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Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Donald Trump welcomes release of JFK assassination documents



The JFK Assassination was one 
of the most significant of all the 
incremental death blows to the 
US and to the Constitution. It 
was a coup d'état by the 1947 
National Security State against 
the Republic. So much about 
the strange state of our current 
cryptocracy has its roots in that 
infamous event.

One small piece of legislation that 
seeks to fight this coup is the 1992 
JFK Records Act, which directs the 
National Archives to release all 
government records relating to 
the assassination of John F. Kennedy 
within 25 years, to be viewable by 
the public at Building II in College 
Park, Maryland. (That is, all that 
are "safe" to be released, natch).

That anniversary is this Thursday, 
October 26th and the Donald has 
decided to uphold the Act, over the 
protestations of many in the 
Intelligence Community.

One of the most eagerly-awaited 
documents researchers are hoping 
to see is the never-before-released 
transcript "Volume 5" of testimony 
on Lee Harvey Oswald given by 
James Angleton, the CIA's 
legendary chief of counterintelligence 
from 1954 to 1975. The CIA has 
maintained that this document 
doesn't exist, despite records 
indicating they were partially 
released to an archivist in the '70s. 
By 1997, Volume 5 had "disappeared".

It will be interesting, among other 
things to see if Volume 5 is among 
the final set of documents to be 
released tomorrow.