Martin Luther King
Paul Craig Roberts
Like all false flag attacks and assassinations,
the 1968 murder of Martin Luther King was covered up. In the King case James
Earl Ray was the framed-up patsy, just as Oswald was in the case of President
John F. Kennedy and Sirhan Sirhan was in the case of Robert Kennedy.
The King family, along with everyone who
paid attention to the evidence, knew that they and the public were officially
handed a cover-up. After years of effort, the King family managed to bring the
evidence to light in a civil case. Confronted with the real evidence, it took
the jury one hour to conclude that Martin Luther King was murdered by a
conspiracy that included govermental agencies.
Martin Luther King, like John F.
Kennedy, was a victim of the paranoia of the Washington national security
establishment. Kennedy rejected General Lyman Lemnitzer’s Northwoods Project
for regime change in Cuba, opposed the CIA’s invasion plan for Cuba, nixed
Lemnitzer’s plans for conflict with the Soviet Union over the Cuban missile
crisis, removed Lemnitzer as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and
negotiated behind the scenes with Khrushchev to tone down the Cold War.
Consequently, members of the military/security complex had it in for Kennedy
and convinced themselves that Kennedy’s softness toward communism made him a
security threat to the United States. The Secret Service itself was drawn into
the plot. The films of the assassination show that the protective Secret
Service personnel were ordered away from the President’s car just before the
fatal shots.
King was only 39 years old and had
established himself as a civil rights leader. The FBI convinced itself that
King had communist connections and that the movement he led would develop into
a national security threat. In those days, emphasis on civil rights implied
criticism of America that many confused with communist propaganda. Criticizing
America was what communists did, and here was a rising leader pointing out
America’s shortcomings and beginning to foment opposition to the war in
Vietnam.
The conflation of justified criticism
with treason is always with us. Not long ago Obama appointee Cass Sunstein
advocated that the 9/11 truth movement be infiltrated and discredited before Americans could learn that they had been deceived into accepting wars
and the loss of civil liberties. Before Janet Napolitano left her post as head
of Homeland Security to become chancellor of the University of California, she
said that the focus of Homeland Security had shifted from terrorists to
“domestic extremists,” which included war protesters, environmentalists, and
government critics.
Throughout history thoughtful people
have understood that truth is the enemy of government.
Most governments are privatized. They are controlled by small groups who use
the
government to pursue their private agendas. The notion that government serves
the public interest is one of the great deceptions.
People who get in the way of these
interests are not treated kindly. John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King were
murdered. Robert Kennedy was murdered, because he knew who the government
operatives were who murdered his brother. Robert Kennedy was well on his way to
becoming the next President and implementing his murdered brother’s plan to
“break the CIA into a thousand pieces.” If Robert Kennedy had become president,
elements of the national security state would have been indicted and convicted.
The Warren Commission understood that
Oswald was a fall guy, but the commission also understood that at the height of
the Cold War to tell the Americans the truth of the assassination would destroy
the public’s confidence in the national security state. The commission felt it
had no alternative to a coverup.
Experts’ dissatisfaction with the Warren
Commission led to a second inquiry, this time by the Select Committee on
Assassinations of the US House of Representatives. This report, released in
1979, 14 years after JFK’s assassination, was also a coverup, but the Select
Committee could not avoid acknowledging that there had been a conspiracy, more
than one gunman, and that “the Warren Commission’s and FBI’s investigation into
the possibility of a conspiracy was seriously flawed.”http://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/select-committee-report/part-1c.html
In 1997 the John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Review Board released the top secret Northwoods Project
submitted to President Kennedy in 1962 by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The
Pentagon plan was to murder US citizens and to shoot down US airliners in order
to blame Castro and create public support for an invasion that would bring
regime change to Cuba. President Kennedy rejected the report, a decision that
increased the doubts of the national security state that Kennedy had the
strength and conviction to stand up against communism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Northwoods
Washington’s response to the
government’s murder of Martin Luther King was to create a national holiday in
his name. Honoring the man that elements of the government had murdered was a
clever way to bring the controversy to an end and dispose of troublesome
questions.
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