Dallas Public Library

Dallas '63, the first deep state revolt against White House, Peter Dale Scott, with editorial assistance from Bill Simpich, Oliver Curme, and Rex Bradford

Label
Dallas '63, the first deep state revolt against White House, Peter Dale Scott, with editorial assistance from Bill Simpich, Oliver Curme, and Rex Bradford
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
Dallas '63
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
918555175
Responsibility statement
Peter Dale Scott, with editorial assistance from Bill Simpich, Oliver Curme, and Rex Bradford
Sub title
the first deep state revolt against White House
Summary
With a foreword by Rex Bradford and a preface by Bill Simpich: From deep within American society emerged the plot that killed a president Beneath the orderly façade of the American government lies a complex network, only partly structural, linking Wall Street influence, corrupt bureaucracy, and the military-industrial complex. Here lies the true power of the American empire: This behind-the-scenes web is unelected, unaccountable, and immune to popular resistance. Peter Dale Scott calls this entity the deep state, and he has made it his life's work to write the history of those who manipulate our government from the shadows. Since the aftermath of World War II, the deep state's power has grown unchecked, and nowhere has it been more apparent than at sun-dappled Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963. The central mystery of the JFK assassination is not who fired the guns that fateful day, but the untouchable forces behind the shooters. In this landmark volume, Scott traces how culpable elements in the CIA and FBI helped prepare for the assassination, and how such elements continue to influence our politics today. In his 1993 publication Deep Politics and the Death of JFK, Scott looked closely at the foreground of the assassination: Lee Harvey Oswald, Jack Ruby, and their connections to Dallas law enforcement, to the underworlds of Dallas and New Orleans, and to Cuba. This new book, in contrast, looks at the assassination as an event emanating from the American deep state, including actions of the CIA and FBI in Washington and Mexico City, and apparent continuities with later deep events, notably Watergate, the Iran-Contra affair, and 9/11. Dallas '63 concludes with an overview of the 2 pivotal decades between the death of JFK and the Reagan Revolution, when all 4 presidents following Kennedy were increasingly at odds with deep state ambitions for world hegemony and saw their presidential careers prematurely terminated
Classification
Content
Mapped to