Fairy Tales — Then and Now
ALAN writes:
On the night of Jan. 31, 1968, I sat down in front of our TV to watch Johnny Carson speak with New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison on “The Tonight Show”. The topic was Garrison’s claim that John Kennedy was taken out by a conspiracy, including elements of the CIA, and that the Warren Report was a Fairy Tale.
Those were hard possibilities for most Americans to consider in 1968.
The CIA responded to Garrison by advising its assets-pretending-to-be-“journalists” to ridicule and smear Garrison as a “conspiracy theorist” or “conspiracy buff” or just plain wacky. They were happy to do so. Ad hominem attacks were launched in place of addressing the murder of the president.
Johnny Carson was incredulous. Why, he asked Garrison, would so many “experts” and “authorities” and a blue-ribbon panel and President Johnson endorse the Warren Report if it were not valid? It was too much for Carson and other Americans like him to imagine that all those prestigious men could be wrong or were liars, or that some of them were liars and the others decent but much too gullible. “Nice” people could not imagine that their government could be so evil or that lawyers and doctors in finely-tailored suits and with impressive-sounding credentials could be party to such a fraud. (more…)

