vintageTink
One Too Many
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- An Okie in SoCal
Wow, LaMedicine. Those are still something.
Well you know how it is. The people who warned him that it was a bad idea probably were working class Joe Schmoes whose opinions didn't matter. Working in corporate America I've learned that a lot of powerful people are dead set on doing things their way or nothing else.
Is the riderless horse a funeral tradition, or was that unique to Kennedy?]
Foxer55, thanks for that description of how you remember JFK's murder, from an active-duty serviceman's experience.
One of the most memorable things about it was the Germans were shocked. Absolutely shocked. They loved Kennedy and shops, homes, and stores began displaying photos of Kennedy in their windows with black bands and shrouds over the pictures or doorways. I believe you can still find some places still displaying these things in Germany.
My dad was not active duty at the time of the assassination, but had recently been discharged. He doesn't have any memorable stories of that day, but has others during Kennedy's days as President. He was in the 101st Airborne and has a great Bay of Pigs story, plus stories of being active duty during the Cuban missile crisis. In short, most people didn't, and don't, realize just how close we were to war.
I was born a few days before the assassination so obviously I don't remember it. And sadly, when people remark that that was when they 'lost their innocence' I never know what they are talking about. How innocent could people have been, after going through McCarthyism, the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the 1963 coup in Vietnam etc. etc.?
I was born a few days before the assassination so obviously I don't remember it. And sadly, when people remark that that was when they 'lost their innocence' I never know what they are talking about. How innocent could people have been, after going through McCarthyism, the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the 1963 coup in Vietnam etc. etc.?
Those would be interesting to hear, to say the least...
Foxer55, thank you.
To say nothing of the assassination attempt on Truman by a couple of Puerto Rican nationalists in 1950, and Giuseppe Zangara taking a shot at FDR in 1933 (he missed, and killed the Mayor of Chicago instead.)
I think most of the people who lost their innocence in 1963 were kids and very young adults, those who had likely cast their first vote for JFK. Their parents and grandparents had lost their innocence long before, somewhere among two world wars and a depression.