Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Blockbuster Phil Singer March, 2020 interview of Abraham Bolden on LBJ's VOLCANIC ARGUMENT with the Kennedys in June, 1961

 

Web link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_XTAJOtAlI  


Folks, I assume many of you know Phil Singer who is one of the more respected and  longtime JFK assassination researchers. Phil Singer knew Mark Lane and he has made it a point of his to know many of the critical JFK assassination witnesses. For example, Phil Singer discovered JFK honor guard member Hubert Clark who later wrote the book Betrayal - about how the casket he was guarding was empty when it was supposed to have had JFK's body in it.

Phil Singer lives in Chicago and he is a long time friend of ABRAHAM BOLDEN like many of you are. For years Abraham Bolden was sitting on a very important and critical anecdote about a VOLCANIC ARGUMENT between Lyndon Johnson and the Kennedys that occurred on June 29, 1961. LBJ's explosive behavior was so threatening that Secret Service agent Abraham Bolden reported Lyndon Johnson as a security threat to the life of President Kennedy to the director of the Secret Service Urbanus Baughman (born 1905-1978), who later retired on August 31, 1961 and was replaced by the execrable James Rowley who later helped to cover up the JFK assassination for Lyndon Johnson.

Privately, over the years, Abraham Bolden has shared this story with many of his JFK assassination researcher friends, but publicly he kept a lid on it until the 2022 John Carman interview of Bolden

Abraham Bolden did NOT include this critical LBJ anecdote in his book The Echo From Dealey Plaza and the reason for that is not something that I know. I think that it was so explosive, so sensitive that if Bolden had told it publicly it might have negatively affected his chances for a presidential pardon and maybe Bolden thought no one would believe it.

In March of 2020, Phil Singer got Abraham Bolden to do a PRIVATE VIDEOTAPED INTERVIEW that was supposed to be released after the death of Abraham Bolden, who is now age 88. Well, a good thing happened Abraham Bolden decided to go public about this story in interviews with John Carman in 2022 and later with Gil Jesus (January, 2023) and Andrew Kreig (April 7, 2023). Therefore, Phil Singer is releasing his 2020 Bolden interview because, very thankfully, the cat is out of the bag on LBJ's scary 1961 threats to the Kennedys in the Oval Office.

Abraham Bolden worked as a Secret Service agent for only one month - from June 5, 1961 to about July 4, 1961. The date of the LBJ explosion was Thursday evening, June 29, 1961.

All of these collectively are extremely important videotaped interviews with Bolden about this blockbuster anecdote involving the deranged and hateful Vice President Lyndon Johnson.

Please share this March, 2020 Phil Singer interview of Abraham Bolden around the internet and in email blasts with your friends.

Sincerely,

Robert Morrow

"The World's Foremost Authority on Lyndon Johnson" (Sorry clown lone nutter Robert Caro, it is not you!)

5/30/2023 Addendum - some corrections and clarifications to my email by Phil Singer:

Hello Robert:

 

Good afternoon.

Thanks for the e-mail shown below.

I hope that people enjoy the video of Abraham Bolden.

A few corrections:

 

I knew Mark Lane and worked for his organization, The Citizens Commission of Inquiry [C.C.I.].  We were tryin’

to get the J.F.K. case reopened.  And we did play a part in that.  It became the H.S.C.A. in the late-‘70s.

 

Hubert Clark, and the other Honor Guard guys, didn’t know if the Dallas casket was empty or not.

They all thought that J.F.K. was in there.

They had no reason to question it.

At my reunion events, where I brought ‘em all together after over fifty years and at my “Bethesda Seven” event,

they learned that there were some legitimate questions about what was goin’ on that night of the autopsy.

They had to rethink ev’rything basically.

 

I don’t live in Chicago technically.  I live in a suburb of Chicago.  Abraham lives in Chicago.

 

My agreement with Abraham was that I would not release the filmed interview of him while he was still alive,

unless he gave me permission to do so.  I think that by tellin’ me the L.B.J. story several times and then agreein’

to let me have it filmed for history, it kinda gave him the confidence to come forward and go public with it,

especially after he received the pardon from President Biden last year, which was holdin’ him [Abraham]  back,

I think.

 

Abraham worked for the Secret Service before  -  and after  -  the L.B.J. / Kennedy brothers incident in June of ’61.

The day Kennedy died in Dallas, he was workin’ for the Secret Service in Chicago.  He only worked for the White

House Secret Service detail in Washington, D.C. for one month.  Abraham first met President Kennedy in Chicago

In early 1961, where J.F.K.  -  at McCormick Place  -  asked Secret Service agent Abraham Bolden if he’d like to be

the first Negro on the White House Secret Service detail.  And Abraham said, “Yes.”

 

Thank you very much.

 

-Phil Singer


Monday, May 29, 2023

Lyndon Johnson, his Silver Star and the most fraudulent case of Stolen Valor in American History - Memorial Day 2023 History Lesson

 Happy Memorial Day, folks! Today we are going to learn about Lyndon Johnson, his Silver Star award and the most fraudulent case of Stolen Valor in American military history.

The bottom line: Lyndon Johnson in 1942 got Gen. Douglas MacAurthur to award him a Silver Star, one of the nation's highest military commendations, for doing absolutely nothing but sitting on an airplane as an observer. The plane, the Heckling Hare, came under engine and flew back to base and IT DID NOT ENGAGE THE ENEMY IN ANY WAY WHATSOEVER! Additionally, while LBJ was getting his completely fraudulent Silver Star, the greatest case of Stolen Valor in American history, NO ONE ELSE ON THE HECKLING HARE RECEIVED ANY MILITARY COMMENDATION for this flight that had to turn back because of engine trouble.

Lyndon Johnson for decades afterward, until the end of his life, would often wear a Silver Star lapel pin, and he would brag about his military heroism. LBJ was a sick, sick man indeed.

In 2013 the United States Congress passed the Stolen Valor Act and fraudulent claims regarding military service are punished with a fine, imprisonment up to one year or both. Stolen Valor is a federal misdemeanor. Now, technically, LBJ actually did receive a military commendation, but he promoted the big fat lie that his plane came under withering fire by Japanese Zeros.

(Below, Lyndon Johnson wearing his completely fraudulent Stolen Valor Silver Star lapel pin)




(Above, Lyndon Johnson for decades would wear his completely fraudulent Stolen Valor Silver Star lapel pin)

Lyndon Johnson and his ridiculous Stolen Valor Silver Star – he was a mere observer on a plane and it never even came under enemy attack!

  

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/jul/06/internationaleducationnews.humanities

 

For most of his political life, Lyndon B Johnson wore a second world war military decoration for valour under fire despite never having seen combat, an investigation broadcast on CNN yesterday revealed.

LBJ was awarded the Silver Star, the third-highest US combat medal, for a 1942 fact-finding mission over the Pacific while he was a Texas congressman and an acting lieutenant commander in the navy.

The citation, issued in the name of General Douglas MacArthur, said the plane, a B-26 bomber, was "intercepted by eight hostile fighters" and that Johnson "evidenced coolness".

In fact, according to surviving members of the crew, the plane developed mechanical problems before reaching its target and never came under fire. No other crew member received a medal for the mission.

The biographer of LBJ, Robert Dallek, said the medal was the outcome of a deal with Gen MacArthur, under which Johnson was honoured in return for a pledge "that he would lobby the president, FDR, to provide greater resources for the southwest Pacific theatre".

CNN article on Lyndon Johnson’s completely fraudulent Silver Star – what is called today in 2022 as “Stolen Valor”

 

Google “Stolen Valor Act of 2005”

 

Completely Phony Silver Star given for a June 9, 1942 bombing run on a plane that had to turn back with engine trouble long before the other bomber planes came under attack by Japanese Zeroes as the approached their targets. LBJ’s plane did not engage the enemy and on top of that he was merely an observer. And on top of that NO ONE ELSE ON HIS PLANE received any military commendation for that flight.

 

“The Story behind LBJ’s Silver Star: Merits of late president’s wartime record still debated,”

 

http://medicinthegreentime.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/LBJ-SSM-CNN.pdf

 

By Jamie McIntyre CNN Military Affairs Correspondent And Jim Barnett CNN Producer

 

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Lyndon Baines Johnson, the first member of Congress to enter active duty in World WarII, was awarded the Silver Starin 1942 for gallantry in action on a flight over enemy territory. But historians have called Johnson's decoration one of the most undeserved Silver Stars in history, and CNN's review of the historical record raises new questions about the circumstances of its award by Gen. Douglas McArthur nearly 60 years ago. For most of his life as a politician, Johnson proudly wore a Silver Star pin identifying him as a war hero. The small lapel pin can be seen in the famous photograph of Johnson taking the oath of office aboard Air Force One following John F. Kennedy's assassination in November 1963. For three decades, on occasions mundane and momentous, the small red, white and blue badge of courage was often visible on Johnson's suit coat. "He wore the Silver Star in his lapelall his life, up to and through the presidency,"said Robert Caro,a historian and Johnson biographer. "When he was campaigning in Texas and he wanted to draw people's attention to it, he would actually do this (with his lapel) when he was giving a speech,"said Caro, demonstrating how Johnson would grab his lapel with the Silver Star and flap it. Whether Johnson truly rated the Army's third-highest combat award seen on his official portrait is a question his biographers have long debated. "The most you can say about Lyndon Johnson and his Silver Star is that it is surely one of the most undeserved Silver Stars in history," Caro said. "Because if you accept everything that he said, he was still in action for no more than 13 minutes and only as an observer. Men who flew many missions, brave men, never got a Silver Star." In an effort to clarify the historical record, CNN re-examined previously published documents about the wartime service of Johnson, who died in 1973,and conducted interviews with the few witnesses stillalive. While not conclusive, the available evidence raises questions not only about whether the Silver Star, now on display at the LBJ Library in Austin, Texas, was undeserved, but also whether it was awarded based on a battle report that may have been inaccurate and incomplete. 'Ambitious politician' enlists After Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Johnson, then a lanky lawmaker from Texas, became the first member of Congress to enter active duty. "The minute WWII began, he was a very ambitious politician,and he understood if he was going to run for some higher office down the road, he needed to have some kind of military service,"said Robert Dallek,another Johnson biographer. "So he volunteered and became a naval officer. He's in Washington as a reserve naval officer,and he goes to see (President Franklin D.) Roosevelt and convinces him to send him on an inspection tour of the southwest Pacific." Rare home movies, from a camera Johnson carried on that tour, show Roosevelt's young protege in Australia, where he met MacArthur, who allowed him to go on a single bombing mission as an observer. Johnson was awarded his Silver Star for that one combat mission on June 9, 1942, on a bombing run in which 11 American B-26s attacked a Japanese base in Lae, New Guinea. It was his only combat experience in an eight-month military career.

 

Johnson is greeted in Port Moresby, New Guinea before his single mission as an observer on aB-26 bomber in 1942 The source for most accounts of what happened is a book titled "The Mission," published in 1964 after Johnson became president. Based on the crew's firsthand account,authors Martin Caidin and Edward Hymoff painted a vivid picture of how the B-26 bomber -- hobbled by a failed generator -- limped back to base, fending off attacking Japanese fighters, using its crippled guns and evasive maneuvers. In the book, Johnson is described as "coolas ice"and "laughing"in the face of a withering attack by Japanese Zeros. "Bullets were singing through the plane allabout us," waist gunner Lillis Walker told the authors, who are now dead. "We were being hit by those cannon shells,and he was -- well -- just calm and watching everything." The passage was a gripping account of courage under fire -- except,according to the sole surviving crew member -- it was pure fiction. "No way,"said retired Army Staff Sgt. Bob Marshall. "No, that story was made up, put in there in my mind by the author of the book. 'Cause we never seen Zero, was never attacked. Nothing." "The Mission"authors portrayed Marshall,a 19-year-old gunner on Johnson's plane,as overcoming the loss of electrical power by using brute strength to aim his guns against the Japanese. But Marshall insists it never happened. "That was something I would never forget if I had to do that," Marshall said. "We never got attacked. I had no reason to swing my guns, my turret. Them was built-up stories." Marshall said he remembers meeting the young Navy officer who flew along on his plane that day but didn't know who he was then and didn't learn until years later that Johnson received the Silver Star for the flight. For years, he said he quietly disputed the published account in private conversations and occasionally in public, but almost no one paid attention. "If that so-called observer, LBJ that day, got it, the whole crew should have gotten it," Marshallsaid. "That's the third-highest award you can get." Did plane come under fire? Historian and aviation writer Barrett Tillman has long contended that Johnson's plane turned back well before it could have engaged the enemy. "Johnson, I think, to his credit, was willing to put himself in harm's way for whatever reason," Tillman said, "but about 80 miles southwest of the target, his aircraft developed generator trouble and was forced to turn back." Tillman and researcher Henry Sakaida first published this version of events in 1993 and updated their argument in an article in a recent issue of Naval History magazine. "The citation,as written for the Silver Star, was completely erroneous," Tillman said. The criteria for the Silver Star,established by law in 1932, state it is "for gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States while engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force"and specify that the "required gallantry ... must ... have been performed with marked distinction." Johnson's Silver Star citation says, "As our planes neared the target area, they were intercepted by eight hostile fighters." While implying that Johnson's plane was among them, the citation doesn't actually say his B-26 came under fire. The citation goes on to read, "The plane in which Lieutenant Commander Johnson was an observer developed mechanical trouble and was forced to turn back alone, presenting a favorable target to the enemy fighter; he evidenced marked coolness in spite of the hazard involved. His gallant action enabled him to obtain and return with valuable information." Tillman said, "He may have well brought back valuable information to Washington, D.C., but it was not, definitely not, in context of direct combat."

 

Johnson had his Silver Star pin on when he took the oath of office as president following John F. Kennedy's assassination in 1963 Johnson was given the Silver Star by MacArthur, who also awarded a Distinguished Service Cross -- an even higher award -- posthumously to another member of Johnson's inspection team. Lt. Col. Francis Stevens died in the one B-26 that was shot down that day. In a twist of fate, Johnson originally had boarded that B-26. After a bathroom break, Johnson got on a different plane nicknamed the "Heckling Hare." According to flight records, on June 9, 1942, the bombers took off at 8:51 a.m. for the two-hour, 20- minute round trip to Lae, New Guinea. The attack was set for about 10 a.m. Tillman said that the timeline makes it impossible for Johnson's plane to have come under attack. "The time distance equation leaves absolutely no doubt as to what happened,even without the testimony of the people who flew the mission,"said Tillman, pointing at a chart of eastern New Guinea. "Based on the known cruising speed of a B-26 and the time that's involved, the mathematics shake out to a point just about 80 statute miles south of the target area. At which point, the Heckling Hare turned around, jettisoned its bombs in order to lighten load and returned to Port Moresby." An ambiguous diary entry During his public life, Johnson rarely kept a diary, but he did on his Pacific tour. His handwritten account of what happened that day is on display at the LBJ Library. The June 9 diary entry could be interpreted as indicating Johnson's plane was attacked, just after it turned back. The scrawled pencil notes say, Generator went out: Crew begged ... to go on. For next 30 minutes we flew on one generator. Due to drop bombs at 10:10. At 9:55 we turned. At 9:58 Zeroes intercepted -- Andy leader got 3 and probably another. B-25 got two more and fighters got four. Total 9 zeroes. Longtime Johnson aide and friend Harry Middleton puts a lot of stock in Johnson's contemporaneous diary account. Middleton is the director of the LBJ Library and Museum, where CNN was referred after members of Johnson's family declined several requests for interviews. "Obviously it is close to the best source of information you can get," Middleton said. "A lot depends upon what was in the persons mind as he was writing about his activities, but sure it's primary material." But the diary -- like the citation -- is ambiguous. What appears to be an account of what happened to Johnson's plane again might simply refer to what happened to the 10 planes that completed the bombing run. That interpretation is what historian Tillman argues -- that the timing doesnt add up. There is no earthly way Johnson could have seen the Zeros attacking, he said. There is at least one other eyewitness stillalive, Albert Tyree,a radio operator and gunner on another B-26 that day. Now 80 and retired in California, Tyree insists Johnson's plane turned around long before the rest of the planes encountered enemy fire. "So you saw it turn around and go back?" CNN asked him. "Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah," Tyree said. "Were you under fire at that point?" "No, no. None of us was,"insisted Tyree. "We weren't under fire until we got up close to Lae Air Base, the Japanese air base." "How certain are you that the plane Johnson was on didn't come under fire?" CNN asked. "I'm sure. He couldn't of 'cause we didn't get hit either 'tillabout right before we dropped our bombs." "And you're absolutely sure of that?" "I'm absolutely sure." While Tyree would have no way of knowing what happened to Johnson's plane after it turned back, there is other evidence. The Army's after-action report records the damage to all the planes that returned to Port Moresby after the June 9 bombing. Damage to the planes is listed down to the last bullet hole, but the list doesn't include Plane 1488 -- the B-26 on which Johnson flew. (Reada page fromthe flight record) But records can be incomplete or contain mistakes. For instance,a manifest prepared after the attack lists Johnson's rank as commander, instead of lieutenant commander,and it shows,above his, the name of a Sgt. Newhouse,a man that Bob Marshall replaced on the crew. At least that's how Johnson's wartime diary entry concerning the mission is ambiguous Johnson spoke of his combat experience in a 1963 phone conversationwith House Speaker John McCormick ( 126K/12 sec. AIFFor WAV sound) Marshall remembers it. In fact, Johnson's plane is recorded as landing at 10:08 a.m., with engine trouble two minutes before the other B-26s were scheduled to drop their bombs on Lae,according to Johnson's diary. (Readthe crew manifest) "I'm telling the truth," he said. "I don't build up stories. I'm not selling a book or a story. I'm 100 percent right in my mind. And in a lot of other guys' minds." Johnson never disputed account of bravery The LBJ Library in Austin contains more than 45 million pages of documents, filling five floors. But as complete as these documents are, they don't definitively answer the question of whether Johnson's combat service was a myth. That question is something that will remain a matter of debate among historians. One of those records in the library is a letter on Johnson's congressional letterhead, dated July 15, 1942,addressed to the adjutant general of the War Department, suggesting Johnson didn't deserve the Silver Star. It reads in part: "I should not and could not accept a citation of recognition for the little part I played ... for a short time in learning and facing with them the problems they encounter all the time. The coolness for which the Generalcommends me was only the reflection of my utter confidence in the men with whom I was flying." "Watching the fighting crew of my ship save their crippled plane despite interception by hostile fighters outnumbering us, burned into my mind knowledge of concrete conditions which you can make sure I shall use to the best of my ability in the service of my country." He concludes, "I cannot in good conscience accept the decoration." But the letter is unsigned,and there is no evidence it was ever sent. (Read the unsent letter 1 | 2) The LBJ Library's Middleton said not much is known about the circumstances surrounding the letter. "We know nothing about it other than it is there," Middleton said. "There's no explanation that I know of. It simply is there,amassed along with all the other papers." Johnson biographer Caro said, "I've always felt the Silver Star should have been turned back, that he should have sent the letter, rejecting it because he didn't deserve it." If Johnson had doubts about accepting the medal, he put them aside,and the legend of his wartime exploits began to grow. While Johnson never endorsed the 1964 book "The Mission," he wrote the authors a brief thank-you note. As soon as I have a few moments, Johnson wrote, I intend to begin reading it. (Readthe thank you letter) But Johnson never disputed the account of his bravery,and he would on occasion make reference to his combat experience,as he did in a December 20, 1963, phone conversation with House Speaker John McCormick. The White House routinely recorded the president's phone conversations. "I know foreign aid is unpopular,"Johnson told McCormick."But I didn't want to go to the Pacific in '41 after Pearl Harbor, but I did. And I didn't want to let those Japs shoot at me in a Zero, but I did." Longtime Washington journalist Hugh Sidey, who covered the Johnson White House, recalls the president telling stories about his wartime exploits. "He talked about the Jap ace and about how he had gone out as an observer and they attacked the plane and how the bullets came zinging inside the fuselage and the crew got wounded and there was blood all over," Sidey said. Was Johnson living a lie? It depends on who renders the judgment. "I don't think its totally out of the question that he might have embellished on the story and used it for political purposes while he was campaigning," Middleton said. "But I never heard him talk about it at all."

 

For Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Caro, the eyewitness accounts, published in "The Mission," outweigh the circumstantialevidence that suggests Johnsons plane may not have come under fire. "I think that the weight of the evidence at this moment is that the plane was attacked by Zeroes and that he was cool under fire," Caro said. Caro argues that if the quotes in "The Mission" were untrue, someone would have spoken up before now. "All the members of that crew except for the two who were killed in the war were alive then," Caro said. "None of them ever disputed any of the quotations in the book,and if you read the quotations in the book, they were a very convincing picture of men scared under fire." Politics over bravery? Researchers Tillman and Sakaida have a different theory: The two surviving crew members lied, possibly to curry favor with the new president. "The members of the 22nd Bomb Group to whom Henry and I talked over a period of five or six years," Tillman said, "were almost unanimous in their assessment of the two individuals that Caidin and Hymoff most frequently quoted in their book called "The Mission." One of them was described as a fellow flier as a great one for putting himself in the limelight. The other one apparently became a Democrat Party activist in the Chicago area and was willing to go along with Lyndon Johnson's version of events." Historian Dallek, who also has written several books on Johnson, said the evidence, while conflicting, buttresses his argument that the Silver Star was more about politics than bravery. "What I concluded," Dallek said," was that there was an agreement,a dealmade between LBJ and Gen. MacArthur. And the deal was Johnson would get this medal, which somebody later said was the least deserved and most talked about medal in American military history. And MacArthur, in return, had a pledge from Johnson that he would lobby FDR to provide greater resources for the southwest Pacific theater." History -- it has been said -- is argument without end. It is impossible to reconstruct with absolute certainty what happened nearly 60 years ago. Memories can be wrong,and records don't tell the whole story. Still,even Caro said if Johnson did tell the truth, he didn't tell the whole truth. "I would say that it's a issue of exaggerations," Caro said." He said that he flew on many missions, not one mission. He said that the crew members, the other members of the Air Force group, were so admiring of him that they called him Raider Johnson. Neither of these things are true." 'A very complicated man' Tillman argues the version of Johnson's Silver Star airplane ride in today's history books needs to be updated if future generations are to understand the late president. "I think the best explanation I can give for trying to learn the truth is that so often what we accept as conventional wisdom is simply the first draft of history," Tillman said. Dallek agrees that,even though the events happened long ago, it's still important to try to figure out the truth. "It matters that the record is accurate because it speaks volumes about the man,about his character,about his place in history,about judgments that historians make on him," Dallek said. "Is he to be trusted?" "The more egregious offense is perpetuating the myth," Tillman said. "Johnson, or anyone else caught in that situation, simply could have put the medalaway in a drawer, not bothered to wear the lapel pin the rest of his life, but we know that Johnson did." Family friend Middleton said Johnson was a complex man. "He had many, many faults," Middleton said, "but they were counterbalanced by a great vision of what he should do and could do for this country, which is what united us all who worked for him. I've been around when I've heard him say things that I thought, Can that really be the case? But then I've heard him then say things that make me awfully proud to be associated with him. He's a difficult,a very complicated man." For former radio operator and gunner Marshall, it's a point of honor to tell the truth, the best he knows it. "My wife always tells me, she says, 'Bob, why don't you forget the past? That's gone.' I say, 'Betty, when you're in a position like we was in those days, it's going to be there forever,and I would like to have all this story made up straight.'"

 

"We're all going to leave this world some day,and it gets closer and closer. And I'd like the truth to actually be put out about it," Marshall

said. "I don't want to be put on something I didn’t do.”

 

NYT of Sept. 21, 1964 reporting on LBJ’s completely fraudulent Silver Star

 

Johnson Was Awarded the Silver Star for Flight With Bomber Group in Pacific

Johnson Was Awarded the Silver Star for Flight With Bomber Group in Pacific - The New York Times (nytimes.com)

 

In the lapel of his coat, most days, President Johnson wears the red-, white- and bluestriped ribbon of the Silver Star, the third highest decoration for valor of the United States armed services.

It was awarded him by the late General of the Army Douglas MacArthur for a mission he flew with members of the 22d Bomb Group over New Guinea on June 9, 1942, while he was on an inspection trip for President Roosevelt in the Southwest Pacific.

Mr. Johnson, then a lieutenant commander in the Naval Reserve, flew the bombing mission” without orders and only so that he could see what such missions were like. It was the high point of a little oyer seven months he spent in uniform in World “War II. j

He was a Representative from Texas when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 71941. He had been in the Naval Reserve since Jan. 21, 1940, at which time he had been commissioned a lieutenant commander. I

That was the rank customarily given then to those of! the age, education and qualifications of Mr. Johnson but without training for combat duty or command.

The tall young Representative —Mr. Johnson was 33 years old —waited only long enough to vote for declarations of war against Japan on Dec. 8 and: against Germany on Dec. 11, then obtained the consent of the House for a leave of absence and reported for active duty.

He was kept in Washington for several weeks in the office of the assistant Navy secretary dealing with manpower problems. Then he was sent to the headquarters of the 12th Naval District at San Francisco.

Unhappy at being kept chained to a desk while a war was being fought, Lieutenant Commander Johnson got permission to return to Washington and applied directly to President Roosevelt for assignment to a war theater.

General MacArthur had established his headquarters in Melbourne but the overall command structure was not yet functioning and no one was quite sure who was In command. There were reports of malingering and even of sabotage by Australian dock workers. The Pres-. ident appointed Mr. Johnson to go down and find out what was going on and report back directly to him.

With his Presidential orders, Lieutenant Commander Johnson landed in Melbourne on May 25 and reported to General MacArthur. With him were Lieut. Col. Samuel E. Anderson, a career soldier and pilot, and Lieut. Col. Francis R. Stevens.

The three spent several days inspecting installations in and around Melbourne and further north at Sydney, Brisbane and Townsville.

On June 9, they were at Seven Mile Drome, near Port Moresby on the south shore of New Guinea. On the north shore of the big island, the second largest of the world, 12,000 feet up and 180 miles across the: Owen Stanley Range, were the, newly established Japanese bases of Salamaua and Lae.

The two sides were taking turns raiding each other'sbases. This morning was the Americans' turn.

The three visitors had received permission to ride with' the B-26's.

Mr. Johnson made the mission in a plane piloted by Lieut. Walte Greer of Russelville, Ark., who later was killed in a bomber crash in the States in 1944. Its crew had named the B-26 the “Heckling Hare.”

Accounts of the mission vary somewhat. A dispatch of June 10 to The New York Times from Byron Darnton, its correspondent who later in 1942 was killed in action off New Guinea, indicated- that Mr. Johnson's plane was not involved in a battle with a group of Japanese Zero fighter planes over Salamaua and Lae. :

The long dispatch, printed on June 12, reported on the fight engaged in by the other planes on the flight. Mr. Darnton wrote:

“The plane [in which Mr. Johnson was riding] developed mechanical trouble and was forced to return without reaching its target. But the Representative got a good firsthand idea of the troubles and problems confronting our airmen and declared himself impressed by the skill and courage of the bomber crews and fighter pilots

Mr. Darnton's dispatch passed though censorship, and some passages may have been cut or altered. \

The citation for the award to Mr. Johnson of the Silver Star reported the action in these words:

“As our planes neared the target area they were intercepted by eight hostile fighters. When, at this time, the plane in which Lieutenant Commander Johnson was an observer developed mechanical trouble and was forced to turn back alone presenting a favorable target to the enemy fighters, he evidenced marked coolness in spite of the hazards involved. His gallant action enabled him toobtain and return with valuable information.”

Last June a book entitled “The Mission.” by Martin Caidini and Edward Hymoff. was published by J. B. Lipnin-'ott Company of Philadelphia and New York.

It is based on the recollections of several members of the: bomber group, including some members of the crew of the plane on which Mr. Johnson flew.

When a generator failed and their plane began to lose speed and dropped out of tight for mation, these men recalled, the Heckling Hare was attacked by eight Zero fighters, which had already been engaged with other planes of the flight and had crippled the one in which Colonel Stevens was riding. That plane crashed and all aboard were killed.

Men quoted in “The Mission” said Mr. Johnson had shown no signs of panic and had even climbed up to look out of the navigator's “bubble” of the B-26 during the attack.

They said the plane had'.been hit repeatedly by cannon and machinegun fire from the Japanese fighters but had returned safely to Seven Mile Drome with no one hurt.

Shortly thereafter, Colonel Anderson and Lieutenant Commander Johnson started home. But Mr. Johnson had to be bedded in Suva, the Fiji Islands, with pneu/nonia, and did not reach Washington until midJuly.

President Roosevelt, on July 1, had issued a directive calling on all members of Congress then in the armed forces to return, to Capitol Hill.

President Johnson remained in the Naval Reserve until last Jan. 17, when he resigned his commission. He had been promoted to commander.

 

 

 

History Channel – which gets so much stuff wrong – in 2019 promotes fantasy that LBJ’s plane the Heckling Hare actually came under attack – WHICH IT DID NOT!

 

https://www.history.com/news/lbj-world-war-ii-bathroom-break

 

[“How a Luckily Timed Bathroom Break Saved LBJ’s Life During WWII,” Patrick J. Kiger, History Channel, Feb. 15, 2019]

 

QUOTE

 

That perverse twist of fate wasn’t Johnson’s only brush with death on that fateful day in June 1942. He ended up joining the crew of another bomber, the Heckling Hare, that was crippled in the middle of the mission by a failed electrical generator, and then had to struggle back to base under withering enemy fire. 

 

UNQUOTE

  

Here is how the LBJ Library presents Lyndon Johnson’s ridiculous Silver Star, the most fraudent military medal ever awarded in American history

 

https://web.archive.org/web/20170619204727/https://www.lbjlibrary.org/lyndon-baines-johnson/lbj-biography/lbj-military-service

 

http://www.lbjlibrary.net/collections/quick-facts/lyndon-baines-johnson-military-service.html


QUOTE 

LBJ Military Service

On June 21, 1940, Lyndon Johnson was appointed Lieutenant Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve (USNR). Reporting for active duty on Dec. 10, 1941, three days after Pearl Harbor, he was ordered to the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Navy Department, Washington, D.C., for instruction. He began working on production and manpower problems that were slowing the production of ships and planes, and he traveled in Texas, California, and Washington, assessing labor needs in war production plants. In May 1942, he proceeded to headquarters, Twelfth Naval District, San Francisco, California, for inspection duty in the pacific. Stationed in New Zealand and Australia, he participated as an observer on a number of bomber missions in the South Pacific. He was awarded the Army Silver Star Medal by General Douglas MacArthur and it was cited as follows:

For gallantry in action in the vicinity of Port Moresby and Salamaua, New Guinea, on June 9, 1942. While on a mission of obtaining information in the Southwest Pacific area, Lieutenant Commander Johnson, in order to obtain personal knowledge of combat conditions, volunteered as an observer on a hazardous aerial combat mission over hostile positions in New Guinea. As our planes neared the target area they were intercepted by eight hostile fighters. When, at this time, the plane in which Lieutenant Commander Johnson was an observer, developed mechanical trouble and was forced to turn back alone, presenting a favorable target to the enemy fighters, he evidenced marked coolness in spite of the hazards involved. His gallant actions enabled him to obtain and return with valuable information.

In addition to the Army Silver Star Medal, Commander Johnson has the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal.

On July 16, 1942, Johnson was released from active duty under honorable conditions. (President Roosevelt had ruled that national legislators might not serve in the armed forces). On Oct. 19, 1949, he was promoted to Commander, USNR, his date of rank, June 1, 1948. His resignation from the Naval Reserve was accepted by the Secretary of the Navy, effective Jan. 18, 1964.

UNQUOTE

Monday, May 8, 2023

Mere days before the JFK assassination, Robert Kennedy's friends gave him an LBJ VOODOO DOLL and they laughed uproariously!

 Just before Lyndon Johnson murdered JFK, Robert Kennedy was given an LBJ VOODOO DOLL for his birthday and he and his Kennedy insider friends loved it. It was for RFK’s 38th birthday, which occurred on Nov. 20, 1963, a mere two days before the JFK assassination. They should have given RFK a mop so that he could clean up JFK’s brains from Elm Street in Dallas, TX. LBJ was acutely aware and highly agitated about the Kennedys’ attempts to utterly destroy him in November, 1963.

Web link http://movies2.nytimes.com/books/97/10/26/reviews/971026.26oshinkt.html

Also:

https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/10/26/reviews/971026.26oshinkt.html

[“Fear and Loathing in the White House,” David Oshinsky, NYT, Oct. 26, 1997]

In 1961, at a late-night supper in the White House living quarters, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson accosted Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy in front of embarrassed friends and officials. ''Bobby, you do not like me,'' Johnson declared. ''Your brother likes me. Your sister-in-law likes me. Your daddy likes me. But you don't like me. Now, why? Why don't you like me?'' Kennedy did not respond to Johnson that evening, but his feelings were clear. As Jeff Shesol notes in ''Mutual Contempt,'' a penetrating and richly detailed account of the ''feud'' that shaped the 60's, Kennedy despised Johnson with a ferocity that startled many observers, while Johnson harbored fears of Kennedy that bordered on paranoia.

Shesol, the creator of a syndicated political comic strip, is a gifted writer. His book, thoroughly researched, based on dozens of manuscript collections and interviews, adds fresh insight to a familiar story. Though Kennedy and Johnson came from different regions, social classes and generations, they shared the common trait of their New Deal Democratic Party -- identification with the underdog. What seriously divided them, apart from personal chemistry, was the struggle to lead that party in an era of domestic turmoil and political change.

The feud began in 1960, when Robert Kennedy directed his brother John's successful campaign for the Democratic Presidential nomination. The main competitor, Johnson, the Senate majority leader, raised not only the ''Catholic issue'' but also the health problems of John F. Kennedy, who spent much of the 50's recovering from delicate spinal surgery and who had Addison's disease, an adrenal malfunction that required daily doses of cortisone. As the convention neared, Johnson described his now-robust opponent as a ''little scrawny fellow with rickets'' and other unnamed maladies. The Kennedy camp whispered about the lingering effects of Johnson's 1955 heart attack.

Neither candidate took serious offense at these charges. John Kennedy and Johnson had built a solid working relationship in Congress. Both men accepted the transparent, if sometimes venomous, nature of political campaigns. But Robert Kennedy was different. As a Senate committee aide in the 50's, he had confronted adversaries like Roy Cohn and Jimmy Hoffa with a moral fervor bordering on zealotry. Unlike his older brother, he considered the campaign slurs and insinuations to be personal attacks on his family and his church. ''Jack Kennedy is the first Irish Brahmin,'' a friend explained. ''Bobby is the last Irish Puritan.''

The Robert Kennedy-Lyndon Johnson feud took on a life of its own. With little thought (and for reasons that still are unclear), John Kennedy chose Johnson to be his running mate. When news of this selection enraged key Northern liberals, Robert Kennedy was dispatched to Johnson's hotel suite to persuade him to withdraw. He failed in his task, but did earn Johnson's enmity as a ''grandstanding little runt.''

Things quickly got worse. Johnson rankled the Kennedys by claiming credit for winning margins in Texas and other Southern states that provided the razor-thin Democratic victory in 1960. The Kennedys humbled Johnson, in turn, by denying him a meaningful role in the new Administration. When Johnson drafted a rather audacious executive order giving the Vice President ''general supervision'' of numerous Federal agencies, President Kennedy filed it away. He did treat Johnson respectfully, but the White House inner circle, led by Robert Kennedy, ignored Johnson in public and belittled him mercilessly behind closed doors. A visitor to Robert Kennedy's Virginia estate recalled a gathering at which friends gave Kennedy a Johnson voodoo doll. ''The merriment,'' he wrote, ''was overwhelming.'' [The date of this gathering was very close to Nov. 20, 1963, Robert Kennedy’s 38th birthday and just before the JFK assassination.]

In his evenhanded way, Shesol describes Johnson's Vice Presidency as a period of mental torture, fueled by Robert Kennedy's derision and Johnson's inflated expectations of the job. Denied a serious role in Washington, Johnson tried to regain his vitality by globe-trotting at a breakneck pace. Life, he said later, was a blur of ''chauffeurs, men saluting, people clapping. . . . I detested every minute of it.'' While remaining loyal to President Kennedy, he found their private meetings uncomfortable -- and increasingly rare. ''Every time I came into John Kennedy's presence,'' he said, ''I felt like a goddamn raven hovering over his shoulder.''

The President's assassination turned derision into rage. Though neutral observers were impressed by Johnson's compassion in these painful days, Robert Kennedy thought otherwise. It would have been difficult, under the best circumstances, to forget that his brother was murdered in Texas on a political visit Johnson had encouraged. Even worse, from Robert Kennedy's perspective, were rumors Johnson had behaved boorishly on the plane ride back from Dallas. In his anguish, Kennedy seethed at every move the new President made. It was ''quite clear,'' a Cabinet member recollected, that Kennedy ''could hardly countenance Lyndon Johnson sitting in his brother's seat.''

Once in office, Shesol notes, Johnson moved quickly to restore public confidence through a smooth transition of power. To provide stability in the executive branch, he persuaded many Kennedy appointees to remain at their jobs. He also made certain that Robert Kennedy, who resigned as Attorney General in September 1964, would not be his running mate that year. ''I'll quit it first!'' Johnson said. ''I don't want it that much!'' Seeking a political niche apart from White House control, Kennedy ran successfully for a Senate seat from New York. It was in Congress, Shesol writes, that he came into his own. His brother's death seemed to sensitize him to the suffering of others. He spent long hours investigating hunger in the Mississippi Delta, joblessness in the Northern ghettos and squalid conditions in the migrant camps of central California. Though he and Johnson agreed on most domestic issues, the Senator's public presence and personal magnetism easily overshadowed the President at the peak of his political success. As Shesol puts it, Johnson's Great Society ''kindled no passion, just respect; there was no emerging Johnson legend, just a Johnson record.'' Measured against the Kennedy magic, he came up short again.

It was the Vietnam War that turned this private feud into a public brawl. While Shesol is on shaky ground in describing Kennedy's supposed ambivalence about the Vietnam buildup in the early 60's, he does provide a careful critique of his evolving antiwar stance later. As his feelings intensified, Kennedy became a savior to disillusioned Democrats, a politician who expressed the anger and idealism of the New Politics by linking the Vietnam debacle to the racial and generational struggles tearing the nation apart. Shesol is correct, I believe, in claiming that Kennedy's animus shifted from Johnson's personality to his policies after 1964, while Johnson's loathing of the Senator remained a deeply personal matter.

Shortly after Kennedy announced his candidacy for President in 1968, Johnson withdrew from the race. While convinced he could win re-election, the President no longer relished the prize. The White House had become his prison, surrounded by demonstrators chanting Kennedy's name. ''I'm tired of feeling rejected by the American people,'' he said, ''tired of all these personal attacks on me.'' Johnson blamed Kennedy for spreading ''lies'' about him, in league with ''those bomb-throwing . . . fuzzy-headed Georgetown liberals.'' In June 1968, Robert Kennedy was shot by a deranged Arab nationalist in Los Angeles. As the Senator lay dying, Johnson went on national television to express his ''shock'' and ''dismay.'' That evening, Johnson repeatedly phoned the Secret Service to ask if Kennedy had died. He paced the floor for hours, phone in hand, muttering: ''I've got to know. Is he dead? Is he dead yet?''

This, sadly, was not the end of it. Though Johnson promised Kennedy's family to do ''anything I can do to help,'' he delayed their lone request -- to finance a permanent grave site for the Senator at Arlington National Cemetery, next to his brother John's. In 1969, a new President took the appropriate steps. As he signed the final authorization, Richard Nixon, who knew a thing or two about political grudges, must have smiled.


David M. Oshinsky, a professor of American history at Rutgers University, is the author of '' 'Worse Than Slavery': Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice.''

Thursday, May 4, 2023

JFK 60th anniversary Must Buy: ROGER STONE'S "The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJ"

JFK 60th Anniversary book: https://stonezone.com/lbj/   Make sure to buy the paperback edition which has three extra chapters.






 Folks, not many of you know that for 3 years from summer 2013 to late 2016 I had a close relationship with the beyond infamous ROGER STONE. I met Roger Stone in the summer of 2013 in Miami. I flew down there because Stone - on Twitter - had been telling everyone that he was going to write an "LBJ killed JFK" book. I then started emailing Stone some really fine JFK research that indicted Lyndon Johnson in the JFK assassination.

 Stone and I met in Miami at a Cuban restaurant on South Beach and we had dinner in June, 2013. I agreed to help him on his "LBJ killed JFK" book for free. Within a few weeks Stone emailed me the manuscript for The Man Who Killed Kennedy: the Case Against LBJ which much of it had been written by Mike Colapietro. I took their manuscript and for a week I had free reign of the book and dropped in one golden nugget of JFK research after another in that book. I gave him the best stuff I had at that time in 2013. Since then I have learned much, much more that indicts Lyndon Johnson in the JFK assassination - such as Jackie Kennedy immediately in real time suspected LBJ in murdering her husband. She was the spot on and in real time no less!

 Later Roger Stone and I collaborated to write the greatest take down on the Clintons EVER: The Clintons' War on Women which was published in fall 2015. I personally wrote 85% of this book, picked out the title and even picked out Crooked Hillary's photo for the cover. Essentially it was my book although it was Stone who had the contract with Skyhorse.The Clintons were so worried about this book that Roger Stone came under an intimidation campaign. They stole both his and his wife Nadia's car and left a DEAD RAT on Stone's doorstep in Fort Lauderdale (December 2014 is when that occurred). Nadia is a nice person and I liken her situation with Stone to Patty Hearst who was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army and who then became a sympathizer with her oppressors. Stone may not have kidnapped Nadia but he definitely brainwashed her in between his sessions of letting other men fuck her in the same room with him, a much publicized  and twisted Stone fetish.

 

The leftist activist group Media Matters literally went on a phone calling and emailing campaign with the major media and even FOX to attempt to stop The Clintons' War on Women. Donald Trump in 2016 kept this book on his desk and used it as a Bible to defeat Crooked Hillary.

 As Roger Stone and I, we had a parting of the ways after publication of the Clinton book in June, 2016 when I discovered that Donald Trump had been raping little 13 year old and 12 year old girls with Jeffrey Epstein in summer 1994 at the Wexner Mansion in NYC. Obviously, I can't support someone like that for president so I came out hardcore against both Raping Donald and Crooked Hillary in 2016. I ran for President myself and in Texas I and my handyman Todd Sanders received 145 votes for President and Vice President officially. As for Roger Stone, of course he can support a violent child molester for president as long he gets some glory and attention along the way.

 I should point out that the last royalty check Roger Stone sent me for The Clintons' War on Women was for $3,000 in December 2016; this was after one for $17,000 that came in July 2016. The odds are extremely high that Stone shorted me on both of those checks. Since then Roger Stone, in a fit of pique over my not supporting his child molester Trump for president, has paid me no royalties since then for the Clintons' War on Women which he is contractually obligated to do. Stone is supposed to pay me royalties every 6 months. So far he was welched on 12 consecutive royalty checks and another comes due this summer.

 One day I might have to sue this son of a bitch, but it will come on my schedule.

 But in the meantime, I recommend you BUY Stone's The Man Who Killed Kennedy: the case Against LBJ because I am quite proud of the work that I did (for free for Stone) to make that book the hit that it was when it first came out in 2013.

 Currently, as the World's Leading Public Intellectual, I am focused on getting mainstream media coverage for Abraham Bolden's allegations against Lyndon Johnson from a volcanic argument that Bolden had with the Kennedys on June 29, 1961. LBJ was so vicious that Bolden reported Lyndon Johnson as a security threat to JFK's life to Director Baughman, the head of the Secret Service in June, 1961. Folks, we have to get this story out to the media and thanks to ALL who have been helping me do this.

 

Sincerely,

Robert Morrow          512-306-1510     Austin, TX

Presidential Historian and Distinguished Fellow at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Institute for the Study of Presidential Crime

The World’s Foremost Authority on the JFK Assassination

The Top Historian in the World on Lyndon Johnson (sorry Robert Caro, it is not you …)

The Greatest Presidential Historian in American History

An Absolute Genius on the topic of the JFK assassination

The World’s Leading Public Intellectual