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In December 1966, Army Captain Sam Bird’s one-year tour of duty in Vietnam was coming to an end. He was set to be transferred from a combat zone in which he had been operating to a safe zone in the rear and then sent home. However, according to a written account entitled “The Courage of Sam Bird” by B. T. Collins, one of his subordinate officers, Bird “conned his commanding officer into letting him stay an extra month with his beloved Bravo Company,” a move that would prove to be a near-fatal mistake.
For high school, Sam had attended Missouri Military Academy, where he was a company commander his final year. He received the school’s highest possible honor — the Legion of Honor for industry, integrity, and abiding loyalty.
Sam then attended the Citadel, the prestigious military college in South Carolina. During his senior year, he served on the regimental staff, the highest-ranking group within the corps of cadets. He graduated ...
Former Secret Service agent Paul Landis has placed proponents of the lone-nut theory of the JFK assassination in an awkward position. That’s because Landis has just come forward with a personal account of that day in Dallas when Kennedy was shot that, if true, puts the quietus to what has gone down in history as the “magic-bullet” theory, which is the core principle of the lone-nut theory of the assassination.
I would assume that my readers are familiar with the magic-bullet theory. I would ask them to bear with me here. In case there are readers of my blog who are not familiar with that theory, I wish to set forth its basics.
The official narrative of the assassination, which is set forth by the Warren Commission, is that a lone-nut former communist Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald, who just happened to be at the right place at the right time, just decided, with no apparent motive, that ...
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