The Journey 113. Jack Roth: THE CIA WEAPONIZED CANCER

Publisher Kris Millegan speaks with Jack Roth about his book, KILLING KENNEDY: Exposing the Plot, the Cover-Up, and the Consequences; Oswald’s efforts to save Kennedy, and how his assassination changed America.

Kris: People in your book also talked about 9/11.

Jack: Both the Kennedy assassination and 9/11 are significant events in American history that kind of changed everything moving forward. It was the psychologists I spoke to who mentioned 9/11. I asked them why American society may or may not accept things at face value. Even though all the evidence points otherwise, why would people still think that Oswald was a lone nut assassin? And they had done some work in the 9/11 truth community, but that’s a whole other show.

They brought up stuff like cognitive dissonance, the idea of obeying and believing authority, conformity, the spiral of silence. All these things that play into why people [don’t critically think].

A lot of people don’t want to believe that their government would be involved in such a thing, because there’s that idea of government as father figure, who’s supposed to protect us at all time.

So when people realize that that’s not the case, people have a hard time with that. Cognitive dissonance makes us incredibly uncomfortable. It messes with your paradigm.

One of the things I learned writing this book is that you can’t trust any government. You can’t.

Kris: You were at one of the conferences in Dallas. There have been two conferences in Dallas [for a long time], what I call a controlled conference and an uncontrolled conference. In the one, you can’t say that Johnson had prior knowledge. And you have to say bad things about some of our TrineDay authors.

Do you have people who honestly look at things [a certain way]? Or do you have people who are actually trying to drive the conversation and take control of the narrative?

You spoke to [two TrineDay authors], Judyth Baker and Ed Haslam. What do you think of the story they have to tell?

Jack: They’re both incredible stories. [Judyth Baker, ME AND LEE: How I Came to Know, Love and Lose Lee Harvey Oswald. Ed Haslam, DR. MARY’S MONKEY: How the Unsolved Murder of a Doctor, a Secret Laboratory in New Orleans and Cancer-Causing Monkey Viruses Are Linked to Lee Harvey Oswald, the JFK Assassination and Emerging Global Epidemics.] Ed knew, as a child, Dr. Mary Sherman. And then she’s murdered [in 1964]. And Ed’s story ties directly into Judyth’s story.

I read ME AND LEE and was blown away. As I was when I read DR. MARY’S MONKEY. They made sense, when you use critical thinking. And they tie together very neatly, for the most part.

New Orleans, in the summer of 1963, was one heck of a place. I mean, Ed’s story, that a nuclear particle accelerator was being used for cancer experiments, and the CIA had their people in Tulane University. Dr. Alton Ochsner, the head of the whole thing there, was a CIA asset. And they were working on how to weaponize cancer, because they wanted to kill Castro.

The fact that the CIA wanted to kill Castro is no secret. The cancer experiments are quite shocking, because Ed ties those experiments to the epidemic of soft tissue cancers we’re seeing today and the polio vaccine and everything else. I think that’s what happens when you try to play God and that’s what the CIA was doing.

And then Judyth’s story, of course, is incredible. Because very few people have come forward to talk about the real Lee Harvey Oswald as a human being, not as a lone-nut or a patsy.

Reply