Dawn of the Age of Conspiracy: The Assassination of JFK

Sono passati sessant’anni da uno degli eventi più traumatici che hanno segnato la psiche americana, un omicidio che ha lasciato la democrazia ferita e ha scatenato la cultura della cospirazione, oggi imperante in tutto il mondo.

Bandera UK
Sarah Davison

Speaker (UK accent)

Aggiornato il giorno

464 The Assassination of JFK Getty

Ascolta questo articolo

Stampare

On 22 November 1963, US president John F. Kennedy was mortally wounded as he rode in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas. At the time, the forty-six-year-old Democrat was campaigning to win a second term as president in the 1964 election. Sixty years on, and another US election looms. Today, candidates receive protection from US security forces — but perhaps it is the voters who need looking out for.

lone gunman

After the assassination, Kennedy’s accused killer was quickly arrested, though he never reached trial: Lee Harvey Oswald, a former US marine with a history of psychiatric illness who had defected for a time to the Soviet Union, was shot dead within days by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner with mafia connections. In 1964, US president Lyndon B. Johnson set up the Warren Commission to investigate Kennedy’s killing. It concluded that Oswald had acted alone.

464 The Assassination of JFK freeimage

RUMOURS

However, rumours were already circulating of a conspiracy to kill the president. Among the more prevalent theories were that a second shooter aimed from a nearby grassy knoll; that a man with an umbrella signalled to the killer or shot a poisoned dart; that the US government, the mafia or the Soviet state police, the KGB, were involved; or that Cuban leader Fidel Castro ordered the shooting.

INVESTIGATION

In 1976, a US House of Representatives committee was formed to reexamine the case. After conducting some 25,000 interviews and chasing down tens of thousands of leads, all suspicions of a conspiracy were dismissed. This did nothing to stop the rumours: then, in the 1990s, Oliver Stone’s movie JFK, followed by the expansion of the internet, helped theories which were decades old and decades disproved become even more entrenched.

CONSPIRACY NATION

In the immediate aftermath of the 1963 assassination, 87 per cent of Americans asked said they believed that there was only one shooter. Today, around 60 per cent are convinced that more than one person was involved. In 2022, US president Joe Biden ordered the disclosure of all releasable records, around 3,600 items, on the assassination. By June 2023, 99 per cent of all materials were made public — but there were no revelations.   

2024: the Conspiratorial Presidential Nominees

In 2016, a whole new theory around the JFK assassination was born. The presidential candidate Donald Trump implied that his Republican competitor Ted Cruz’s Cuban father Rafael was an associate of Lee Harvey Oswald. With no evidence for this claim, it nevertheless reignited interest in a Kennedy killing cover-up. Fast forward to today, and (at the time of writing) Donald Trump is a favourite to win the 2024 US presidential election; this, despite the many serious criminal charges against him… Then, there is John F. Kennedy’s nephew, Robert Kennedy Jr., a candidate for the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination. While he is unlikely to get far, Kennedy Jr. is a high-profile proponent of all kinds of conspiracy theories. He links vaccines with autism, calls Covid-19 ‘racially selective’, blames school shootings on antidepressants, and says the 2004 US election was “stolen”. He also claims that the CIA plotted his uncle’s death back in 1963.

 

464 Cover

Questo articolo appartiene al numero November 2023 della rivista Speak Up.

Buy My Face: Mobile Marketing

People

Buy My Face: Mobile Marketing

Un'idea geniale e divertente. Ed Moyse e Ross Harper, due laureati disoccupati, decisero di vendere i loro volti. Guadagnarono molto denaro e riuscirono a saldare i loro debiti, contratti per pagare gli studi universitari.

Linda Ligios

More in Explore

Le parole più antiche dell'inglese
iStock

World

Le parole più antiche dell'inglese

'I', 'we' e 'two' sono alcune delle 30 parole più antiche della lingua inglese che scoprirai in questo affascinante viaggio attraverso secoli di storia.

Natalia Cristiano

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

You'll Never Walk Alone

Culture

You'll Never Walk Alone

Visitare Londra? La congestion charge ha scoraggiato definitivamente l’uso dell’auto. La metropolitana copre un territorio vastissimo e arriva dappertutto, ma costa un occhio! Allora, tutti a piedi: e la miglior guida si chiama Jim Walker.

Julian Earwaker

Rachel Roberts