What If Japan Had Succeeded in Developing An Atomic Bomb during WWII?Bob Mayer
Near the end of the Second World War, as the Reich was crumbling, they sent what plutonium they had to Japan on board a submarine. The Japanese already had a fledgling program developed. At the end of the war, why were the Russians suddenly so eager to invade Manchuria? What prize were they after? And what if the result of that program still exists and lies at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge?
What If Japan Had Succeeded in Developing An Atomic Bomb during WWII?Bob Mayer
Near the end of the Second World War, as the Reich was crumbling, they sent what plutonium they had to Japan on board a submarine. The Japanese already had a fledgling program developed. At the end of the war, why were the Russians suddenly so eager to invade Manchuria? What prize were they after? And what if the result of that program still exists and lies at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge?
High School PowerPoint with primary sources and important questions for students in the study of the JFK assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald, Lyndon B. Johnson, Single Bullet Theory, Warren Commission
High School PowerPoint with primary sources and important questions for students in the study of the JFK assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald, Lyndon B. Johnson, Single Bullet Theory, Warren Commission
Book Review: The Truth about the JFK Assassination Conspiracy is Finally Revealed
1. Book Review: The Truth about the JFK Assassination
Conspiracy is Finally Revealed
2. Author R.E. "Gus" Payne dives into the depths of truth
about the JFK assassination conspiracy in his book
"Falsely Accused." From the author of "The Death of
Brandon Lee: The Untold Story" and "Caught in the
Crossfire" comes a book that answers many pertinent
questions about JFK's murder that have plagued
Americans for years.
3. Why did the New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison
and the U.S. Justice Department refuse to investigate
the known Mafia leader Carlos Marcello in connection
with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy?
Why did Garrison, along with other U.S. Justice
Department officials, deny the existence of the Mafia's
part in the assassination when it was clearly a matter to
be investigated? These questions and more are finally
answered in Payne's eye-opening book.
4. Names such as Lee Harvey Oswald, Clay Shaw and David
Ferrie always arouse curiosity in the minds of those who
want to know what really happened on that dreaded
day in history. These three men were said to have been
seen together on the day of JFK's assassination, but
were they really? Witnesses changed their stories. Why?
5. The author goes a step further and looks closely at the
New Orleans FBI and those that were in charge of
investigating the JFK assassination as well as the
possible involvement of Carlos Marcello. He also
explains in vivid detail key facts in the investigation such
as the missing "BRILAB" tape recordings, the "FOGG"
arrest report, and more.
8. In Marcello's case the intent of the Kennedy
administration was made known even before
Inauguration Day, January 20, 1961. On December 28,
1960, the New Orleans States-Item reported that
Attorney General-designate Kennedy was planning
specific actions against Marcello. An FBI report from that
period noted:
9. "On January 12, 1961, a [source] advised that Carlos
Marcello is extremely apprehensive and upset and has
been since the New Orleans States-Item newspaper on
December 28, 1960 published a news story reporting
that... Robert F. Kennedy stated he would expedite the
deportation proceedings pending against Marcello after
Kennedy takes office in January 1961."
10. While the House Select Committee on Assassinations
carefully examined numerous areas of information
pertaining to the proficiency of the FBI in investigating
organized crime during the 1950's and early 1960's, and
found various areas in which Bureau performance was
significantly deficient, questionable and even
suspiciously so, the city of New Orleans was a special
case. The FBI's outright denial of the existence of
organized crime in New Orleans was unique to that city.
11. The facts reveal that the Bureau's conclusions on
Marcello in New Orleans were attributable to a
disturbing attitude on the part of the senior agent who
supervised the organized crime investigations in that
city, Regis Kennedy. He had been in charge of the
Bureau's work on Marcello and the New Orleans Mafia
for years; unfortunately, he had also directed much of
the FBI investigation in that city of President Kennedy's
assassination.