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Initially, the House Select Committee on Assassinations had unrestricted access to files on the JFK assassination. However, they encountered redactions, obstruction, and even retyped documents. If the intelligence community wants to regain trust, they have to be transparent.
18,198 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)
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Transparency isn’t optional—it’s the bare minimum. The House Select Committee’s struggles with redactions and altered documents prove how bureaucrats weaponize secrecy to bury inconvenient truths. The JFK Act of 2025 (H.R. 239) finally forced full disclosure of assassination records, but it shouldn’t take decades to expose what taxpayers fund. If agencies can retroactively “retype” files or hide behind national security theater, accountability dies. Real reform means stripping their power to classify history. The fact that Trump had to mandate this release shows how deeply entrenched the cover-up culture is. Trust isn’t earned by redacting—it’s earned by burning the shredders.

Like the plot to a dystopian movie, New York will now monitor social media writings, collect data, and use law enforcement to crack down on any expression it deems to be hate speech.

The ship has sailed and sunk years ago

EO

Of course they did because they're the ones that pulled it off

Knew it! The took the Limo to Langley,and flew it back to its manufacturer to exchange the " Bullet Hole thru windshield,with a clean windshield,then sent it back for investigation! This completely blew up the story that Kennedy was killed by lone gunman,in the back.

This is what the public has suspected all along.

If Congress wants them to behave, stop giving them money. Who is actually running our country?

I’ve my doubts trust will ever be regained, unfortunately. The damage has been too great, and the people simply will not go there again.

That's like asking water to run uphill.

I’m 69 years old, there’s nothing they can do to regain my trust in my remaining years.

