NOV 22: Remembering John F. Kennedy

Gupshup Community pays tribute to American Hero, John F. Kennedy.

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Kennedy’s Biography:

The youngest Man ever to be elected for the America’s highest office, he had served as a United States Naval officer in the South Pacific during World War II and there he commanded the PT-109. During an attack by a Japanese Crusier, he was credited with saving the livesof his crew. On his return home following the war, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts and later to the United States Senate from that state. He was elected to the Presidency in November 1960, defeating the Vice-President, Richard M. Nixon by one the smallest margins in history. He was assassinated in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963 as he rode in an open motorcade in that city. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetry on November 25, 1963 and his gravesite is one of the most visited spots in the cemetery. He was moved from the original gravesite to one just a few feet away on March 14, 1967. His wife, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was laid to rest next to him when she died of cancer in 1994. His infant daughter(who wasn’t named) and who was born and died on August 23, 1956 is also buried in his gravesite as of December 4, 1963. She was originally buried in Newport, Rhode Island. An infant son, Partick Bouvier Kennedy (August 7, 1963-August 9, 1963) who was born prematurely and who was originally buried at Brookline, Massachusetts, is also buried in this site as of December 4, 1963. May Allah Bless Kennedy’s Family.

Snaps.

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John F Kennedy, was a Great Man who stood for honesty and integrity toward our country. He was going to reveal the truth about our past FBI director (J Edgar Hoover, a gay controlled by blackmailing mob): and about the connection of organized crime and the CIA.

He tried to do something about the lies and corruption. Look what it got him. Death. And something else. Martardom.

I for one beleave as he did. Lets stop the CIA and the FBI from destroying our liberties. The Cancer has spread and now the office of the President of the United States is also infected.

Pray for us here in the United States. And remember us for what we are under this cloak of darkness.

Thank you JFK.

A state sponsored killing in the 20th century.

I remember the day he died. It was my brothers birthday. My mom cried.

This is my earliest memory actually. I was almost 3, my brother turned 2 and we were mad we couldn't watch Tom and Jerry cartoons :(

I remember his brother being assinated also. Had something to do with the civil rights movement.

They were of the best of the Kennedy's.

Wouldn't the world and life? be more fun..trying to make it to the moon or mars? or to the deepest depths of the ocean? rather than killing each other?

Lets have a cold war :)

Challenge is race to cure H.I.V.

Kennedy’s file opened after 39 years.

In Kennedy File, a Portrait of Illness and Pain

WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 The first thorough examination of President John F. Kennedy’s medical records, conducted by an independent presidential historian with a medical consultant, has found that Kennedy suffered from more ailments, was in far greater pain and was taking many more medications than the public knew at the time or biographers have since described.

As president, he was famous for having a bad back, and since his death, biographers have pieced together details of other illnesses, including persistent digestive problems and Addison’s disease, a life-threatening lack of adrenal function.

But newly disclosed medical files covering the last eight years of Kennedy’s life, including X-rays and prescription records, show that he took painkillers, antianxiety agents, stimulants and sleeping pills, as well as hormones to keep him alive, with extra doses in times of stress.

At times the president took as many as eight medications a day, says the historian, Robert Dallek. A committee of three longtime Kennedy family associates, who for decades refused all requests to look at the records, granted Mr. Dallek’s, in part because of his “tremendous reputation,” said one of them, Theodore C. Sorensen, who was the president’s special counsel.

Mr. Dallek is writing a biography, “An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963,” to be published next year by Little, Brown. He was allowed to examine the records over two days last spring in the company of a physician, Jeffrey A. Kelman, and to make notes but not photocopies. Their findings appear in the December issue of The Atlantic, and they discussed them in interviews with The New York Times. The new information shows how far Kennedy went to conceal his ailments and shatters the image he projected as the most vigorous of men. It is a remarkable example of a phenomenon that has been seen many times, notably in the case of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Yet for all of Kennedy’s suffering, the ailments did not incapacitate him, Mr. Dallek concluded. In fact, he said, while Kennedy sometimes complained of grogginess, detailed transcripts of tape-recorded conversations during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962 and other times show the president as lucid and in firm command.

By the time of the missile crisis, Kennedy was taking antispasmodics to control colitis; antibiotics for a urinary tract infection; and increased amounts of hydrocortisone and testosterone, along with salt tablets, to control his adrenal insufficiency and boost his energy.

The records show that Kennedy was hospitalized for back and intestinal ailments in New York and Boston on nine previously undisclosed occasions from 1955 to 1957, when he was a senator from Massachusetts, campaigning unsuccessfully for the 1956 Democratic vice-presidential nomination and quietly planning his 1960 presidential bid.

In December 1962, after Jacqueline Kennedy complained that he seemed “depressed” from taking antihistamines for food allergies, he took a prescribed antianxiety drug, Stelazine, for two days. At other times he took similar medications regularly.

The records show that Kennedy variously took codeine, Demerol and methadone for pain; Ritalin (news - web sites), a stimulant; meprobamate and librium for anxiety; barbiturates for sleep; thyroid hormone; and injections of a blood derivative, gamma globulin, presumably to combat infections.

In the White House, Kennedy received “seven to eight injections of procaine in his back in the same sitting” before news conferences and other events, Dr. Kelman said.

The president had so much pain from three fractured vertebrae from osteoporosis that he could not put a sock or shoe on his left foot unaided, the records reveal. He sometimes reported waking before dawn with severe abdominal cramps.

In August 1961, the records show, Mrs. Kennedy rushed in from another room when he screamed in pain as the White House physician, Dr. Janet G. Travell, injected procaine deep into his back muscles to numb them.

While not a complete record of Kennedy’s lifetime medical history, much of which remains sealed in private hospitals, the disclosures provide a broad, authoritative view.

The records are largely from Dr. Travell, a specialist in internal medicine and pain management who treated Kennedy for years before ultimately being eased aside after bitter arguments with other doctors about his care. She gathered files from before and after he became president in 1961. Kennedy’s widow and brothers, Robert and Edward, donated them in 1965 to the Kennedy Library, Deborah Leff, the library’s director, said, and a half-dozen scholars who sought permission to see them over the years were rebuffed.

In The Atlantic, Mr. Dallek writes that while Kennedy’s secrecy can be taken as “another stain on his oft-criticized character,” the records also reveal the “quiet stoicism of a man struggling to endure extraordinary pain and distress.”

Senator Edward M. Kennedy said that his family abided by the committee’s decision to make all judgments like releasing the medical records.

“While not aware of the exact details of my brother’s medical condition,” Mr. Kennedy said, **“I did see the great courage he exhibited throughout his life in triumphing over illness and pain.” **

Dr. Kelman, a specialist in internal medicine and physiology in Collington, Md., said: “The most remarkable thing was the extent to which Kennedy was in pain every day of his presidency.”

Mr. Dallek first sought permission to examine the records about three years ago. The committee that controls them is led by Burke Marshall, 80, a former Justice Department (news - web sites) official under Robert F. Kennedy. The other members are Mr. Sorensen, 74, and Samuel Beer, 90, an emeritus professor of government at Harvard.

Mr. Marshall and Professor Beer favored granting Mr. Dallek’s request, he said, but Mr. Sorensen was reluctant.

“I was with J.F.K. for 11 years,” Mr. Sorensen said in an interview, “and for so many of those I was trying to refute, rebut rumors that he was suffering from this disability or that, and that’s why as a general rule, if those medical files were placed in the library under very restricted conditions by the family, as the family’s nominee, I just couldn’t agree that they would be opened to any Tom, Dick or Harry because I knew a bunch of them would seek to exploit them.”

But he and Mr. Dallek “had a long talk, and I just decided on the basis of that talk that I could trust him,” Mr. Sorensen said, adding with a rueful chuckle, “Probably contrary to everything J.F.K. taught me.”

Mr. Dallek said that in the archives, he and Dr. Kelman found boxes apparently untouched for years, including about 10 boxes of X-rays.

For many years, Kennedy’s back problems were largely attributed to injuries suffered when his Navy patrol boat, PT-109, was sunk in World War II. In fact, he had back pain before that. Mr. Dallek said his vertebrae may have begun degenerating as a result of the steroids he may have taken for intestinal problems in the late 1930’s.

For much of his life, Kennedy also suffered from severe and potentially dangerous bouts of diarrhea, which doctors suspected might have been from ulcerative colitis. Repeated examinations did not confirm that. Their ultimate diagnosis was spastic colitis, which today would be described as irritable bowel syndrome.

Kennedy took antidiarrheal drugs like Lomotil for relief, and he lost so much weight and strength from his ailments that he received the male hormone, testosterone, to build up his muscles. He also had high blood cholesterol, often in the range of 300, once at 410, which is twice the level now considered desirable.

In 1954, doctors in Manhattan inserted a metal plate to fuse Kennedy’s damaged vertebrae, but an abscess forced its removal. Later he developed abscesses at the site of injections, and one had to be drained surgically, the records show.

The records show that Kennedy had “a tremendous proclivity for infections,” Dr. Kelman said, contradicting Dr. Travell’s assertion in 1960 that Kennedy had “a better than average resistance to infection” and “astounding vitality.”

Dr. Travell had also said that Kennedy’s back trouble was cured, which the records clearly show was not the case.

The records say nothing about treatment by Dr. Max Jacobson, a Manhattan physician who later lost his medical license for prescribing amphetamines. The Times detailed his involvement years ago, but the files said “nothing, nil,” about Dr. Jacobson, Mr. Dallek said.

Earlier accounts have said that Kennedy was first known to have adrenal insufficiency in 1947, but there are strong hints that he was treated many years earlier. The disease affects the adrenal glands, which produce hormones to regulate blood sugar, sodium, potassium and the response to stress. Its symptoms, including fatigue, vomiting, diarrhea and low blood pressure, can be life-threatening. Treatment with steroids was first used in the late 1930’s.

…continue…

Dr. Kelman and Mr. Dallek said the records suggested at least two hypotheses about Kennedy's illnesses. One is that he developed a number of medical conditions independently early in life, including colitis and osteoporosis. If so, he had "markedly washed-out bones at an early age," Dr. Kelman said. X-rays in the new files showed the spinal fractures and metal screws in the vertebrae. This is especially intriguing because Kennedy's autopsy report found "no significant gross skeletal abnormalities," aside from the bullet wounds in the skull. Many experts have criticized the report, and Mr. Dallek's findings raise new questions.

A second theory is that Kennedy developed adrenal insufficiency as a youth, and that steroid treatment for colitis alleviated the undiagnosed adrenal condition, possibly leading to the spinal fractures and chronic adrenal insufficiency. The only evidence to support this is a witness account of Kennedy implanting pellets in his leg in 1946, a year before receiving the "official" diagnosis from doctors in London.

Addison's disease was first described in the 1850's, when most cases were from tuberculosis.

Kennedy, his family, Dr. Travell and other aides obfuscated the issue by denying that he had Addison's from tuberculosis. Dr. Travell said in 1959 that the PT boat incident and possibly malaria led to "a depletion of adrenal function from which he is now rehabilitated," without saying he was still being treated. The records show no evidence that Kennedy was tested for tuberculosis, Dr. Kelman said.

In November 1960, asked by a reporter about the rumor of Addison's disease, the newly elected president flatly denied having it.

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., the historian and Kennedy aide, wrote in "A Thousand Days" that he asked Kennedy in 1959 about Addison's and was told:** "No one who has the real Addison's disease should run for the presidency, but I do not have it."**

In an interview this week, Mr. Schlesinger, 85, said that Kennedy "did draw a distinction between true Addison's and broadly construed Addison's" but that he did not know why. He said he had never been aware of the president's pain, except when he was unable to pick up his children, for example. "I mean, he never uttered a word of self-pity or complaint," Mr. Schlesinger said.

Indeed, in one of his most famous presidential epigrams, Kennedy declared in 1962, "Life is unfair." Most citations omit the words that followed, *"Some people are sick and others are well." *

What is sort of amazing is that based upon what we now know and what we continue to learn about JFK's medical conditions and the drug cocktails he needed to take on a daily basis, people would not view him fit to elect as a dog catcher today. Similarly, a guy like FDR, polio stricken, confined to leg braces and a wheelchair, simply could not win an election with those images plastered on every newspaper in the country.

Makes you sort of wonder whether the full disclosure and proctological examinations the press give to our candidates for office has served our country well or ill.

when are JFK records expected to become de-classified?

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*Originally posted by Fraudz: *
when are JFK records expected to become de-classified?
[/QUOTE]

From my days as an active believer in and researcher of the conspiracy theory regarding his assassination (a long, long time ago mind you), my recollection is that the complete file is sealed until the year 2020 or so. I think the Church Committee in the mid-70s had access to all or part of it when they reviewed the Warren Commission work.

I think when unsealed and if made commerically available they will break all sales records for books. kinda like the star report on slick willie did.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Fraudz: *
I think when unsealed and if made commerically available they will break all sales records for books. kinda like the star report on slick willie did.
[/QUOTE]

At least the truth and the true face of FBI and CIA will be "visible" for those who support their government's doings. Btw it will be around 2032 (if im not mistaken) and I'm anxiously waiting for the excuses those ppl will have this time. Most of them will ignore it and will declare it as history.

Dear People,

If one really wants to get to know Americans. (and American History),
one should visit.. http://www.loc.gov/.

I am familiar with americans and american history :) loc does not have much information on the whole JFK tragedy. I am just curious whats in the sealed docs. Maybe one day we will be able to read them at loc.

maybe its nothing, but i'm still curious.

Mr. Fraudia,

Use the search machine. Lots of declassified documents to be found there.

AvgGirl

Though 70 years is average wait for most records. Unless one writes to the archives with proof of death in USA, and mention the Freedom of information ACT... opps... darn.. can we still do that after today?

why do we need to remember a habitual drug user, serial womaniser in one instance both him and his brother robert where doing the deed with marilyn monroe :nono1:

He led america into the bay of pigs fiasco and ultimate slap in the face war called “Vietnam”

This is pak.org not america.org sheeesh

I ain’t paying no tribute what the hell for he is americas hero not mine!

The best thing associated with JFK in my opinion was his space program. The international space station is now functional, and innovation and advances in science and technology was possible due to his support in the beginning.

Ditto! :k:

United States able to landed on the moon because of JFK.

JFK and Cuban Missiles Crisis

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Tapes reveal after 39 years of Deadly attack on JKF

Tapes Reveal Reactions To JFK Slaying

CNN) – On the 39th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination new voices tell a chillingly familiar story.

**“Give me all available information on the president. Over.” **

It’s November 22, 1963, and two-thirds of the members of the presidential Cabinet are in a plane over the Pacific Ocean, en route to Japan, when President John F. Kennedy Jr. is fatally shot while he rides in a Texas motorcade. Ground-to-air radio messages – beginning with the above query from White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger – boomerang between the White House and two aircraft carrying Cabinet members and newly sworn-in President Lyndon B. Johnson.

“John and Governor Connally of Texas have been in the car in which they were riding. We do not know how serious the situation is. We have no information.” – White House reply to Salinger

Marking the anniversary of Kennedy’s death, National Public Radio airs portions of that radio traffic Friday during the show “All Things Considered.” NPR producer John McDonnough found the radio transmissions in the national archives.

The tapes reveal stalwart calm among the country’s leadership during the crisis. As America fell apart, people on airplanes and in the White House coolly put it back together. The ensuing conversations used code names for key figures. Wayside for Salinger. Volunteer for Johnson. Lace for Jacqueline Kennedy, and the fallen president is the Lark.

**“This is Situation Room. Relay following to Wayside… The president is dead… New subject: Front office desired plane return to Washington with no stop Dallas. Over.” **

Meanwhile, White House staff in Dallas, Texas, communicated with the executive mansion, called the Crown, updating colleagues about the transition of power and arrangements for Kennedy’s corpse and coffin.

“We are waiting for the swearing-in at the plane before takeoff,” Dallas reports.

**“That is for Volunteer, is that right?” **

And then more questions from the Crown: **“Do you have any idea yet what Lace wants to do, and what Volunteer wants to do on arrival here?” **

Details follow regarding the autopsy and a special request for an ambulance to ferry the casket to Walter Reed Hospital, as a helicopter would be too awkward. And from Johnson’s plane, Maj. Gen. Chester Clifton plans how to get the widow, Kennedy’s body and the new president off the plane. Following tradition, Kennedy exited the plane from the portal he used while alive.

**“…On the right rear, no the left rear of the aircraft where we usually dismount the Lark, we may need a fork lift rather than a ramp.” **

National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” features full tape airing Friday.