LBJ Night Before JFK Assassination: "Those SOB's Will Never
Embarrass Me Again"
by Paul Joseph Watson, Aug 30, 2006
Last Updated:
Friday, September 01, 2006 04:51:19 AM
Outside the debate of magic bullets, multiple shooters
and grassy knoll theories - an astounding deposition of a deliberately
planned criminal conspiracy straight from the horse's mouth.
Paul Joseph Watson
he night before the
Kennedy assassination, Lyndon Baines Johnson met with Dallas
tycoons, FBI moguls and organized crime kingpins - emerging from the
conference to tell his mistress Madeleine Duncan Brown that "those
SOB's" would never embarrass him again. It's a jaw-dropping
deposition and it's the biggest JFK smoking gun there is - despite
the fact that it has received little media attention.
Before her death on June
22 2002, prolific author and lecturer Robert Gaylon Ross had the
opportunity to conduct an 80 minute sit-down interview with
Madeleine Duncan Brown and from that lengthy discussion the truth
about exactly who was behind the assassination of JFK was exposed.
The JFK Cortege on 11/22/1963
Though Brown first went
public on her 21-year relationship with Johnson in the early 80's,
to this day her shocking revelations about how he had told her the
Kennedy's "would never embarrass me again" the night before the
assassination are often ignored by the media who prefer to keep the
debate focused on issues which can't definitively be proven either
way (or at least can be spinned and whitewashed).
It is important to note
that before her death Brown carried no hostility towards Lyndon
Johnson and in fact was just as smitten with him as on the first day
they met.
Joe Kennedy (1888-1969)
Brown said that the plan
to kill JFK had its origins in the 1960 Democratic Convention, at
which John F. Kennedy was elected as presidential candidate with
Johnson as his running mate, where
H.L. Hunt, an American oil
tycoon, and Lyndon Johnson hatched the assassination plot.
HL
Hunt (1889-1974)
"When they met in
California
Joe Kennedy, John Kennedy's father, and H.L. Hunt met met
three days prior to the election - they finally cut a deal according
to John Currington (an aide to H.L. Hunt) and H.L. finally agreed
that Lyndon would go as the vice president....this came from the
horse's mouth way back in 1960 - when H.L. came back to Dallas I was
walking....with him....and he made the remark, 'we may have lost a
battle but we're going to win a war,' and then the day of the
assassination he said 'well, we won the war'," said Brown.
Brown said that in the
immediate aftermath of the convention Hunt and Johnson mapped out a
strategy to kill Kennedy.
"It was a total
political crime and H.L. Hunt really controlled what actually
happened to John Kennedy - he and Lyndon Johnson," said Brown.
"They had this
lodge....outside of Dallas and they would meet there....he chose
different people to do certain things for him and I'm sure it went
on about two years prior to the assassination of John Kennedy."
Watch a clip of Robert Gaylon Ross' eye-opening interview with
Madeleine Duncan Brown.