And remind me that my late father never trusted any politician ever until JFK.
Maybe because they were both saw combat for the US Navy during WWII.
But the reason she said he gave her was, “there’s just something about that guy.”

Perhaps a vast one.
That included multiple gunmen and coverups by investigators at all levels of government.
Volumes have been written and terabytes of digital media have covered it, and will continue to be.
So instead, I’ll rely on the best friend of the lazy blogger: The List.
In this case, the biggest, most important unanswered questions.
Not a dent or a scratch on it.
In fact, his wife refused requests to remove them after he died.
Why was Connally’s account ignored?
How could the second and third shots have been fired so close together?
The second and third came in rapid succession.
Less than one second apart.
The murder weapon was a bolt action rifle.
Meaning each round had to be cleared from the chamber and reloaded.Boom.
Boom.The only logical explanation is that there was another gun, fired at almost exactly the same time.
And it delivered the kill shot.
How could a shot from behind produce “Back and to the left”?
If Oswald was just some random nobody, why did the Feds have an extensive file on him?
Part of the case as I used to believe it was that Oswald was a nobody.
And that was the official narrative.
How was that video worth taking, except to establish this rando as a pro-Communist sympathizer.
Why was Oswald questioned without a lawyer present?
Not if you want to get a conviction, that is.
Then paraded him before the press, while he was still in custody.
A suspicious person might conclude they knew he was never going to go to trial.
Why was the JFK in the autopsy photos completely different than the JFK everyone in the hospital saw?
A good quarter of the right side of his skull missing, which is consistent with an exit wound.
Almost as if those pictures were not a fair and accurate depiction of what his corpse looked like.
And finally:
Why did the FBI commit a credible witness to an insane asylum?
I’ll give all the credit to theSolving JFKpodcast for educating me on this little subplot.
He was carrying something long and thin wrapped in brown paper and said they were curtain rods.
A weird question, but whatever.
After dropping him off, Yates mentioned his odd encounter to someone.
Just a citizen trying to do his part.
The problem with Yates' story is that it couldn’t have been Oswald.
He was at work at that time on that day.
Eyewitnesses and his time card confirmed that fact.
But the guy he drove to work that day looked just like Oswald.
This framed Oswald, while Yates led to a conspiracy, something that the FBI wanted to avoid.
But he died in a mental institution where he was sent against his will.
For the crime of passing lie detector tests ordered by Hoover.
Because the Feds argued he must be insane to believe a thing they didn’t think was true.
No one can prove it.
But it makes sense.
It’s been 60 years and will no doubt be 60 more.