4.6 • 602 Ratings
🗓️ 10 July 2021
⏱️ 40 minutes
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0:00.0 | Welcome to JFK in The Enduring Secret. I'm your host, Jeff Crudell. Hello everyone and welcome back to the podcast. |
0:27.5 | Today's episode is episode 41. |
0:31.9 | I'm sure you've heard of the saying, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. |
0:36.9 | It's a good saying, and it applies well to much |
0:40.1 | in life. And it applies to the Kennedy assassination research, too. Beverly Oliver is captivating, |
0:48.1 | and let's face it, a lot more interesting to listen to than me talking about the downward angle of a shot |
0:55.3 | coming from the sixth floor depository. |
0:58.5 | And it gets maybe even a little coochier in this episode today with Badge Man and Gordon Arnold. |
1:06.4 | But don't confuse the entertaining nature of the testimony with your search for the truth. |
1:12.8 | In episodes 39 and 40, Oliver adds to the narrative in a very rich way, but she also muddies the waters more than a tad. |
1:22.5 | I'm not telling you what to believe or not to believe. You have to decide on that. |
1:30.3 | But we are going to review a lot of evidence. |
1:37.3 | We already have. And believe me, there is lots more and it's going to get progressively murkier as we go. |
1:46.1 | And one bias that we all have is humans, and sometimes it's quite subtle, is that over a long period of relationship with any person or any topic or anything that constitutes something tangible or intangible in our minds, |
1:54.2 | around which to form an opinion, well, it becomes subject to the cumulative emotional biases |
2:00.2 | that build up in our minds in response to how we personally have reacted over time, reacted to each topical stimulus as it occurs. |
2:11.0 | Stimulus that can be either positive or negative around the subject. |
2:16.5 | And let's face it, these are biases that can and do sway us. |
2:21.9 | So, simply put, regarding the JFK assassination, we might just become at some point, say, a conspiracy |
2:30.7 | advocate. In other words, we might have heard enough. We might have passed over the |
2:35.9 | Rubicon, so to speak. Too many coincidences or too many convincing ruleouts. Whatever it was for you |
2:43.0 | personally when listening to all of this. You know, it might have been based on an individual fact |
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