There is an interesting post by a guy who goes by P.K. on McAdams forum in which he brought up that there were people outside the theater who were yelling, "kill him, kill him". They also said things in reference to Oswald having killed the President.
My understanding is that they arrested Oswald for the murder of Tippit, not Kennedy. Furthermore, in such an operation, I would expect the police to say nothing to the public. And I mean not a word.
So, how do we account for it? I don't claim to know, but I think we should consider the idea that they had agents or operatives in the crowd. I mean fake spectators or bystanders who were really put there to steer public thinking in a certain direction.
There has been a lot said and written about phony 9/11 witnesses who were really agents placed there to make televised statements to steer public opinion. And there has been a great deal more talk about phony witnesses at more recent events, such as the Boston bombings and Sandy Hook.
I am not going to delve into those events; I think it would be a distraction to do so. But, knowing that the idea of such placements exists for those events, it's possible that they were doing such things at the time of the JFK assassination, and it wouldn't surprise me.
And in regard to the idea of killing Oswald being broadcast, if you listen to the tapes of the radio broadcasts on the morning of the day he was killed, there was endless discussion of the fear and the serious threat that someone would make an attempt on Oswald's life. And it makes the event that followed (Ruby's killing of Oswald) all the more surreal because of how they predicted it.
And, it's really imponderable because if they were really concerned, why did they do it the way they did? Why didn't they move him without announcing it? Or, why didn't they announce that they were going to move him at one time and then move him at another time? Perhaps earlier? Perhaps in the middle of the night? It really doesn't make sense the way they did it, and it makes you suspect that the whole thing was orchestrated.
I know that Hugh Aynesworth was there at the theater, and he reported the lynch mob mentality of the crowd, calling for Oswald to be killed. Of course, Aynesworth has always supported the official story, and not surprisingly, he has never addressed how the crowd knew.
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