In a television interview, A Current Affair, the mistress of Lyndon  Johnson, Madeleine Brown, described the meeting of 21st November, 1963, when she was at the home of Clint Murchison. Others at the meeting included Harold L. Hunt, J. Edgar Hoover, Clyde Tolson, John J. McCloy and Richard Nixon. At the end of the evening Lyndon B. Johnson arrived...

"Tension filled the room upon his arrival. The group immediately went behind closed doors. A short time later Lyndon, anxious and red-faced, reappeared... Squeezing my hand so hard, it felt crushed from the pressure, he spoke with a grating whisper, a quiet growl, into my ear, not a love message, but one I'll always remember: "After tomorrow those goddamn Kennedys will never embarrass me again - that's no threat - that's a promise.".

It's important to note that John J. McCloy was a member of the now discredited Warren Commission which "investigated" the assassination, appointed by none other than Johnson. Nixon himself was in Dallas on the day of the assassination.

Dallas Morning News, November 22, 1963. The day of President Kennedy's assassination

The lead prosecutor in this so called investigation is Sen Arlen Specter. Today, he is Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, insuring that while he is alive, the miscarriage of justice perpetrated on an American president will never be addressed.

 

"I was particularly disturbed by the attitudes of top Masons. I got to know several who are high court judges. In private they talk as if ordinary people are an expendable nuisance."

 Inside the Brotherhood  by Martin Short (Copyright © 1989) Pg. 135

Turning Back the Clock by 40 Years: The Assault on Civil Disobedience

Nevermind Iraq: Prisoner Abuse in America.... Brazoria County, Texas, 1996

A female protester is dabbed in the eyes with pepper spray in the office of a Republican lawmaker.


[IMAGE]

New York City
 

Abner Louima, who on August 9, 1997; was raped and sodomized with a toilet plunger handle by Officer Justin Volpe. The abuses committed herein were, at bottom, made possible by the dismantling of a citizen oversight committee crushed by NYC Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. When the city council passed a resolution for an independent police monitor, Mayor Giuliani successfully challenged the reform in court. 


Washington D.C.


 September12, 1997: Moved by the Abner Louima case in New York City, a protest against the rise of police brutality cases across the nation, this one held in Washington D.C. 


Los Angeles 
 Los Angeles march against police brutality. Fifty cities in every state participated in a day of protest in October of 1998.