John Ridley : The Death of
Oswald, the Birth of Conspiracies
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-ridley/the-death-of-oswald-the-_b_74335.html
Posted November
27, 2007 | 12:41 PM (EST)
Read More: Jack
Ruby, JFK Assassination Conspiracies, Kennedy Assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald,
Breaking Politics News
This just passed
24th of November was the day way back in 1963 some no-name clip joint operator
named Jack Ruby walked into the basement of a Dallas police station and popped
some no-name nutcase named Lee Oswald who'd whacked Jack Kennedy. And Ruby with
his loose mob ties, and Oswald with his loose commie connections could not
possibly have done what they'd done without a huge apparatus pulling their strings.
And with Oswald's death the era of conspiracy was mid-wifed by paranoia and
cynicism into existence.
I won't waste
breath -- or risk carpal tunnel syndrome -- trying to debunk the
Kennedy/Oswald/Ruby conspiracy because the great thing about conspiracies is
that they are completely un-debunkable.
In fact, I'm
obviously on the payroll of some trilateral commission that's into the
anti-conspiracy agitprop anyway.
And there is an
upside to Kennedy/Oswald/Ruby. Some would say the moment Kennedy took a bullet
is when America lost her innocence. I say that a nation stolen from her native
people, built on the backs of slaves and coolies was never innocent. Instead,
the 24th of '63 is when America's populace became self-aware of its own
inequity. It made the public ready for and intolerant of true conspiracies: the
Pentagon Papers, Watergate, Iran-Contra. The inept machinations of glorified
civil servants.
The problem is
that for the less than shrewd Kennedy/Oswald/Ruby has made them anxious to the
point that they fear the monster under the bed when there isn't even a bed in
the room. Any and every national tragedy is greeted with the belief that it is
not just horrible happenstance, but in fact some fabulous government
implemented Rube Goldberg-type device that self-executes with the precision of
Canadian pairs figure skaters.
This despite the
fact our government cannot either get out welfare checks or invade other
countries without making an utter mess of things. They can, however, activate
the hundreds if not thousands of people necessary to kill a president or
destroy levees or topple twin towers without a single one of those duty bugs
deciding they'd like to write a book about their part in the plan and pitch it
on Oprah.
As a coping
mechanism, or as a way to make a little hard count by shilling demons in the
shadows, I try not to belittle the thought process of the conspiracy theorists.
As a cocktail waitress in Vegas once schooled me: never get down on anybody
else's hustle.
But I do believe
there is a true downside to obsessing on conspiracies: it tends to obfuscate
issues of greater importance. When people are focusing on who blew up the
levees they're not focusing on the horrendous response of government agencies
at the municipal, state and federal levels. When they are looking for who
planted the bombs in Building Seven, the are not paying attention to the fact
the government had every indication a terrorist attack was imminent and was too
inept to do thing one about it.
It does no good
to believe in what does not exist to the point one cannot focus on what is
real. That would be the greatest tragedy of any "conspiracy."
If there's
anything to be taken away from Kennedy/Oswald/Ruby, it's that it's all right to
be paranoid. As long as you don't think the government's out to get you.