Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Talk:JFK: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "== Oswald == I put this on the Carcano discussion page, but what the hell. I'll repost it here as well. In all seriousness there is one thing about Oswald that has always bu...")
 
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


So then we have Oswald who defects to the Soviet Union during this time period and then returns a few years later ''married'' to the daughter of a Soviet general.A soviet general who was a big shot in their missile command! And what happens to him? Nothing. He's free, no prison time, no trials for treason, his wife isn't detained (evidently) buying guns and handing out all types of bizzaro literature on the streets of New Orleans and hanging out with half-baked revolutionaries. Huh? I don't claim to have a handle on any type of conspiracy regarding the assassination, but doesn't that whole Oswald situation strike anybody as being really strange? All out of step with what was happening in the United States in the 1950's. That's my one major observation.--[[User:Jcordell|Jcordell]] ([[User talk:Jcordell|talk]]) 11:21, 31 January 2013 (EST)
So then we have Oswald who defects to the Soviet Union during this time period and then returns a few years later ''married'' to the daughter of a Soviet general.A soviet general who was a big shot in their missile command! And what happens to him? Nothing. He's free, no prison time, no trials for treason, his wife isn't detained (evidently) buying guns and handing out all types of bizzaro literature on the streets of New Orleans and hanging out with half-baked revolutionaries. Huh? I don't claim to have a handle on any type of conspiracy regarding the assassination, but doesn't that whole Oswald situation strike anybody as being really strange? All out of step with what was happening in the United States in the 1950's. That's my one major observation.--[[User:Jcordell|Jcordell]] ([[User talk:Jcordell|talk]]) 11:21, 31 January 2013 (EST)
:At first I was wondering if there was even a process to regain US citizenship after renouncing it, but it appears Oswald never actually did renounce his US citizenship. And even though he offered to reveal info on the USMC radars he had worked on, it looks like he never really did. So other than some really bizarre and suspicious behavior, I'm not sure he actually committed any crimes. --[[User:Funkychinaman|Funkychinaman]] ([[User talk:Funkychinaman|talk]]) 11:35, 31 January 2013 (EST)

Revision as of 16:35, 31 January 2013

Oswald

I put this on the Carcano discussion page, but what the hell. I'll repost it here as well.

In all seriousness there is one thing about Oswald that has always bugged me. In the 1950's the U.S. government was busy destroying people who had dated girls who got them to go to a Communist party meeting in the 1930's when they were in college. We know that those young guys didn't give a shit about the Communists. They were just wanting to have sex and would have gone to a Tupperware meeting if they thought that was what it would take. Nevertheless twenty years later those same guys are getting destroyed by McCarthy and HCUAC. They were going after janitors who might have known somebody who once expressed sympathies for the Communists for crying out loud. It was a witch hunt after all. Unreasoning and dangerous.

So then we have Oswald who defects to the Soviet Union during this time period and then returns a few years later married to the daughter of a Soviet general.A soviet general who was a big shot in their missile command! And what happens to him? Nothing. He's free, no prison time, no trials for treason, his wife isn't detained (evidently) buying guns and handing out all types of bizzaro literature on the streets of New Orleans and hanging out with half-baked revolutionaries. Huh? I don't claim to have a handle on any type of conspiracy regarding the assassination, but doesn't that whole Oswald situation strike anybody as being really strange? All out of step with what was happening in the United States in the 1950's. That's my one major observation.--Jcordell (talk) 11:21, 31 January 2013 (EST)

At first I was wondering if there was even a process to regain US citizenship after renouncing it, but it appears Oswald never actually did renounce his US citizenship. And even though he offered to reveal info on the USMC radars he had worked on, it looks like he never really did. So other than some really bizarre and suspicious behavior, I'm not sure he actually committed any crimes. --Funkychinaman (talk) 11:35, 31 January 2013 (EST)