Jim Schutze
The Dallas Observer
November 25, 2013
The only truth-teller Friday was Alex Jones, who said the whole thing was a
lie. By now all of the responsible parties are congratulating themselves for the
seamless passage of the 50th Kennedy Assassination Anniversary event at Dealey
Plaza last Friday and especially for the way the massive security apparatus
worked. After all, the whole thing went by and we didn’t have a … there was no …
we avoided any kind of a …
We avoided what? Remind me again what we were avoiding. We assembled enough
marching policemen, paddy wagons and high-tech spyware for a full-scale North
Korean succession of power. And we were trying to make sure there wasn’t a what
again?
One of the organizers made the brilliant observation early on in this process
that there was not enough security at Dealey Plaza 50 years ago (talk about
20/20 hindsight). I believe the expression was something to the effect that we
would not want to allow tragedy to strike again.
What tragedy? Shoot Kennedy again?
Let me tell you two things about the security Friday. It was piss-poor. And
it was never intended to prevent a security or terror event anyway.
If it was anti-terrorism security, then why was I able to get myself into the
pre-party at the Meyerson Symphony Center without going through a metal detector
and without any press credentials? Had I stayed, then presumably I would have
been provided a bus ride with the other hoity-toities, replete with police VIP
escort and screaming sirens all the way to Dealey Plaza — Wouldn’t that have
been special? — where eventually I would have been asked to pass through a
scanner of some sort before entering the plaza. But because they had warned me
of that step beforehand, I think I might have blown up my bus full of toities on
the way, had I been so inclined.
And no big problem, apparently, had I made it to Dealey Plaza and not felt
like going through the scanner. Conspiracy author Jim Marrs made it right down
into the center of Dealey Plaza by using the old wandering trick — just
waaandering on out there. Eventually somebody did come up and ask to see his arm
band, to which he said something like, “Oh, I forgot it,” and, then sure, he had
to leave. But he could have taken out half the rich people in the city by
then.
Hey, I have seen security where somebody in authority who knows what they are
doing is seriously worried about somebody out of authority who knows what they
are doing. Nobody wanders into any part of it.
This was not security. It was message management. The most elaborate
precautions, like the four-story tall banner hanging from a crane hiding all of
Main Street from the plaza, were designed to force visiting media to look at,
hear and film only the official choreographed message. By now you know what that
was: Dallas is sorry, Dallas has changed, Dallas has repainted Dealey Plaza,
Dallas promises it won’t happen again.
I don’t have any particular quarrel with that message. Fine. It’s bulls***,
because nobody asked. The event doesn’t really belong to Dallas in the way the
event seemed to claim. But if Dallas wants to buy ownership of the Kennedy
assassination with its purse full of obsequious regrets, then great, go for it.
It’s a free country.
What was absolutely wrong, lugubrious and obscene was the elaborate effort to
prevent anyone from saying or hearing anything that departed from the official
program. In that sense, the hero of the day was Austin radio show host Alex
“InfoWars” Jones and his doughty band of 150-or-so followers who marched to the
barricades shouting “No more lies.” Theirs was the only truth of the day.
Their detractors always describe Jones and his followers as paranoiacs and
conspiracy theorists who propound so many conspiracies at once as to make the
whole world a conspiracy. But Friday’s event was a perfect example of what Jones
and his followers are up against — a huge and seamless propaganda that masks the
streets of real life behind banners the size of buildings.
Here is what I think is a simple proposition philosophically: If all truth is
hidden behind a banner of lies, then all conspiracy theories are true. We should
all be d***ed glad Alex Jones and the soldiers of InfoWars believe in
conspiracy, preach conspiracy and are willing to march on the barricades of
conspiracy. Who is crazy, Alex Jones on the street behind the banner shouting
“no more lies” or the people in the stands staring at the banner believing it is
the edge of the world and afraid of falling off?
This article originally appeared at the Dallas Observer.
Monday, November 25, 2013
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