AI Misfires on JFK Files: How Grok Muddles Truth and Conspiracy

The newly released JFK assassination files have sparked intense debate, and AI tools like Grok are making the confusion worse. Glenn Beck’s team discovered major flaws in Grok’s summaries of the 31,000-page document dump. The AI produced wild claims about LBJ, CIA rogues, and Soviet agents plotting together—claims that vanish when you check the actual files. This mess shows why blindly trusting chatbots is dangerous.

Grok’s analysis flip-flopped like a bad magic trick. At first, it blamed LBJ and CIA leaders for masterminding the killing. Later, it switched to calling Oswald a “lone wolf.” Researchers caught the AI inventing fake quotes, like a nonexistent order from LBJ to CIA spymaster Allen Dulles. These phantom details could trick people into believing conspiracy theories that aren’t in the files.

The problem isn’t just wrong answers—it’s how AI thinks. Programs like Grok can’t smell a rat. They don’t question why CIA files mention tracking Oswald before the shooting but “lose” him on the big day. They ignore red flags like Oswald’s shady CIA buddy George de Mohrenschildt, who mysteriously died before testifying. Machines see words, not schemes.

While Grok tripped over itself, Congress already confirmed doubts about the “lone gunman” story. The House JFK Committee found evidence of a second shooter and called the murder “probably a conspiracy.” But they couldn’t name names. AI tools skip this nuance, swinging between “Oswald alone” and “LBJ did it” without explaining the middle ground.

The files reveal unsettling gaps. CIA agents monitored Oswald’s Mexico City trips but kept it quiet. A military intel officer who blamed “CIA rogues” for JFK’s death wound up “suicided.” AI glosses over these patterns, treating each fact like disconnected trivia. It’s like having a detective who notices bloodstains but can’t imagine a killer.

Beck’s team proved AI is only as good as its users. When real researchers double-checked Grok’s claims, they found zero proof of LBJ plots or Mafia collusion. But lazy journalists ran with the bot’s first answer, mocking conspiracy theorists. This reckless trust in machines lets tech companies—not facts—shape history.

America’s leaders must demand transparency. Why did the CIA redact cryptonyms even in newly released files? Why does Grok downplay Soviet ties while amplifying unproven LBJ rumors? These tools risk becoming Deep State puppets, steering searches away from uncomfortable truths.

The JFK files teach a key lesson: truth needs human grit. Patriots should read the documents themselves, challenge AI outputs, and pressure Congress to release EVERY page. Letting algorithms filter history is how mysteries stay buried—and how freedom dies.

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Keith Jacobs

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