The killing of President John F. Kennedy remains a national wound festering with unanswered questions. Patriots know the Warren Commission’s “lone gunman” story collapses under scrutiny, exposing a web of lies woven by power-hungry elites.
Eyewitnesses at Dealey Plaza reported a second shooter on the grassy knoll, with smoke seen rising from the fence line. A green Plymouth station wagon fled the scene carrying a rifle—details buried by bureaucrats desperate to hide the truth. The American people were fed a fairy tale while real killers slipped into shadows.
Organized crime fingerprints stain this crime, with mafia-linked figures tied to Oswald through shady dealings. Corrupt unions, casino bosses, and anti-Kennedy factions had motive to silence a president threatening their rackets. Justice wasn’t served—it was murdered alongside JFK.
Parkland Hospital doctors described entrance wounds in Kennedy’s throat and skull proving shots came FROM THE FRONT. Yet the Warren Commission ignored this, peddling a “magic bullet” fantasy. When medical facts contradict government tales, patriots smell a rat.
The CIA’s role reeks of suspicion—classified files reveal agents monitoring Oswald before 1963. Why did intelligence officials obstruct investigations? A nation built on transparency shouldn’t tolerate spies burying evidence to protect their turf.
President Trump’s push to declassify JFK files shows real leadership—draining swamps, not swimming in them. Establishment reptiles hissed, but sunlight remains the best disinfectant. Every redacted page hides truths that would outrage decent Americans.
This cover-up mirrors today’s battles—corrupt media, deep-state operatives, and woke mobs all fear citizens who question narratives. Just as they lied about Kennedy, they lie about elections, pandemics, and gender lunacy. Patriots must stay vigilant.
The truth matters because dead heroes deserve justice—and living Americans deserve leaders who fight for it. JFK’s death taught us: Question authority. Seek facts. Never let suits in Washington dictate reality. That’s the conservative way—the American way.