It’s Payback Time

When did you first become aware of the larger world beyond your home, immediate family, your friends, your school, maybe trips to the grocery store with mom?  For me, it was during the days many referred as, “Camelot.”

Now I vaguely remember the election of 1960.  My dad voted for Nixon, mom for Kennedy.  I remember them saying they cancelled each other’s vote.  That would not happen today, not without hair pulling, a divorce or worse, but I digress.  So, I remember Camelot in America, the presidency of John F. Kennedy, who together with First Lady Jackie, children Caroline and John Jr., or “John John,” presented an image of style and grace, humor and humility, the ideal American family, at least it appeared.

At our school I remember JFK’s picture hanging next to the American flag.  Each day before instruction, we would stand, place our hands over our hearts and recite the Pledge, followed by the Lord’s Prayer.  Then we would sing patriotic songs conveying a sense of what America was, or at least supposed to be.  I recall the lyrics of one very well, “My Country ‘tis of Thee, sweet land of liberty, of Thee I sing.”  I remember the next lines, “Long may our land be bright, with freedom’s Holy Light. Protect us by Thy might, great God our King.”  Yes, we sang that song, and others like it, every day in public school.  And nobody ever complained. 

Those were the days when dads went to work sporting fedoras (a hat style of the day.)  I still have my dad’s hats.  I mean, what do you do with a box of fedoras today?   

And during the days of Camelot, kids were much better protected against questionable influences from the outside world, unlike today when those influences gain direct access to minors through smart phone or cable TV technology, without parents knowing, or in some instances caring.

And so for my first two years in school I lived in Camelot.  In the 3rd year, however, it all changed.  On Friday, November 22, 1963, while I was in Mrs. Powell’s class, word came down that President Kennedy had been killed.  School was over.  Many of us just walked home, about a mile, wondering what had happened.  No worries, the streets were safe then.  Like I said, it was Camelot.

After arriving home, this 8-year-old kid stayed glued to a 21-inch RCA black and white TV console all weekend, trying to understand what had happened.  Why would anyone want to assassinate such a wonderful man as President Kennedy?  Sunday morning, there I was, still watching and wondering.  The TV commentators were saying that they were going to take the “lone assassin,” to another location and that we might be able to see him.  So I waited.  Just as they predicted, soon the doors opened in the basement of the police station and out strode several law enforcement officers, one wearing that familiar cowboy hat, frog-marching the individual apparently blamed for killing President Kennedy in front of the TV cameras.  And so there I was, eight years old, watching a murder on live television.  I had no idea it was all a frame up.

JFK Jr. Salutes the Father He Would No Longer Have
The next day was JFK’s funeral.  I remember the horse-drawn caisson carrying his casket, the same caisson used for Lincoln.  I will never forget the riderless horse, boots strapped backward, signifying the death of a fallen hero.  I recall John John’s salute, JFK “lying in state” in the “rotunda” of the capitol, and Jackie kissing the casket before departing.  I recall JFK’s burial at Arlington Cemetery and wondering how an eternal flame could possibly remain lit forever.  I witnessed utter sorrow.  A pall came over America.  Camelot was over. 

After that, America was different.  LBJ became our new President.  Didn’t like him much, nothing like JFK.  Then came the Gulf of Tonkin, the Vietnam War, long-haired hippies, the drug culture, burning of American flags, protest music and riots in the streets.  On April 4th, 1968, the day before my birthday, my mom picked me up from Scouts to tell me Martin Luther King had been murdered.  Two months later, Robert Kennedy, who would have been President, was gunned down as well.

Neither America nor the world has been the same since.  And it is a shame that subsequent generations of Americans can’t have memories of Camelot like I do.  Camelot is what America is supposed to be.

And what really surprises me is the number of people who cannot understand that the remnant of the perpetrators of the Kennedy assassination are still around.  You see, on November 22nd, 1963, a cabal took charge of the American Government and has been in charge ever since.  They finance their operations by printing money and placing Americans into debt to pay it back. 

But now is the time to pay them all back, in full.  Now is a time to remove the cabal, those President Trump refers as, “a failed and corrupt establishment,” and destroy it.  And whether you have eyes to see right now or not, you will soon realize that destroying the cabal that murdered President Kennedy, and subsequently took over the American Government, is the reason Donald Trump ran for President.  He is the only one who could have done that job.  And he needs our help.  To finish the job, he needs a Red Wave in November.  It is time to redeem November 22nd. It is time to take America back from the cabal. It’s time to vote Red Wave and restore Camelot.

Comments

  1. I can remember the assignation of JFK also. I was in the 5th grade and 11 years old. That day was the only time that I can remember the Gainesville Times doing an extra newspaper. It was being circulated on my way home from school.

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  2. It was about as bad of a day as one can imagine

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  3. I was also in 3rd grade. Your experience parallels mine so much that we could have been next to each other going through this time. I was in Catholic school, and that seemed to heighten the grief and loss for us. We need to fight back, keep up the fight for a right and just world and not for a manufactured horrible and deadly future for all but the rulers who would be left alive.

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  4. I was in college.. and, had to go to the "common area" to watch the news.

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  5. I was 6 years old, and I was home sick.
    My older sister came home and said the President was shot and she turned on the TV, so I watched it with her. My sister Elaine said all the teachers were crying at school and most of the students were crying.. everyone was sent home...
    About time we pay those pricks back for all the murders, culling medicine to kill the elderly so they cannot collect their Social Security all the while giving it to Illegal Aliens and Muslims.....WTH......Sick of this shit..... ~Deb

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  6. A frightful moment in time for a 4th grade student whose teacher immediately burst into tears as the announcement of President Kennedy being shot came from the school rooms intercom at Jewett Elementary in Evansdale Iowa. My teacher Mrs. Kraft said to us Dear children would you please bow your heads I want to say a prayer for you. We each bowed our heads and she prayed. She asked God to protect our nation and the Kennedy Family to watch over them in their time of sorrow as she fought back tears she said will you join me in the Lord's Prayer we did we all did. Then she went back to her desk as another announcement came over the intercom that said May we each take a moment of silence. We each continued to bow our heads in silence. After that she came to the front of the classroom. She said children I want you to not be afraid everything is going to be alright. I would like to show you something special and to never forget it. My grandma taught this to me as a little girl and it has helped me lot in life and I am sure it will help you too .
    She wrote the word JOY in large capital letters on the chalkboard. She said, children I want you to tell me what this word joy means to you. We all shared, then she said I want you to know what joy means to me and what my Grandma taught me, She wrote the word Jesus going down from the letter J and said always put J-esus first in your life, then she wrote the word O-thers going down from the O and said always put others second in your life, then she wrote the word Y-ourself and said always put yourself last. She said if you can try your best to do that you will have joy and let us not forget what President Kennedy said can you say it with me? Ask not what your country can do for you but ask what you can do for your country as she tried to hold back her tears we all knew it well and I am sure hearing all of us recite it touched her deeply just as her sharing the meaning of Joy touched each of us.....that is the America I grew up in and loved.
    May God Bless America and Make America United Again........For God and Country

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  7. Thank you for that inspirational comment You touched me.

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  8. I think everyone that was of any age remembers that day. I was in my 9th grade math class when word came over the system from the Principal's office that the President had been shot. Our school was let out early, so we went home and like you, I was glued to the tv for days. I also saw when Jack Ruby came in and shot Oswald right in front of us. They didn't have church that day either. What a terribly, somber, black weekend it was to know that our President, (America's President had been murdered). Always remembering a lot about President Kennedy's 1,000 days in office. My dad bought the book of pictures of those days of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and his Presidency.

    Thank you for your very informative article which helped us all remember that terrible day. I read Bill O'Reilly's book "Killig Kennedy" but there was not anything new in it from what e had already witnessed. No mention of anything different than what the Warren Report came out with and that was the sold and chief actor Lee Harvey Oswald committed the assassination alone. I don't think many of us ever believed that. I always thought there was a Conspiracy...words came out that the CIA had him assassinated, but who knows the real story!

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  9. I was in the third grade and when the news came about Kennedy. They cut the TV on and we watched. My mom picked me up and hadn't heard. She was horrified I remember her franic, trying to get the radio on to hear more. The next day in class one of the students told the teacher that his parents cheered when they heard the news. I was confused, but today know that Kennedy only won by 1% . The media painted it as if the country was 100% behind him, kind of like they do today. But they weren't.

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  10. This why the white wash of Bush 41 is well underway because of go gerprints on the whole coup-de-tau

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  11. I was also only 8 years old at the time, but I remember very vividly where I was on a day I learned about the Kennedy's and the JFK's assassination. My mom with my ant were sitting at the kitchen table going through some colorful journals from America reminiscing about the American young president and his family with their eyes in tears. I myself could not take my eyes away from the colorful pictures and the somber story of this handsome man’s slaying. This was in Poland, in a small town named Lubawka, worlds away from America…
    Would never guess then, I would one day end up living in America…

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  12. Empress Tia LoftonMarch 22, 2020 at 4:56 PM

    I swear I am sitting here in tearssssss.. As a STRONG Black Woman I have FELT the affects of that loss my whole entire life... I know that the lives of me, my family and my community would be so much different had he not been killed... As a community within itself we are also divided... And we are the pawns of every presidential race... It's the only time America really thinks about us when they need our vote... For the 1st time in my life I am denying my democratic heritage and voting for Trump in the next election.. I pray I do not live to regret this and that he remembers my ppl in the end... #ReturnToCamelot

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    Replies
    1. You will not regret voting for President Trump. You will be ecstatic when you see how he is going to restore our country and avenge the death of President Kennedy. These are historic times. Trust me.

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