach.
Florida law requires no blood test before a couple can apply
for a marriage license. Prior to 1983, however, couples making application had
to wait three days for a license to be issued. If Jack Kennedy and Durie Malcolm
followed the law, their wedding was planned at least three days in advance and
thus was more than a spur-of-the-moment "prank," as Charles Spalding claimed
(Hersh, The Dark Side of Camelot, pp. 327-328).
Traphes Bryant
was an electrician at the White House and later the official kennel keeper. He
witnessed an endless procession of women secretely visiting the White
House . . . but not to discuss politics with the President.
Traphes Bryant and Kennedy photographer
Cecil Stoughton with the Kennedys' dogs.
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Traphes Bryant—the official kennel
keeper—witnessed an endless procession of women secretly visiting
Kennedy at the White House . . . but not to discuss politics with the
President!! |
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Traphes Bryant saying goodbye to Jackie
at the White House on Dec. 6, 1963.
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During his
Presidency, Kennedy had an endless procession of women in the White House. Many
times they went skinny dipping with Kennedy in the White House pool. It was said
that his overwhelming sex drive was due to the cortisone shots. Here is a report
by the White House kennel keeper:
President Kennedy
certainly seemed to enjoy his women. I don't know for sure about Marilyn Monroe,
but I did hear backstairs talk, after he was dead, that during his visits to
California he had enjoyed a few discreet meetings with her at a private
home.
I never saw her around the White House and I never heard talk of her
being either an official or "O.R."-off the record-guest there in his
administration, even though she once sang "Happy birthday, Mr. President, happy
birthday to you" to him in New York's Madison Square Garden.
But this much I can tell you: he did enjoy having beautiful women
around him at the White House and he did entertain them when Jackie was away.
There was a conspiracy of silence to protect his secrets from Jacqueline and to
keep her from finding out. The newspapers would tell how First Lady
Jacqueline was off on another trip, but what they didn't report was how anxious
the President sometimes was to see her go. And what consternation there
sometimes was when she returned unexpectedly.
I remember one time it was a
beautiful tall blond girl skinny dipping in the pool with him. JFK liked to swim
nude and so did some of the girls who popped in to visit him. But this
particular girl must have been just waiting for the First Lady to be on her way.
She came in the South West Gate and straight to the South Portico, and a trusted
aide met her there. He walked her through the Diplomatic Room and along the
Colonnade, as if he were taking her to the President's office, but instead he
took her to the gymnasium, where she shed her clothes and went to the
pool.
Jack Kennedy was already there, lounging naked beside the pool and
sipping a daiquiri. Sometimes one or two from a group of trusted staff aides and
friends would join Kennedy in the pool, and often there would be just one other
male and female to make up a foursome. This time there were several girls and
several male friends. (Bryant, Dog Days at the White House, p.
22).
Marilyn Monroe and Judith
Campbell Exner were just 2 of the women who had adulterous affairs with
Kennedy.
Marilyn
Monroe.
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Marilyn Monroe
and Judith Campbell Exner were just 2 of the women who had adulterous affairs
with Kennedy.
The Secret
Service and staff noticed an endless procession of women to the White House
during his Presidency.
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Judith
Campbell Exner.
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All this
womanizing seemed to mask a much more SINISTER side to Jack Kennedy. The daily
cortisone shots alone cannot explain his adulterous relations with so many
women.
President
Kennedy and Lem Billings
Kennedy had a
boyfriend named Kirk LeMoyne Billings—known to everybody as Lem.
Their friendship went back to their days as classmates at Choate School
for Boys in Wallingford, Connecticut. Lem traced his ancestry back to the
Pilgrims, and the Kennedys were flattered by his love for Jack because
they had tried unsuccessfully to break into Boston high society.
Lem Billings (1916-1981) on the north lawn
of the White House in 1962. |
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The Bible says that JEHOVAH created Adam and
Eve . . . not Adam and Steve!!
From the
highest office in the land, Satan is desperately pushing his Sodomite perversion
as we approach the end of time.
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Lovers Lem and Jack, Hyannis Port, 1955.
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The Office of the
Presidency has a tremendous influence on the morals of the people of the United
States . . . and the entire world. That is why Satan is pushing his perverted
homosexual agenda from the highest office in the land.
Jack Kennedy had
numerous female lovers . . . but he preferred to sleep with his boyfriend
Lem Billings.
Here is a report
from Rose Kennedy's chauffeur Frank Saunders. When Frank first started working
as a chauffeur, he missed picking up Joe Kennedy at the airport, so he was
afraid of losing his job:
I hadn't heard
any such thing, not from Johnny Ford or any member of the family. But as far as
the help was concerned, Rose Kennedy's absence was a bonus. "Count your
blessings, Frank," one of the maids said. I kept silent. Besides, I was still
not certain how much longer I'd have the chauffeur job. I'd had trouble falling
asleep the night before, still thinking about the incident in the driveway with
Mr. Kennedy and how I was sure I had lost the Kennedy job just as it was
beginning. I figured Mr. Kennedy would wait until this Memorial Day weekend
reunion with his son was over and then put the kibosh on me.
Then there was some talk about my having stayed up until after one
to meet the president. I made the mistake of asking who this friend Lem Billings
was. "Oh, him! He's always here," Dora Lawrence said. "I think he sleeps with
Jack more than Jacqueline does," she said.
This
was all so new to me, I did not know what the maid was talking about. And
evidently I showed it. The maid laughed, a kind of half laugh. "President
Kennedy doesn't like to sleep alone, Frank. Lem Billings is an old school chum,
and he's always with him," she said. (Saunders, Torn Lace
Curtain, pp. 45-46).
Lem Billings had
his very own room at the White House. Here is a quote from Lemmings biographer,
David Pitts:
As the
administration got under way, Lem came to Washington almost every weekend,
flying down from New York, where he was still working for Lennen & Newell.
He stayed at the White House so often that he was given his own room on the
third floor. He would leave some of his belongings there, so it effectively
became Lem's room. No one else stayed in it. "Lem was in and out of the White
House almost as much as the White House usher, and some people saw him so much
they thought he was the Secret Service," said Jack's aide Dave Powers. (Pitts,
Jack & Lem, p. 192).
That Billings
knew Jack intimately is verified by his own words:
Asked a year
after Jack died why they were so close despite their differing interests and
temperaments, and why their friendship had changed so little over the years, Lem
said, "I suppose it must have changed a little, but I probably spent more time
with him than any of his friends, even during his years in the presidency. . . .
He relaxed with me because I didn't really talk to him about any political
matters, or any of the matters he had on his mind all during his workweek, and I
mean this from the time he was congressman on through the presidency. I don't know that we had a lot of things in common. I guess just
the fact that we'd known each other intimately for thirty-two years is a pretty
strong bond in itself, so I felt that I understood him, understood his sense of
humor and he understood mine. I guess, just by habit, that we continued
to enjoy each other. It's very easy to see why I enjoyed him. I suppose that he
felt the same way. I think that was it. Probably having me around was relaxing,
because he knew me so well. I don't know what else it was." (Pitts, Jack
& Lem, p. 218).
East meets
West with Jackie and Ari!!
Jackie was
not blind to her husband's homosexual relationship with Lem Billings .
. . and his frequent adulteries.
She got her
revenge by having affairs of her own. A close "friend" of Jackie was Greek
multimillionaire
shipping magnate, Aristotle
Onassis:
Aristotle Onassis (1906 - 1975).
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In October
1963, just a month before the assassination, Jackie joined Greek
multimillionaire playboy Aristotle Onassis on his yacht, the
Christina.
Jackie's
sister, Lee Radziwell, was also on the Aegean cruise.
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Jackie on Onassis' yacht, the
Christina.
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This photo of
Jackie on the Aegean cruise threatened to derail the hopes of Kennedy to serve a
second term as President. However, she was persuaded to return home and assume
the role of dutiful loving spouse. That charade ended with her husband's
assassination just a month later.
The wedding of Jackie and "Ari" in
1968.
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Jackie married
"Ari" on October 20, 1968.
"Ari" had a
problem because he couldn't tell if Jackie married him for his good
looks . . . or his money!!
This mismatched
marriage could have been one way to end the so-called Great
Schism!!
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Was Jackie attracted by his good
looks . . . or his money??
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The two were
married on October 20, 1968, in a ceremony held on his private island of
Skorpios. The couple stayed married, despite often living apart, until
Aristotle's death in 1975.
Jackie Onassis
went to meet her Maker in New York City on May 19, 1994. She is buried next to
President Kennedy in Arlington National Cemetery.
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Grave site of President Kennedy and Jackie
Onassis in Arlington National Cemetery. Lem Billings is buried in Pennsylvania.
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Editor's Note
The
first book on the assassination of President Kennedy was Red Roses from
Texas by Nerin E. Gun. No publisher in the U.S. would touch his book so it
was printed in London....A used copy will cost you about $500.00
dollars.....That's right, $500.00 dollars!!
Vital links
References
Aitken, Jonathan.
Nixon: A Life. Regnery Publishing, Inc., Washington City, 1993.
Adams, Cincy
& Crimp, Susan. Iron Rose: The Story of Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy and Her
Dynasty. Dove Books, Beverly Hills, CA, 1995.
Bryant,
Traphes, Dog Days at the White House. The Outrageous Memoirs of the
Presidential Kennel Keeper. Macmillan Publishing Co., New York, 1975.
Dunleavy, Stephen
& Brennan, Peter. Those Wild, Wild Kennedy Boys, Pinnacle Books,
New York, 1976
Deppisch, Ludwig
M. The White House Physician. A History from Washington to George W.
Bush. McFarland & Co., London, 2007.
Eisenhower,
Dwight D. Waging Peace. The White House Years. Doubleday & Co.,
Garden City, New York, 1965.
Gun, Nerin E.
Red Roses from Texas. Frederick Muller Ltd., London, 1964.
Gilbert, Robert
E. The Mortal Presidency: Illness and Anguish in the White House.
HarperCollins Publishers, New York, 1992.
Livingstone,
Harrison Edward. Killing the Truth. Deceit & Deception in the JFK
Case. Carroll & Graf Pub., New York, 1993.
Marrs, Jim.
Crossfire. The Plot that Killed Kennedy. Carroll & Graf Pub., New
York. 1989.
Schwarz, Ted.
Joseph P. Kennedy. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey,
2003.
Travell,
Janet,. Office Hours: Day and Night. The Autobiography of Janet Travell,
MD. World Publishing Co., New York, 1968.