Because I am so skeptical of so many JFK assassination theories, I still love checking out each one. O'Reilly may be full of himself, but he writes a damn good book here.
Cross checking his facts produced this interesting exchange and a couple of photos on the ship on which Lee Harvey Oswald returned to America with his Russian wife and daughter.
Why does the author point to all those very plausible things and non-events as being “remarkable”? Someone who just happened to be in a room close to the Oswald’s and didn’t particularly attempt to communicate with them is “remarkable”? Oswald was described as somewhat anti-social and as a loner, so why is it remarkable that he didn’t interact very much with fellow passengers? And even if he had, so what?
Read Ion Pacepa’s books- best re assassination
The Commie did it, end of story.
You are all wrong, Bush did it...